.
GENERAL
INTRODUCTION
Pushto is one of the national languages of
Afghanistan (Dari Persian is the other), and the
home language of Pushtuns living in the Northwest
Frontier Province of Pakistan, and many Pushtuns
living in Baluchistan (Iran and Pakistan). Major
Pushto speaking cities in Afghanistan are
Kandahar (Qandahar), Kabul; and Peshawar in
Pakistan. There are 8 million speakers of Pushto
in Afghanistan (50% of the population) and almost
9 million in Pakistan (13% of the population).
Alternate Names: Pashto, Pukhto Afghani
Number of Speakers: Approximately 17 million
KeyDialects:Eastern, Western Central,
SouthernGeographical Center: Northeastern
Afghanistan Northwest Frontier Province,
Pakistan. These are the areas where Poshtu is
spoken
LINGUISTIC AFFILIATION
Pushto is one of the East Iranian group of
languages, which includes, for example, Ossete
(North Ossetian, south Ossetian, Caucusus Soviet
Socialist Republic) and Yaghnobi
(Tajikistan).East Iranian and West Iranian (which
includes Persian) are major sub-groups of the
Iranian group of the Indo Iranian branch of the
Indo European family of languages. Indo-Iranian
languages are spoken in a wide area stretching
from portions of eastern Turkey and eastern Iraq
to western India (see Crystal 1987 and Payne
1987). The other main division of Indo- Iranian,
in addition to Iranian, is the Indo-Aryan
languages, a group comprised of many languages of
the Indian subcontinent including Sanskrit,
Hindi/Urdu,
Bengali, Gujerati, Panjabi, and Sindhi.
LANGUAGE VARIATIONT
here are two major dialects of Pashto: Western
Pashto spoken in Afghanistan and in the capital,
Kabul, and Eastern Pashto spoken in northeastern
Pakistan. Most speakers of Pashto speak these two
dialects. Two other dialects are also
distinguished: Southern Pashto, spoken in
Baluchistan (western Pakistan and eastern Iran)
and in Kandahar, Afghanistan; Central Pashto
spoken in northern Pakistan (Wazirstan).The
variation in spelling of the language's name
(Pashto, Pukhto, etc.) stems from the different
pronunciations in the various dialects of the
second consonant in the word; for example, it is
a retroflex [sh] in the Kandahari dialect, and a
palatal fricative in the Kabuli dialect. The
major dialect divisions themselves have numerous
variants. In general, however, one speaker of
Pashto readily understands another. The Central
and Southern dialects are more divergent. The
Kandahari dialect is reflected in the spelling
system, and is
considered by some to be the "standard"
for that reason.
ORTHOGRAPHY
Pushto has been written in a variant of the
Persian script (which in turn is a variant of
Arabic script) since the late sixteenth century.
Certain letters were modified to account for
sounds specific to Pushto. Until the spelling
system was standardized in the late eighteenth
century, the representation of these consonants
varied greatly. The Pushto alphabet, which has
more vowel sounds than either Persian or Arabic,
represents the vowels more extensively than
either the Persian or the Arabic alphabets. With
the adoption of Pushto as a national language of
Afghanistan, some revisions of the spelling
system have been made
in the interest of clarity. In Pakistan, the
classical spelling standard is not always
followed. There is a tendency to substitute the
Urdu forms of letters.
LINGUISTIC SKETCH
Pushto has a seven vowel system. There are
retroflex consonants sounds pronounced with the
tongue tip curled back--which were presumably
borrowed from nearby Indo-Aryan languages. Unlike
other Iranian languages, such as Persian, Pushto
allows consonant clusters of two or three sounds
at the beginning of a syllable.Pushto
distinguishes two grammatical genders as well as
singular and plural. There are generally two
nominal cases
in Pushto, although the vocative case is still
used with singular nouns. Case is marked both
with suffixes and with changes in the vowel of
the noun stem and stress. Verbs agree with their
subjects in person, number, and grammatical
gender as well as being marked for tense/aspect.
Past tense transitive sentences are formed as
ergatives: in these, the object rather than the
subject agrees with the verb, and weak pronoun
objects rather than subjects are omitted if they
are not emphatic. Word order, which is very
rigid, is subject-object-verb.A high number of
words in Pakistani Pushto are borrowed from Urdu,
which is to be expected given that the majority
of Pashtuns in the Northwest Frontier
Province of Pakistan speak at least some Urdu. As
the language of an Islamic people, Pushto also
contains a high number of borrowings from Arabic;
among educated speakers, the Arabic plurals of
borrowed nouns are frequently maintained.
ROLE IN SOCIETY
In Afghanistan, Pushto is second in prestige to
Dari, the Persian dialect spoken natively in the
north and west. Because of the political power of
the Pushtuns, however, Pushto has been a required
subject in Dari medium schools, and as an
official language has been one of the languages
of the government. For practical purposes,
however, Dari is the language of business and
higher education, and so Pushtuns learn Dari.
Very few Dari speakers have a good command of
Pushto. In Pakistan, Pushto has no official
status; it is not taught in schools and Pushtun
children learn Urdu as their language of
education and activities outside the home.Pushto
has an extensive written tradition. There are a
number of classic
Pushtun poets, most notably Khosal Khan Khattak.
Modern Pushtun written literature has adapted
those modern western literary forms, like the
short story, that match forms from traditional
Pushto oral literature. Pushtun folk literature
is the most extensively developed in the region.
Besides stories set to music, Pushtun has
thousands of two and four line folk poems,
traditionally composed by women. These reflect
the day to day life and views of Pushtun women.
HISTORY
The first written records of Pushto are believed
to date from the sixteenth century and consist of
an account of Shekh Mali's conquest of Swat. In
the seventeenth century, Khushhal Khan Khatak,
considered the national poet of Afghanistan, was
writing in Pushto. In this century, there has
been a rapid expansion of writing in journalism
and other modern genres which has forced
innovation of the language and the creation of
many new words.Traces of the history of Pushto
are present in its vocabulary. While the majority
of words can be traced to Pushto's roots as
member of the Eastern Iranian language branch, it
has also borrowed words from adjacent languages
for over two thousand years. The oldest
borrowed words are from Greek, and date from the
Greek occupation of Bactria in third century BC.
There are also a few traces of contact with
Zoroastrians and Buddhists. Starting in the
Islamic period, Pushto borrowed many words from
Arabic and Persian. Due to its close geographic
proximity to languages of the Indian
sub-continent, Pushto has borrowed words from
Indian languages for centuries. Pushto has long
been recognized as an important language in
Afghanistan and Pakistan. Classical Pushto was
the object of
study by British soldiers and administrators in
the nineteenth century and the classical grammar
in use today dates from that period.In 1936,
Pushto was made the national language of
Afghanistan by royal decree. Today, Dari Persian
and Pushto both are official national languages.
ACADEMIC RESOURCES
Pushto is taught at very few universities in the
United States and Canada. The most consistent
program offered is at the Diplomatic Language
Services in Arlington, Virginia.
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