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It is hardly an overstatement to say that Soviet linguists had a
monopoly over Tajik linguistics before the dissolution of the
Soviet Union, when most studies on the language were accessible
exclusively through Russian and Tajik. Today, however, linguists
dealing with Tajik are diverse not only in terms of their location
but also in terms of their disciplinary orientation within
linguistics, making it difficult for the general linguist to work
out the state of the art of the linguistic study of Tajik. This
volume aims to address this difficulty by collecting in a handbook
format recent (post-Soviet) developments in the study of Tajik that
now lie scattered in different subdisciplines of linguistics. The
volume thus showcases the state of the art of post-Soviet Tajik
linguistics and can be used as a guide for linguists interested in
the language.
This study is the first to introduce evidentiality to the stylistic
analysis of literary works, specifically that of the great Persian
writer Sa'di, focused on how he used linguistic means to illustrate
a real or ideational world. The authors begin by introducing the
concept of evidentiality; its definition, its coding in Persian,
the rationale behind evidentiality analysis, and semantic-pragmatic
functions of evidentiality. The book highlights how evidentiality
can be accounted for as a stylistic device to reveal the validity
of a narration, as well as the author's commitment and contribution
to it. Three of Sa'di's major works are analysed - Bustan, Golestan
and Sonnets - using Krippendoff's frequency approach. It is argued
that Sa'di deployed an array of evidentials in his work, from
direct visual evidentials in Golestan and Sonnets to heard and
quoted evidentials in Bustan. To illustrate this, the book includes
translations of Sa'di's poetry and prose. In addition, the authors
consider historical and contemporary manifestations of the Persian
narrative style, as well as exploring the cultural concerns of the
Persian speech community. The book will be appeal to general
linguists, practitioners of pragmatics and stylistics, literary
critics, and those interested in contrastive analysis of literature
and cultural studies.
The Iranian languages are one of the world's major language
families. With an estimated 150 to 200 million native speakers,
these languages constitute the western group of the larger
Indo-Iranian family, which represents a major eastern branch of the
Indo-European languages. Geographically, the Iranian Languages are
spoken from Central Turkey, Syria and Iraq in the West to Pakistan
and western edged of Xinjiang Uygur Autonomous Region of China in
the east. Iranian languages have long been among the major
interests of the philologists and general linguists, and European
scholars have made tremendous contributions to the study of this
language family. In light of such efforts, now we know that the
Iranian languages can be historically divided into three phases,
that are old, middle and new Iranian languages, and the new Iranian
languages may be generally grouped as Eastern and Western. In
recent years, the orientation towards typology has led to the
appearance of somewhat more ponderance on the subject but the work
has not included description of some of the very important
languages of the Caspian, and or of the religious minorities (such
as those of the Zoroastrians or the Jewish community), of the
four-fold Central Plateau dial.
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