The Book of Abstracts of The First Annual International Conference on Languages, Dialects and Linguistics 2017.pdf (original) (raw)
Related papers
Academics and university lecturers are cordially invited to present their research in English, Arabic or Persian: The Third International Conference on Current Issues of Languages, Dialects and Linguistics Ahwaz, Iran, 31 January-1February, 2019 For more information, please visit the conference website: WWW.LLLD.IR Optional Services for Non-Iranian Nationality Presenters (If they wish to use) A) Free Accommodation: ((1) accommodation will be in the university hostel or guest house, (2) Accommodation will be for four days (30th & 31st January & 1st & 2nd February 2019, Wednesday, Thursday, Friday, Saturday). (3) Three or four participants will stay in each room). B) Free Transportation: All transportation from Ahwaz airport to the accommodation place, to the conference venue and vice versa will be free. C) Free Food: During 31st January & 1st February 2019 (Thursday, Friday) lunch and dinner will be free. D) Free Tour: One Day Shoustar Historical City Tour - 2nd February, 2019 (Saturday) will be free. E) Other Notable Free Services. (For the last year, the articles were received from more than 30 countries) Please feel free to write if there is any query. The Conference Secretariat, Pazhoheshgaran Andishmand Institute, Ahwaz 61335-4619 Iran Email: info@pahi.ir Tel: (+98) 61-32931199 Fax: (+98) 61-32931198 Mobile: (+98) 916-508-8772 WhatsApp Number: (+98) 916-776-5914
First International Conference on Aspects of Iranian Linguistics Organizing committee
Thursday 16 June ca. 19.30 informal get-together in the restaurant ALTE NIKOLAISCHULE (city center, opposite the Nikolai church) Friday 17 June 8.00-8.50 Registration Entrance Hall 8.50 Welcome remarks Lecture Hall Session I Chair: Martin Haspelmath 9.00-9.30 Don Stilo (Max Planck Institute for Evolutionary Anthropology) Two sets of mobile verbal clitics in Northern Talyshi.
1992
versity, Frankfurt am Main. Originally more than 100 abstracts were submitted to the conference, from which 36 were selected for oral presentations and 19 for poster presentations. A number of contributors to the conference subsequently submitted their papers for publication in this issue of Orientalia Suecana, and after the reviewing process, the seven papers below were finally selected for publication. The aim of the International Conferences on Iranian Linguistics is to provide a common venue for scholars from different disciplines, such as general linguistics, Iranian studies, and comparative Indo-European studies, who share a research focus on the Iranian languages. The first ICIL conference was held in Leipzig in 2005, and thereafter it has become a biannual event, hosted in turn by the University of Ham-burg (2007), the University of Sorbonne Nouvelle, Paris (2009), and Uppsala University (2011). Selections from two previous conferences have been published, Ka-rimi et al. (20...
Aspects of Iranian Linguistics
2009
Aspects of Iranian Linguistics introduces readers to recent research into various properties of a number of Iranian languages. The volume consists of twenty chapters that cover a full range of Iranian linguistics, including formal theoretical perspectives (from a syntactic and morphological point of view), typological and functional perspectives, and diachronic and areal perspectives. It also contains papers on computational linguistics and neurolinguistics, as well as the modern history of lexicography in Iran. Various Iranian languages are discussed in this volume, including Hawrami and Kermanji, two of the major dialects of Kurdish, Medival, Classical and Modern Persian, Balochi, Taleshi and Pamir. With the exception of Persian, other Iranian languages had not received much attention in the past. Thus this work, as the first volume ever published on various aspects of these languages and their linguistic properties, is a valuable contribution to our understanding of a less common...
Sociolinguistic Research into Iranian Languages 2023 final proofs with reference information
In The Routledge Handbook of Sociolinguistics Around the World, edited by Martin J. Ball, Rajend Mesthrie, and Chiara Meluzzi, 2nd ed., 259– 68. Abingdon, Oxon ; New York, NY: Routledge., 2023
The Iranian language sphere consists of three currently recognized “core” varieties, and a number of peripheral varieties that diverge significantly enough to be thought of as separate “languages.” The core varieties are Standard Modern Persian,1 Dari, and Tajik. Other Iranian languages spoken in Iran are Kurdish, of which there are several varieties; Baluchi; Luri; a number of other scattered regional varieties in Northern, Central, and Southern Iran (see Izadi, 2006). Further east are found Modern Sogdian, known today as Yaghnobi, and a variety of “Eastern Iranian languages,” including Nuristani, Pashto, Pasha’i. Included in these Eastern languages are also the languages of the Pamir mountains: Shugni (Shugnani), Yazgulami, Ishkashimi, and Wahkhi. This sociolinguistic overview focuses primarily on the three core varieties just mentioned, which serve as the primary language of communication throughout the Iranian language area.Though local speakers may know a regional variety, they are nearly universally bi- or multilingual, and communicate nationally, are educated in, and identify with Persian, Dari, or Tajik.