Results 1 to 10 of about 148 (117)

Percentage of Consonants Correct for 3-5 Years Old Kurdish-Speaking Children With Middle Kurmanji-Mukryani Dialect [PDF]

open access: yesIranian Rehabilitation Journal, 2018
Objectives: The present research aims to study the normal development of Percentage of Consonant Correct (PCC) in Kurdish-speaking children, with Middle Kurmanji-Mukryani Dialect as an Articulation Competency Index (ACI). PCC was examined in terms of the
Talieh Zarifian   +2 more
exaly   +5 more sources

Language planning in Diaspora: the Case of the Kurdish Kurmanji Dialect

open access: yesEesti ja Soome-ugri Keeleteaduse Ajakiri, 2011
In this paper, we study a particular case of language planning in Diaspora through the activities of the Committee for Standardization of Kurdish Kurmanji dialect spoken by the majority of Kurds living in Turkey, in Syria and by part of the Kurds living ...
Salih Akin
doaj   +4 more sources

Mutual intelligibility of a Kurmanji and a Zazaki dialect spoken in the province of Elazığ, Turkey [PDF]

open access: yesApplied Linguistics Review, 2021
AbstractWe present the first results of a large project concerned with the mutual intelligibility between Zazaki and Kurmanji dialects spoken in Eastern Anatolia. There is an ongoing debate on the classification of Kurmanji and Zazaki as separate languages or as dialects of the same language, Kurdish.
Fatih Özek   +2 more
openaire   +4 more sources

A Survey on Relative Clause Construction in Kurmanji [PDF]

open access: yesمطالعات زبان‌‌ها و گویش‌های غرب ایران, 2020
Relative clause construction in Iranian languages appears mainly in sentences as a subordinate clause and acts as a describer for the preceding noun. Following Dixon's (2010) framework, our aim in this paper is to study and describe the relative clause ...
Shaho Majidi, Mehrdad Naghzguy-Kohan
doaj   +2 more sources

The Antiquity of Kurmanji Kurdish and the Biblical Book of Nahum

open access: yesPrizren Social Science Journal, 2021
The biblical Book of Naḥūm explains the way HaShem (The Name) deals with Evil. An inner biblical interpretive technique is used to reach this meaning, a technique inconsistent with the method of the rest of the Hebrew Bible.
Hasan KARACAN, Aviva BUTT
doaj   +3 more sources

Kurdish Kurmanji Lemmatization and Spell-checker with Spell-correction

open access: yesUHD Journal of Science and Technology, 2023
There are many studies about using lemmatization and spell-checker with spell-correction regarding English, Arabic, and Persian languages but only few studies found regarding low-resource languages such as Kurdish language and more specifically for ...
Hanar Hoshyar Mustafa, Rebwar M. Nabi
doaj   +3 more sources

Case Morphemes in the Kurmanji and Hawrami Dialects

open access: yesGovarî Zankoî Germîan, 2023
Rokan Muhammad, Salem Aziz
exaly   +2 more sources

Central Kurdish Dialect and Its Various Names: New Considerations

open access: yesپژوهشنامه ادبیات کردی, 2022
The Kurdish dialects are known by various names such as Kurmanji, Sorani, Kalhuri, etc. Some of them are named after their speakers’ tribe, region, or city, such as Jafi, Sourchi, Khoshnawi, Sulaymaniyaie, Arbili, Garmiani, etc.
Sudad Rasool
doaj   +1 more source

Investigating the Factors of Sustainability of Arabic Words in Kurmanji Kurdish: A Case Study of the Kurds of Urmia and North West Azerbaijan

open access: yesپژوهشنامه ادبیات کردی, 2022
As a social phenomenon, language change is a normal and inevitable process whose speed hinges upon a myriad of intra-lingual and extra-lingual factors. Despite the resistance and resolve of the Kurdish people against the cultural and linguistic changes ...
Hasan Esmailzade Bavany   +1 more
doaj   +1 more source

From Nazism to Pro‐Kurdish Activism: The International Society Kurdistan, Silvio van Rooy and the struggle against communism in the 1960s and 1970s

open access: yesStudies in Ethnicity and Nationalism, Volume 23, Issue 3, Page 266-282, December 2023., 2023
Abstract Kurdish studies was born as a field of study in imperial Russia, and for much of the twentieth century, the Soviet Union remained the centre of ‘Kurdology’. With the foundation of the International Society Kurdistan (ISK) in Amsterdam in 1960, however, this centre started to move westwards.
Adnan Çelik, Joost Jongerden
wiley   +1 more source

Home - About - Disclaimer - Privacy