Dari
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Dari is a term used to denote one of several closely related Persian dialects spoken in what used to be Greater Khorasan:
- The official name for the Persian language in Afghanistan; see Dari (Afghanistan)
- One name used by Zoroastrians (the others being Gabri and Yazdi) to refer to the Northwestern Iranian language they speak; see Dari (Zoroastrian)
- Another name used to refer to the use of the Persian language in classical Persian poetry
The term Dari is usually said to derive from Pārsī-e Darbārī which means Persian of the (royal) courts. It developed at the royal courts of the Samanids (980 AD) in Central Asia and became the major language of Persia. Another theory is that comes from Dara, a word meaning 'valley', referring to the deep valleys of Khorasan, where the language developed.
[edit] External links
- Daré entry in the Encyclopædia Iranica