Khalaj language

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Khalaj
Spoken in: Iran 
Region: Northeast of Arak in Markazi Province of Iran
Total speakers: 42,107 (2000)
Language family: Altaic[1] (controversial)
 Turkic
  Arghu
   Khalaj
Language codes
ISO 639-1: none
ISO 639-2: tut
ISO 639-3: klj

Khalaj is a language spoken primarily in Iran and Afghanistan. It belongs to the Turkic family of languages. There were approximately 42,000 speakers of this language as of 2000.

Contents

Khalaj has traditionally been classified with Turkoman or Azerbaijani dialects, primarily because of its proximity to those languages. However, features such as preservation of three vowel lengths, preservation of word-initial Proto-Turkic *h, and lack of the sound change *d > y has led to a non-Oghuz classification of Khalaj. An example of these archaisms is present in the word hadaq, which has preserved the initial *h and medial *d. The equivalent form in nearby Oghuz dialects is ayaq. Because of the preservation of these archaic features, some scholars have speculated that the Khalaj are the descendants of the Arghu Turks.

Khalaj is spoken mainly in Markazi Province in Iran. Doerfer cites the number of speakers as approximately 17,000 in 1968; the Ethnologue reports that the population of speakers grew to 42,107 by 2000.

The main dialects of Khalaj are Northern and Southern. Within these dialect groupings, individual villages and groupings of speakers have distinct speech patterns.

Consonant phonemes
  Labial Alveolar Palatal or
postalveolar
Velar Uvular Glottal
Stops and
affricates
p b t d ʧ ʤ k ɡ q ɢ    
Fricatives f v s z ʃ ʒ x ɣ     h  
Nasals m n     ŋ        
Flap/Tap     ɾ                
Lateral     l                
Approximant       j            

Khalaj vowels

Vowels in Khalaj occur in three lengths: long (qn "blood"), half-long (bʃ "head"), and short (hat "horse"). Additionally, some vowels are realized as falling diphthongs, as in quo̯l "arm, sleeve".

Nouns in Khalaj may receive a plural marker or possessive marker. Cases in Khalaj include genitive, accusative, dative, locative, ablative, instrumental, and equative.

Forms of case suffixes change based on vowel harmony and the consonants they follow. Case endings also interact with possessive suffixes. A table of basic case endings is provided below:

Case Suffix
Nominative -
Dative -A, -KA
Accusative -I, -NI
Locative -čA
Ablative -dA
Instrumental -lAn, -lA, -nA
Equative -vāra

Verbs in Khalaj are inflected for voice, tense, aspect, and negation. Verbs consist of long strings of morphemes in the following array:

Stem + Voice + Negation + Tense/Aspect + Agreement

Khalaj employs Subject Object Verb word order. Adjectives precede nouns.

The core of Khalaj vocabulary is Turkic, but many words have been borrowed from Persian. Words from neighboring Turkic dialects, namely, Azerbaijani have also made their way into Khalaj.

Khalaj numbers are Turkic in form, but some speakers replace the forms for "80" and "90" with Persian terms:

  • 1 - biː
  • 2 - æk.ki
  • 3 -
  • 4 - tœœɾt
  • 5 - bie̯ʃ
  • 6 - al.ta
  • 7 - jæt.ti
  • 8 - sæk.kiz
  • 9 - toq.quz
  • 10 - uo̯n
  • 20 - ji.iɾ.mi
  • 30 - hot.tuz
  • 40 - qiɾq
  • 50 - æl.li
  • 60 - alt.miʃ
  • 70 - yæt.miʃ
  • 80 - saʲ.san (Turkic), haʃ.taˑd (Persian)
  • 90 - toqx.san (Turkic), na.vad (Persian)
  • 100 - jyːz
  • 1000 - min, miŋk

Excerpt from Dorfer & Tezcan (1994) p. 158-9
Translation IPA
Once, Mullah Nasreddin had a son. biː ki.niː mol.laː nas.ɾæd.diː.niːn oɣ.lu vaːɾ-aɾ.ti
He said, "Oh Father, I want a wife." hay.dɨ ki "æj baː.ba, mæn ki.ʃi ʃæj.jo.ɾum"
He said, "My dear, we have a cow; take this cow and sell it. Come, with the proceeds, we will buy you a wife! hay.dɨ ki "bɒː.ba bi.zym biː sɨ.ɣɨ.ɾɨ.myz vaːɾ, je.tib̥ bo sɨ.ɣɨ.ɾɨ saː.tɨ, naɣd ʃæj.i puˑ.lĩn, jæk biz sæ̃ ki.ʃi al.duq

  1. ^ "[1] Ethnologue"
  • Doerfer, Gerhard (1971). Khalaj Materials. Bloomington: Indiana University Press. 
  • Doerfer, Gerhard (1998). Grammatik des Chaladsch. Wiesbaden: Harrassowitz. 
  • Doerfer, Gerhard & Tezcan, Semih (1994). Folklore-Texte der Chaladsch. Wiesbaden: Harrassowitz. 
  • Johanson, Lars & Csató, Éva Ágnes (1998). The Turkic Languages. London: Routledge. 
v  d  e
Turkic languages
Oghur Bulgar† | Chuvash | Hunnic† | Khazar† | Turkic Avar†
Uyghur Old Turkic† | Aini²| Chagatay† | Ili Turki | Lop | Uyghur | Uzbek
Kypchak Altay | Baraba | Bashkir | Crimean Tatar¹ | Cuman† | Karachay-Balkar | Karaim | Karakalpak | Kazakh | Kipchak† | Krymchak | Kumyk | Kyrgyz | Nogai | Old Tatar† | Tatar | Urum¹
Oghuz Afshar | Azerbaijani | Crimean Tatar¹ | Gagauz | Khorasani Turkic | Ottoman Turkish† | Pecheneg† | Qashqai | Salar | Turkish | Turkmen | Urum¹
Arghu Khalaj
Northeastern Chulym | Dolgan | Fuyü Gïrgïs | Khakas | Shor | Tofa | Tuvan | Western Yugur | Sakha/Yakut
Notes: ¹Listed in more than one group, ²Mixed language, ³Disputed, †Extinct
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