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Topic: Pamirian


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  Red Cross Red Crescent - News
The environment is different, the culture, the traditions, the religion, even the language is not the same as in the rest of the country.
But March 8 is a favourite holiday with Pamirian women, who have to bear many family burdens.
Pamirian houses are traditionally built of mud bricks without any partitions inside - just the supporting pillars around the lower central part where the stove stands, while the upper sides serve as beds at night and as benches around the stove during the day.
www.ifrc.org /docs/news/02/031001   (1172 words)

  
 [No title]
tietze "the lingua franca in the levant..." >BULGUR - groats, BALGUR (‘groats, croup’) Pamirian > grits [RPDS, 311] turk.
leng "lame" >MADZHUN - a From the Pamirian/Persian Pamirian > treacle, molasses MAZH (‘a honey’) + the > Pamirian suffix -UN.
AKHbR - a Identical to the Persian AKHAR Pamirian > stable [SIJa, 58] and the Pamirian > AKHOR turk.
www.kroraina.com /sci_lang/445882362.txt   (1945 words)

  
 Old Bulgar words - U-KH
Similar to the Persian FISTAN (‘a woman’s dickey, a plastron’) and the Pamirian PEST
KHAVRA — a virgin land (in the district of Balchik)
SH (‘a hero, a brave man; a close friend’) — Pamirian.
members.tripod.com /~Groznijat/b_lang/bl_u_kh.html   (288 words)

  
 [No title]
Compare to the Pamirian JUR ('to tune a musical instrument') [GASK, 364] ------------------------------------------------------------------------- DOJKA - a wet-nurse The Bulgarian etymological dictionary [BER] correctly connected it with DOJA ('to suckle; to milk'), not providing, however, any direct parallels from other l-s.
Ela - kaj!" Identical to the Pamirian KE [GASK, 368] ------------------------------------------------------------------------ KARAM SE - to scold; tp quarrel with s.o.
At first glance, it seems to be same as the Slavic (Bulgarian as well) word MUKHA ('a fly'), but in Persian, in the Pamirian l-s the bees are called MUSH.
www.kroraina.com /sci_lang/461030967.txt   (1087 words)

  
 Phonetic model of the old Bulgar language
It occurs mainly in the Pamirian languages, for example — in the Ishkashimi and Jazguljami, in which KH frequently substitutes the K or G sounds of other Indo-European languages.
A similar frequency picture is characteristic for the Pamirian languages — in them I is the most frequent vowel, while E and U are the rarest.
The reason for that is the frequent use in the Pamirian languages of the suffixes -I and -GI.
www.kroraina.com /b_lang/bl_phonet.html   (869 words)

  
 KAILAS RECORDS :: "Shams" with Muboraksho   (Site not responding. Last check: 2007-10-16)
Such is indeed the case of CD recorded by the Pamirian outfit Shams ("Sun") with leading vocals by Muborakshoh.
This group has long become classical in the East; however, it is almost unfamiliar to Russian audiences with rare exception of musical highbrows from St. Petersburg and Moscow.
This music conceals the essence of Pamirian soul, the charms of Snow Mountains, the purity of mountain streams, dazzling sunshine and deep-blue sky.
www.kailas-records.ru /en/view_release.phtml?rel=28   (194 words)

  
 Old Bulgar words from VI-X c. AD sources
Shupor — a flying mouse, a bat (Pamirian, Talish)
Tuba — a vow, a pledge (Pamirian, Eastern Caucasian)
DALAT — the name of the valuable pelts, with which the Volga Bulgars paid their taxes.
members.tripod.com /~Groznijat/b_lang/bl_oldwords.html   (1763 words)

  
 Old Bulgar words - ZH-I
In Chuvash (Middle Volga) the same word is preserved as CAKHAR (SAKHAR), a legacy from the Volga Bulgars.
Probably these words were derived from the Pamirian word for ‘reddish’ — ZANGOR, leading to ZANGOR for ‘millet’.
That is, ZHITO was derived from the yellow colour of the wheat grains.
groznijat.tripod.com /b_lang/bl_zh_i.html   (465 words)

  
 bulgars - Article and Reference from OnPedia.com   (Site not responding. Last check: 2007-10-16)
Bulgars (also Bolgars or proto-Bulgarians) a people of Central Asia, probably originally Pamirian, whose branches became Slavicized and perhaps Turkic over time.
The Turkic etymology most often given for their name is Bulgha meaning sable and is of totemistic origin.
Tribes thought to have been Bulgaric in origin include:
www.onpedia.com /encyclopedia/Bulgars   (606 words)

  
 Old Bulgar words - R-T
The meaning of this expression is clear from one already dissappeared old Bulgar term — SURF, which meant "holy, blessed".
Compare to the Pamirian SURKH (‘fair’) and the Armenian SURB (‘sacred’)
Compare to the Pamirian TEGAR (‘a beam, a joist’)
groznijat.tripod.com /b_lang/bl_r_t.html   (473 words)

  
 The Geographical Journal: Ethnic minorities and marginality in the Pamirian Knot: survival of Wakhi and Kirghiz in a ...   (Site not responding. Last check: 2007-10-16)
The Geographical Journal: Ethnic minorities and marginality in the Pamirian Knot: survival of Wakhi and Kirghiz in a harsh environment and global contexts.@ HighBeam Research
In contrast, it is shown that exchange relations in all walks of life have been affected not only recently but for nearly two centuries in Central Asia, although the continued importance of subsistence strategies in the agricultural sector can be observed.
The Pamirian Knot provides the mountainous interface between South and Central Asia for case studies...
highbeam.com /library/doc0.asp?docid=1G1:109443135&refid=ink_tptd_mag   (202 words)

  
 PashtunFoundation.org
Those languages that are spoken by significant minorities (e.g.
the Pamirian languages) should be taught and studied in universities and must be preserved as a national and universal cultural asset.
The government ought to conduct Secondary and higher education in both Pashto and Dari in those Public schools where education is subsidized but the other languages should be allowed in private schools.
en.pashtunfoundation.org /bodytext.php?request=186   (1740 words)

  
 Vitasta Annual Number: A Kashmir Sabha, Kolkata Publication
They have arrived at the conclusion that Iranvaej was the region now called Iran extending from the Pamirian Mountains in the east to the Caucasus (koh-e-kaff) in the west.
The cold region of eastern Iranvaej, therefore, should be the Pamirian- Badakhshan mountain region and what the Gathas say confirms the rise of Zoroaster in this region.]
Incidentally it may be mentioned that the first ever state raised by the Aryans in cis-Oxus region was in the same mountainous region to which the Greek historian.
www.vitasta.org /2000/6.11.html   (7545 words)

  
 Untitled Document   (Site not responding. Last check: 2007-10-16)
Geographically, it ranges from the Caucasus and the Urals all the way to China; chronologically, it spans the time from the onset of the Bronze Age (ca.
Pamirian group and Yagnobi which is a direct descendant of Sogdian), dead Tocharian A and B, Tangut (the written language of the Xixia empire mostly studied by Japanese and Russian scholars in the last decades) etc.
We will attempt to clarify the notion of the "Eurasian" linguistic unity (Sprachbund) in both its genetic and typological aspects.
www.humnet.ucla.edu /cmrs/Courses/course_main_gradspring03.htm   (1208 words)

  
 Pameroon - aaaaaaaa aaaaaadd aaaaghhh aaaahhhh aaahhhhh aabdhody aabenraa
paludrine palule palulus palus palustral palustrian palustrine paly palynology pambanmanche pament pameroon pamir pamiri pamirian pamlico pamment pampa
We will be ministering in the upper Pameroon area of Guyana and also we will be conducting training in our southern region.
paludrin palumbos palustra paluszek palvalue palvelin palvelua palvelun palvelut palzkill pamatuju pamcrash pamelina pameroon pamiller pamirian pamitran
scoutwide.com /?q=pameroon   (223 words)

  
 British Academy PORTAL - Etymological Table Dictionaries: Indoeuropean Languages (African and Oriental Studies)   (Site not responding. Last check: 2007-10-16)
This site provides etymological dictionaries in table form for a variety of ancient and less-widely-spoken languages
etymology; Indoeuropean languages; Turkic languages; Turkmen; Cuvash; Gagauz; Karachai; Kumyk; Azeri; Tatar; Kazakh; South Alaic; Uzbek; Uygur; Tuvinian; Yakut; Khahassian; Kirghiz; Finno-Ugric languages; Veps; Mordrin; Estonian; Finnish; Lappish; Mari; Komi; Udmurt; Hungarian; Khanty; Mansi; Iranian languages; Ossetian; Yagnobian; Kurdish; Talishian; Gilanian; Persian; Pushtu; Yazgulam; Pamirian; Sarykolian
If this resource is not what you are looking for, please go to the PORTAL search screen and try another search
www.britac.ac.uk /portal/resource.asp?ResourceID=591   (123 words)

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