Online Encyclopedia

PUSHTU

Online Encyclopedia
Originally appearing in Volume V22, Page 669 of the 1911 Encyclopedia Britannica.
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PUSHTU  , the

language of the
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Pathan races of
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Afghanistan and the North-West Frontier province of India . It belongs to the Iranian
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group of the Indo-
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European
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languages, but possesses many Panjabi words . In Afghanistan it is the dominant language, but is not spoken west of the
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Helmund . In India it has two main dialects, the
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northern, hard or Pukhtu, and the
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southern, soft or Pushtu . The dividing
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line of the two dialects runs eastwards from Thal through the
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Kohat
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district almost to the
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Indus, but it then turns northwards, as the speech of the Akhora Khattaks belongs to the Pushtu or southern dialect . Thus Pukhtu is spoken in Bajour,
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Swat and
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Buner, and by the Yusufzais,
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Bangash, Orakzais, Afridis and Mohmands; while Pushtu is spoken by the Waziris, Khattaks, Marwats and various minor tribes in the south . The language division corresponds roughly with the tribal
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system of the Pathans, who are aristocratic in the north and democratic in the south . The classical dialect of Pukhtu is that of the Yusufzais, in which the earliest
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works in the language were composed . The
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Orakzai dialect differs from that of the Afridis, in that it is broader but less guttural and spoken more rapidly . The standard dialect is that of
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Peshawar . The literature is richest in
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poetry, Abdur Rahman, of the 17th century, being the best-known poet . Pushtu was spoken in the North-West Frontier province in 19o1 by 1,142,011 persons, or 54% of the population .

See Grierson, Linguistic Survey of India; Roos-

Keppel,
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Manual of Pushtu (1901); Lorimer, Grammar of Waziri Pushtu (1902) .

End of Article: PUSHTU
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