
Dimilí is closely related to Hewramí (Hawramani, Ewramani), a relationship indicative of a time when a single form of Pahlawâni was spoken throughout much of Kurdistan, when after the late classical period, Kurdistan was homogenized through massive internal migrations. At that time the domain of the Pahlawâni language was uninterrupted across Kurdistan. The main bodies of Dimilí- and Hewramí-speaking Kurds are now at the extreme opposite ends of Kurdistan.

What I am saying is Laki is under the Gorani language category

hevalo27 wrote:What I am saying is Laki is under the Gorani language category
no it isnt, i thought like you but it isnt.
with feyli i meaned laki, only for you i used feyli
i thought like you but it isnt.

hevalo27 wrote::lol: i give up

jjmuneer wrote:na na hevale heja, you misunderstand, let me explain. the linguists who say feyli is southkurdish, they simultaneously classifie hewrami and zazaki as non-kurdish. the mistake is that the word "kurd" was not the own name of them. persians and arabs used the word kurd as kollective name for iranic tribes with same and similar culture, manners who mixxed and lived together (ethnic kurds). if the linguistics speaks about kurdish, it mean in reality kurmanci and use it as synonymous, because they dont know it better. kurds himself never used in the past the word kurdish to describe any language, even today a kurmanc kurd says i am kurmanc and my language is kurmanci.
Fayli is nothing like Sorani espeically Kurmjani, there are some similarities but that is in all Kurdish dialects. Fayli(Ilami) which is under the Laki catergory is much more similar to Hewrami. You don't even understand laki yourself, neither could any other Sorani when I posted a we feyli video. Most scholars agree faylis(Pahlis) are the original descendants of the Parthians. We even have ancient town called Pahla in our region and many people in our tribe have old Parthian names. Well generally many Kurds in the region have old Parthian names, even the Soranis more North.

so why do you write soranis cant understand these we feyli programs (even if they do)? even i understand a little. 

jjmuneer wrote:If Hewrami isn't southern Kurdish aswell then what does this say?Other major dialects of Souther Kurdish Dialects group, besides Bajelaní, are Kelhirí, Guraní, Nankilí, Kendúley, Senjabí, Zengene, Kakayí (or Dargazini), and Kirmashaní. Today, there are roughly 1.5 mil'lion Southern Kurdish Dialects speakers in Kurdistan.


kurd-sthanam wrote:mubarak do you understand zazaki or hewrami? no. i bet nothing.so why do you write soranis cant understand these we feyli programs (even if they do)? even i understand a little.
please translate this hawrami song for us: http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=iq65eMmXt68&hl=en&fs=1&rel=0&hd=1
when you didnt heard zazaki here, translate this please: http://www.youtube.com/v/m3CZZ26UPnk please translate the conversation from 1:45
this is feyli spoken in ankara: http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=B4aiLzvY8qo
You post "sources", but you contradict yourself with what you post as source:
2. Background
Most researches on Laki dialect are on the basis of ethnological and archaeological grounds, among which the classification of Laki within the Kurdish language can be notified. In this regard and in representing the status of Laki the following triple categorization of Kurdish language has been stated by Tafaroji Yeganeh (2006), for instance, who classifies Laki as a Kermanshahi dialect, as represented below. His classification includes: 1) The Northern Kurmanji: including Bayzidi, Hakari, Ashity, Boutani and Badiani dialects; 2) The Southern Kurmanji: including the dialects of Makri, Sourani, Senehee (Sannandaji) and Soleymanieh; 3) The Kermanshahi: including Kalhori, Laki and Poshtkouhi dialects. Similarly, Yarkhazadi (1379) has asserted the following categorization which considers Laki as a Kermanshahi-Lori dialect. In his categories he considers: 1) Northern Kurdish (Kurmanji), 2) Southern kurdish (Soudani), 3) Gurani-Zazaee, and 4) Kermanshahi-Lori (which includes Kermanshahi, Lori, Phili, Laki and Bakhtiary dialects.
and please dont say you speak that language you posted.
Laki compared to sorani and hewrami:
hwardmon - xwardman - wardman
hwardton - xwardtan - wardtan
hwardon - xwardyan - wardshan

unitedkurdistan wrote:jjmuneer wrote:na na hevale heja, you misunderstand, let me explain. the linguists who say feyli is southkurdish, they simultaneously classifie hewrami and zazaki as non-kurdish. the mistake is that the word "kurd" was not the own name of them. persians and arabs used the word kurd as kollective name for iranic tribes with same and similar culture, manners who mixxed and lived together (ethnic kurds). if the linguistics speaks about kurdish, it mean in reality kurmanci and use it as synonymous, because they dont know it better. kurds himself never used in the past the word kurdish to describe any language, even today a kurmanc kurd says i am kurmanc and my language is kurmanci.
Fayli is nothing like Sorani espeically Kurmjani, there are some similarities but that is in all Kurdish dialects. Fayli(Ilami) which is under the Laki catergory is much more similar to Hewrami. You don't even understand laki yourself, neither could any other Sorani when I posted a we feyli video. Most scholars agree faylis(Pahlis) are the original descendants of the Parthians. We even have ancient town called Pahla in our region and many people in our tribe have old Parthian names. Well generally many Kurds in the region have old Parthian names, even the Soranis more North.
Are you sure about that? You know the video you posted about "We Feyli Speaking about Imam Mahdi" I understood alot of it and so did Kak Talsor. Fayli isn't as isolated from the other kurdish dialects as you may think . I do not consider Hawramis to be "Phali Kurds", I consider them to be kurds who speak a kurdish dialect that is very close to zazaki. They live in a area called Hawraman. I find no reason to merge any kurdish dialect or language at all, just ruins the beauty of kurdish language. What is most important is what the hawrami speakers think about it. So for me everything is good so there is no need for change anything except one thing and that is that we have to protect hawrami dialect in Kurdistan from vanishing.

hevalo27 wrote:jjmuneer wrote:If Hewrami isn't southern Kurdish aswell then what does this say?Other major dialects of Souther Kurdish Dialects group, besides Bajelaní, are Kelhirí, Guraní, Nankilí, Kendúley, Senjabí, Zengene, Kakayí (or Dargazini), and Kirmashaní. Today, there are roughly 1.5 mil'lion Southern Kurdish Dialects speakers in Kurdistan.
you misunderstand, if we in the western say gorani/gurani than we mean the kurdish hawrami. gurani we say in kurdistan to a southerndialect of the so called kurdish branch
look here, http://www.kurdishacademy.org/?q=node/159
Dimilí is closely related to Hewramí (Hawramani, Ewramani), a relationship indicative of a time when a single form of Pahlawâni was spoken throughout much of Kurdistan, when after the late classical period, Kurdistan was homogenized through massive internal migrations. At that time the domain of the Pahlawâni language was uninterrupted across Kurdistan. The main bodies of Dimilí- and Hewramí-speaking Kurds are now at the extreme opposite ends of Kurdistan.

jjmuneer wrote:I do not contridict myself, Laki is clearly in its seperate grouping.
By the way showing one word doesn't mean anything lol. I never say Feyli was isolate language, but its much closer to Hewrami.
Just give me a text or a video in Hewrami, I can translate most of it for you. Anyway I only showed that source for the beginning part. As Kirmanshahi and Fayli is not the same thing, Kirmanshahi is more similar to Sorani as I've stated before. I myself even have a hard time understanding Kirmanshahi, because A) Their accent B)They use different words.
I don't know why you want to connect our language to Sorani, we are own group and it should be said Hewrami is probably just an off-shoot of Pahli, except Pahli becamse corrupted. All I know is my tribe don't speak what you think we speak. I mean you can understand some of our words, sure I can understand also some of your words, but you can't understand most of it. I
In regards to Kak Talsor well he probably came in contact with Feylis before, as he stated he could understand is extensively.


kurd-sthanam wrote:jjmuneer wrote:I do not contridict myself, Laki is clearly in its seperate grouping.
By the way showing one word doesn't mean anything lol. I never say Feyli was isolate language, but its much closer to Hewrami.
Just give me a text or a video in Hewrami, I can translate most of it for you. Anyway I only showed that source for the beginning part. As Kirmanshahi and Fayli is not the same thing, Kirmanshahi is more similar to Sorani as I've stated before. I myself even have a hard time understanding Kirmanshahi, because A) Their accent B)They use different words.
I don't know why you want to connect our language to Sorani, we are own group and it should be said Hewrami is probably just an off-shoot of Pahli, except Pahli becamse corrupted. All I know is my tribe don't speak what you think we speak. I mean you can understand some of our words, sure I can understand also some of your words, but you can't understand most of it. I
In regards to Kak Talsor well he probably came in contact with Feylis before, as he stated he could understand is extensively.
i posted this hewrami video why did you not translate it? http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=iq65eMmXt68&hl=en&fs=1&rel=0&hd=1
kermanshahi and feyli are subdialects. hewrami is not feyli, hewrami is closer to sorani and zazaki. finish.



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