Linguistic Analysis of a Talmudic Narrative (Kiddushin 70a)
Azadeh
Ehsani-Chombeli
Concordia University
author
text
article
2019
per
The present work that fits in the recently flourished field of Irano-Talmudica, examines a Talmudic narrative (Qiddushin 70a) that includes a number of foreign words (non-Aramaic/non-Hebrew). This work aims to investigate the aforementioned words and analyze them philologically in order to identify the language or languages that were common in Sasanian Mesopotamia. There are a number of Pahlavi (Middle Persian) words in the narrative as well, and it worth mentioning that in some cases various pronunciations of certain Pahlavi words are attested. In conclusion, the presence of a common language like present-day Farsi that contains words borrowed from Semitic languages, Greek, etc. is being suggested.
Language Studies
IHCS
2099-8002
10
v.
2
no.
2019
1
15
https://languagestudy.ihcs.ac.ir/article_4984_27a57d0f17ae624a679dc610ea49944f.pdf
dx.doi.org/10.30465/ls.2019.4984
Study on the development of the Parthian script on Ecbatana SilverDrachmas
(51-228 AD)
Ameneh
Bishekolai
Student/ Iranian culture and languages department, faculty of literature and foreign languages, Islamic Azad university of science and research, Tehran, Iran
author
Farah
Zahedi
Assitant Professor of Ancient languages and culture of Iran
author
text
article
2020
per
Parthianswere Iranian kingswho ruled over this land for 475 years. Due to lack of sufficient written material from this era, coins are very useful resources for understanding the economic, cultural and artistic conditions of this period. By studying on coins with Parthian script, we could analyze the development and change in this script. Most of the coins with Parthian Pahlavi scripts and silver Parthian drachmas belong to 51-228 AD that makes the examination of these drachms minted in Ecbatana more significant. In this research we try to study the silver drachmas from Ecbatana which date from 51-228 AD, and examine the course of their evolution. This is possible by extracting Parthian script from the coins and then extracting all the characters of each coin and finally drawing up the timetable for changing characters. Silver drachmaswere the most prevalent coins and monetary units in the ancient world from the beginning of the 1st century AD, Ecbatana became the most important and sometimes the only city to mint drachmas. It is assumed that in the mint of Ecbatana, the engraver’s handwriting didn’t make a difference in different samples, which was confirmed by comparison of a number of coin samples in this study.
Language Studies
IHCS
2099-8002
10
v.
2
no.
2020
17
44
https://languagestudy.ihcs.ac.ir/article_4985_4bb66b492a1677682ee154b843c2d863.pdf
dx.doi.org/10.30465/ls.2020.4985
The Manifestations of Symbolism in Nima’s Poetry
Two Hermeneutics Views for the Poem of “It Is Night”
Fatemeh
Rakei
پژوهشکده زبانشناسی/ پژوهشگاه علوم انسانی و مطالعاتفرهنگی
author
text
article
2020
per
Employing symbols in Persian poetry traces back to old times. The symbolic poems besides their apparent meaning, possess hidden meaning too. Therefore, from very beginning to divulge these hidden meanings, certain efforts have been made. Nima Youshij is one of the prominent contemporary poets who under the influence of French Poets has shown a special interest in symbol and symbolism. “It is night” is one of the symbolic poems belonging to the years after 1937, when he has tried to send his messages and express his ideas to special social groups, because of the social and political suffocating conditions of his time. Due to its structure and the symbols like “night”, “cloud”, “wind” and “air” which are established natural symbols in Nima’s poetry, this poem has produced a symbolic condition, so that the interpreters by the help of newly hermeneutics findings could discover its meaning. In the present article, on the basis of the knowledge of hermeneutics, the writer has offered two possible hermeneutics views for the Nima’s “It Is Night”.
Language Studies
IHCS
2099-8002
10
v.
2
no.
2020
45
65
https://languagestudy.ihcs.ac.ir/article_4986_ea016d73cedc7589ac33e7b5906790cc.pdf
dx.doi.org/10.30465/ls.2020.4986
Study of word orders in sogdian text, the story of two snakes
zohre
zarshenas
d
author
Ali
Sabounchi
Institute for Humanities and Cultural Studies
author
text
article
2020
per
The present research is a study of word order in a manichaean sogdian text, the story of two snakes. This story is a parable that shows manichaean beliefs and faiths. Selected structure to Word order analysis of this present research is Dryer`s BDT. Dryer to analysis Relationships between Verb patterners and object patterners, offers Branching Direction Theory (BDT). According to the BDT, the word order correlations reflect a tendency for languages to be consistently right-branching or consistently left-branching. To study of word order in the story of two snakes, 28 features are standardized according to Dryers`s pairs of elements and Dabir-Moghaddam`s 24 features. 378 pairs of elements are found in this text, 199 pairs elements are left-branching and 179 pairs elements are right-branching. So according to BDT the word order correlations of this text reflect tendency to left-branching more than another one.
Language Studies
IHCS
2099-8002
10
v.
2
no.
2020
67
91
https://languagestudy.ihcs.ac.ir/article_4987_b56bb50406cb2a606673d0fbf422d4c5.pdf
dx.doi.org/10.30465/ls.2020.4987
A Morphemic Analysis of Story and its Metarules
hossein
safi pirloohe
Assistant Professor of Linguistics
Institute for Humanities and Cultural Studies
author
text
article
2019
per
The sequence of story events is more or less reasonably foreseeable from its very immergence. Barely does a reader enter a story world, while precluding any short-term outlook. Whatever the readerly oriented horizons of expectations might be, they should nonetheless be textually legitimized through morphemics, which is an autotelic constituent analysis of a narrative text in order to deduce thematic components of the story behind it. Story reading, in this futuristic sense, can be defined as a function of some utopian hermeneutics, both arousing from the reader's perfigurated vision, and reconfiguring it at the same time. Inquiring into such a regressive progression along with morphemic analysis of a number of Persian modern sample stories, this article aims to explore the dialectics of reading.
Language Studies
IHCS
2099-8002
10
v.
2
no.
2019
93
109
https://languagestudy.ihcs.ac.ir/article_4988_71098e9f5a1e52073b6dde33147e58bf.pdf
dx.doi.org/10.30465/ls.2019.4988
Adjective Predicates in Persian language
azadeh
mirzaei
Assistant professor, Allameh Tabataba
author
text
article
2019
per
There are two main approaches to the predicative function of the adjectives that precede the verb ‘to be’ and it`s equivalences; one which considers these adjectives as a non-verbal element of the compound verb and the other one assumes them as the subject complement. Studying the behavior of the adjectives in the Persian Proposition Bank and Persian Syntactic Dependency Treebank show that the adjectives that accompany the verbs ‘to be’ and it`s equivalences are generally divided into two categories: 1- Adjectives that take argument structure and can be called adjective predicates; 2. Adjectives that do not take argument structure. This study assumes that only the second group of adjectives is the subject complement. To prove this claim, two substitution and coordination tests were used to identify whether this adjective is an autonomous constituent or a part of a whole. Also, considering the semantic role of the subject in the sentences containing this group of adjectives and based on the list of compound verbs in the Persian language, the hypothesis of this study was tested. Accordingly, about half of the approximately eleven thousand subject complements reported in the Persian Syntactic Dependency Treebank should be viewed as the non-verbal element of the-compound-verb.
Language Studies
IHCS
2099-8002
10
v.
2
no.
2019
111
125
https://languagestudy.ihcs.ac.ir/article_4989_0ad11ce7268d822b3cc9cb199d40b1b9.pdf
dx.doi.org/10.30465/ls.2019.4989
An Anthropolinguistic Approach to the Comparative Analysis of Idioms Containing Religious Believes and Signs in Spanish and Persian languages
Touraj
Hesami
PhD Student of Linguistics, Islamic Azad University, Science and Research Branch, Tehran. Iran
author
Azita
Afrashi
Assistant Professor, Institute for Humanities and Cultural Studies
author
zahra
abolhasani chimeh
دانشیار زبانشناسی همگانی، پژوهشکده تحقیق و توسعه علوم انسانی (سمت)، تهران، ایران.
author
Beatriz Cristina
Salas Rafiee
Assistant Professor of Spanish, Department of Spanish Language, Islamic Azad University, North Tehran Branch
author
text
article
2019
per
The present research deals with the comparative analysis of idiomatization, based on the influence of religious beliefs and signs in Spanish and Farsi, in the framework of anthropolinguistic approach. The cultural issues and the impact of culture on language are dominated in this approach.Since idioms are inseparable part of folk knowledge, and the religious beliefs are among the most influential cultural elements, the authors aimed at comparing 5o idioms based on religious beliefs and signs, in Spanish and Farsi in order to analyze the impact of the cultural issues on how native speakers of Spanish and Persian idiomatizea common concept. Research results show both difference and similarity in idiomatization based on religious beliefs and signs in Spanish and Farsi.As these two cultures are both conceived in religious contexts, they make use of religious beliefs and signs for idiomatization. However, since Spanish culture employs concepts of Catholicism and Persian culture employs concepts of Shii, the referents of these concepts are different across the two languages.
Language Studies
IHCS
2099-8002
10
v.
2
no.
2019
1
30
https://languagestudy.ihcs.ac.ir/article_5063_9590353986e16b119955107e5daf760a.pdf
dx.doi.org/10.30465/ls.2019.5063
The effect of the current languages in khuzestan region on Mandaic lexicon
yahya
modarresi
Linguistics professor of IHCS
author
soheila
ahmadi
Department of Linguistics. faculty of linguistics. institute for humanities and cultural studies
author
text
article
2020
per
The present study investigates how much Mandaic language, spoken in Ahvaz, is lexically influenced. In order to collect data, field work and library method are used through interviews recorded from native speakers and then datas are checked in Mandaic dictionary, respectively.It is concluded that Persian, the official language of Iran, and Arabic, the most common language spoken in Khouzestan, are the most influencing languages, respectively.The loan words are not so different from the original ones in terms of semantic aspect whereas they are phonetically changed and these loan words are mostly used in the domain of things which are used in routine life
Language Studies
IHCS
2099-8002
10
v.
2
no.
2020
1
15
https://languagestudy.ihcs.ac.ir/article_5064_979086b715a4d9c9af787ede4a427a9e.pdf
dx.doi.org/10.30465/ls.2020.5064
A suggestion for re-interpretation of GWDAN Mint Marks on Arab -Sassanian Coins.
maryam
ansari
استادیارفرهنگ و زبانهای باستانی، دانشگاه آزاد اسلامی واحد بوشهر
author
text
article
2020
per
The buried remains of the ruins of Sar-Mashhad represent a great city that belonged to the Sassanian-Islamic era. In 1979, Whitcomb succeeded in identifying the ruins of the ancient city ofGhandijan in the south of Kazeroon and the historic route of Shiraz to Tawwaj. Today, it is definitely clear that Ghandijan is the same as Sar-Mashhad, which is 84km. south of Kazeroon. Considering the remains of the ancient site, it seems that this city had thrived during the Sassanid era, at the beginning of the Islamic era, and during the second and third centuries, but was emptied during the seventh and eight centuries. The purpose of this article is to provide another interpretation of the mint mark GWDAN on a number of Arab-Sassanian coins dating back to the reign of Calipha Umar ibnUbayd Allah ibnM’mar.. However, if this mint mark instead signifies GNDAN, then it would correspond to the ancient city of Ghandijan according to linguistic and archaeological evidences, which is located in the Pars province near the city of Tawwaj.
Language Studies
IHCS
2099-8002
10
v.
2
no.
2020
1
21
https://languagestudy.ihcs.ac.ir/article_5065_33777d3cb0dc8281d606daa4b3deded5.pdf
dx.doi.org/10.30465/ls.2020.5065
Rustam, Mithraʼs Soldier
Mohsen
Nazari Farsani
Department of Ancient Iranian Culture and Languages, Faculty of Literature and Humanities
author
text
article
2020
per
The narration collection which has been mentioned in Iranian national book is divided to the three main periods: myth, epic and historical. Rustam is the main hero in epic period of Shahnameh. His principal work is guardedness and maintenance to Iranian kingdom. Numerous valuable researches about various aspects of this deep character are done, but there is ambiguousness and questions about some of Rustamʼs characteristics, meaning of his name, some of his epithets, and some of his weapons, yet. In this paper a few of Rustamʼs characteristics and of his works is studied in epic and myth and linguistic sphere, and with pay attention to Rustam is a Scythian according to Shahnameh, his name and his tāj-baxš epithet and his armor named as babr i bayān is studied on the basis of Scythian language vocabulary. In addition, it is shown that Rustam has no relation and connection with Indra and Apām Napāt, but with Mithra.
Language Studies
IHCS
2099-8002
10
v.
2
no.
2020
1
19
https://languagestudy.ihcs.ac.ir/article_5066_297d529c3a80f6730167d574485dc96e.pdf
dx.doi.org/10.30465/ls.2020.5066
The Procedures and Structures of Coronation for Ruling women in Ancient Iran (550BC-651C
elham
ostadi
PhD student in Ancient Culture and Languages, Tehran University of Science and Research
author
katayoun
mazdapour
استاد فرهنگ و زبانهای باستانی ایران، پژوهشگاه علوم انسانی تهران، (نویسنده مسئول)،
author
text
article
2020
per
Main problem of this research was female rulers and their process of getting to power. The importance of this study was in historical point of view about women and also in the idea and circumstances of selecting heirs that became the basics of the political philosophy of next generations. In this way, the goal of the paper was to find favorable contexts and prerequisites to enthronement of a female ruler in ancient Iran that is based on this assumption that only a man from the royal dynasty could assume this position. According to this, these questions were answered that how a woman that had no legal right to assume this position, crowns as the queen of Iran and what contexts prepared such power transfer? This research was done by desk research and analyzing historical data. This way, it was specified that there was three sorts of exceptions in enthronement of women in ancient Iran: 1- a male ruler shared his kingdom with his wife 2- King’s wife (the queen) takes leverage and conspirates to assume the throne 3- Lack of any rightful and male regent that unevitably led to selecting a female ruler
Language Studies
IHCS
2099-8002
10
v.
2
no.
2020
1
24
https://languagestudy.ihcs.ac.ir/article_5067_fb857f5a6d9cf14d72a34c8ef8849aad.pdf
dx.doi.org/10.30465/ls.2020.5067
Typological Comparison of Relative Structures in Azerbaijani Turkish, Korean, Hungarian and Persian
Mohammad Hossein
Khani
PhD Student- Linguistics Department Shahid Beheshti University
author
Mahinnaz
Mirdehghan
Associate Professor of Linguistics, Shahid Beheshti University
author
text
article
2020
per
The purpose of this research is to answer this question: what are the similar and different typological features of Azerbaijani Turkish, Korean, Hungarian and Persian languages? In our analysis, we have used Chomsky`s Generative-Transformational Grammar and Government and Binding theory. We have studied the movement of the subject and object nominal phrases and the concept of the empty position. The results of the research show that the similarities between the relative structures of these languages are the existence of movement for the transformation of the deep-structure into the relative clause, also the formation of a chain between the head noun and the empty position in the clause. And the differences in the relative structures of these languages are; the relative clauses of Azerbaijani Turkish, Korean, and Hungarian are pre-nominal while in Persian it is post-nominal. Also, the movement of the head noun in the Azerbaijani Turkish, Korean, and Hungarian is to the right and the end of the sentence, but in Persian is to the left and the beginning of the sentence. Another significant difference is the transformation of the verb of the subordinate sentence to the participle in the Ural-Altaic languages while Persian relative clause is a finite one
Language Studies
IHCS
2099-8002
10
v.
2
no.
2020
1
23
https://languagestudy.ihcs.ac.ir/article_5854_f24ebfe45f4bbdfe2323289d3f9a8593.pdf
dx.doi.org/10.30465/ls.2020.5854