Tati language (Iran)

{{Short description|Northwestern Iranian language}}{{About|a Northwestern Iranian language spoken in Iran|the Southwestern Iranian language spoken in the Caucasus|Tat language (Caucasus)}}

{{Infobox language

| name = Tati

| nativename = Tâti
{{lang|tks|{{nq|تاتی زبون|tks}}}}

| states = Iran

| region =

| ethnicity = Tats

| speakers = {{sigfig|405,000|2}} Takestani speakers (2021)
{{sigfig|35,800|2}} Harzandi speakers

| date = 2021

| ref = e26

| familycolor = Indo-European

| fam2 = Indo-Iranian

| fam3 = Iranian

| fam4 = Western

| fam5 = Northwestern II

| fam6 = Old Azeri{{Cite web|url=http://www.iranicaonline.org/articles/azerbaijan-vii|title = Welcome to Encyclopaedia Iranica}}

| fam7 = Tatic

| script = Persian alphabet

| lc1 = tks

| ld1 = Takestani/Khalkhal

| lc2 = xkc

| ld2 = Kho'ini

| lc3 = hrz

| ld3 = Harzandi

| lc4 = rdb

| ld4 = Rudbari

| lc5 = esh

| ld5 = Eshtehardi

| lc6 = tov

| ld6 = Taromi

| lc7 = xkp

| ld7 = Kabatei

| map =

| mapcaption = Areas with Tati-speakers as mother tongue

| notice = IPA

| glotto = khoi1250

| glottoname = Kho'ini

| glotto2 = rama1272

| glottorefname2 = Ramand-Karaj

| glottoname2 = Takestani/Eshtehardi

| glotto3 = taro1267

| glottorefname3 = Taromic

| glottoname3 = Taromi/Kabatei

| glotto4 = rudb1238

| glottoname4 = Rudbari

| glotto5 = harz1239

| glottoname5 = Harzani-Kilit

| image = 200px

| imagecaption = Tati written in Nastaliq script (تاتی)

}}

The Tati language (Tati: {{lang|tks|تاتی زبون}}, Tâti Zobun)A Grammar of Southern Tati Dialects, Ehsan Yarshater, Median Dialect Studies I. The Hague and Paris, Mouton and Co., 1969. is a Northwestern Iranian language spoken by the Tat people of Iran which is closely related to other languages such as Talysh, Zaza,{{Cite web |title=Northwestern/Adharic/Zaza |url=https://glottolog.org/resource/languoid/id/zaza1246 |access-date=1 April 2024 |website=Glottolog}}{{Cite book |last=Henning |first=Walter Bruno |title=The Ancient Language of Azerbaijan |date= |publisher=Austin & Sons |year=1955 |pages=174-175}} Mazandarani and Gilaki.

Old Azeri

{{main|Old Azeri}}

Some sources use the term Old Azeri to refer to the Tati language as it was spoken in the region before the spread of Turkic languages, and is now only spoken by different rural communities in Iranian Azerbaijan (such as villages in Harzanabad area, villages around Khalkhal and Ardabil), and also in Zanjan and Qazvin provinces.Paul, Ludwig (1998a). The position of Zazaki among West Iranian languages. In Proceedings of the 3rd European Conference of Iranian Studies, 11-15.09.1995, Cambridge, Nicholas Sims-Williams (ed.), 163-176. Wiesbaden: Reichert.Andrew Dalby, Dictionary of Languages: the definitive reference to more than 400 languages, Columbia University Press, 2004, pg 496."Azari, the Old Iranian Language of Azerbaijan," Encyclopædia Iranica, op. cit., Vol. III/2, 1987 by E. Yarshater. External link: [http://www.iranicaonline.org/articles/azerbaijan-vii] Alongside with Tati dialects, Old Azeri is known to have strong affinities with Talysh and Zaza language. Tati, Zaza and Talysh are considered to be remnants of old Azeri.{{Cite web |title=Adharic |url=https://glottolog.org/resource/languoid/id/tati1243 |access-date=1 April 2024 |website=Glottolog}}{{Cite book |last=Henning |first=Walter Bruno |title=The Ancient Language of Azerbaijan |date= |publisher=Austin & Sons |year=1955 |pages=174-175}} Harzandi dialect that thought to be descendant of the Old Azeri language was positioned between the Talysh and Zaza.{{Cite book |last=Henning |first=Walter Bruno |title=The Ancient Language of Azerbaijan |date= |publisher=Austin & Sons |year=1955 |pages=174-175}}

Tati language structure

In any language, roots and verb affixes constitute the most basic and important components of a language. The root is an element included in all the words of a lexical family and carries the basic meaning of those lexical items. A verb affix is an element added to the root to form a new meaning.

In many new Iranian languages, verb affixes have been left almost unnoticed, and it will be possible, by the act of deriving roots, to clear up most of their structural and semantic ambiguities. Unlike the root, verb affixes can be easily identified and described. In many languages, verb affixes act as the base of verb formation and are often derived from a limited number of roots. Tati, Talysh, Mazandarani and Gilaki languages belong to North-western Iranian languages currently spoken along the coast of Caspian Sea. These languages which enjoy many old linguistic elements have not been duly studied from a linguistic perspective.Verb Roots and Affixes in Tâti, Tâleshi and Gilaki Dialects, Jahandust Sabzalipoor{{Original research inline|date=August 2019}}

In the field of phonetics Tati is similar to the rest of the north-western Iranian languages: it is distinguished by the persistence of Iranian *z, *s, *y-, * v- against the south-western d, h, j-, b-; development {{IPA|/ʒ/}} < * j, {{IPA|*/t͡ʃ/}} against the south-west z, and the preservation of intervocalic and postvocalic *r and even, for a number of dialects, development rhotacism.

In the field of morphology, Tati is less analytical in structure than the south-western Iranian languages. Having lost the ancient foundations of classes and verb, tati preserved case (two case: direct, or subjective, and oblique). It has a grammatical gender feature in many dialects and exhibits two gendersVardanian, A. (2016). Grammatical gender in New Azari dialects of Šāhrūd. Bulletin of the School of Oriental and African Studies, 79(3), 503 511.{{Cite web |last=Taherkhani |first=Neda |date=2017 |title=A Morpho-phonological Analysis of Vowel Changes in Takestani-Tati Verb Conjugations: Assimilation, Deletion, and Vowel Harmony |url=https://www.stonybrook.edu/commcms/nacil/pdfs/abstracts/NedaTaherkhani_NACIL1.pdf |access-date=April 3, 2024}}{{Cite journal |last=Sabzalipour |first=Jahandoost |last2=Delgarm |first2=Raheleh |date=2016 |title=اَرّانَ مخفیزبان جی دیلی قَرقَهیا نشین خلخال در مناطق تات (Arrānaji or Qarqahdili Argot in Tāti-Speaking Regions of Khalkhāl) |url=https://journals.pnu.ac.ir/article_3243_111a60a647cea191c7f3f90f8ef4ac6c.pdf |journal=Journal of Sociolinguistics |publisher=Payame Noor University}}{{Cite web |last=جهاندوست |first=جهاندوست |date=2013 |title=تمايز جنس مؤنث و مذكر در گويش تاتي خلخال |url=https://ensani.ir/file/download/article/20140318101408-9820-20.pdf |access-date=April 3, 2024 |website=پرتال جامع علوم انسانی (Comprehensive humanities portal) |language=Persian}} just like the Zaza.{{Cite book |last=Todd |first=Terry Lynn |url=http://www.zazaki.de/english/T.L.Todd-AGrammarofDimli.pdf |title=A Grammar of Dimili (also Known as Zaza) |publisher=Electronic Publication |year=2008 |pages=33 |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20120128213242/http://www.zazaki.de/english/T.L.Todd-AGrammarofDimli.pdf |archive-date=January 28, 2012 |url-status=dead}}

=Ergative in Tati language=

Tati is, like Zaza of the same linguistic branch, an ergative language, i.e. "with transitive verbs the subject/agent of the verb is expressed by the direct case in the present tenses, but by the oblique in the past tenses, whereas the direct object/patient in the present tenses is expressed by the oblique, but by the direct in the past".[http://www.iranicaonline.org/articles/estehardi Iranica entry on Eshtehārdi, one of Tati dialects]
Khalkhali is one of the Tati dialects spoken in Shahrood and Xorsh-rostam districts of Khalkhal. Khalkhali Tati is distinguished from other dialects producing ergative structures, because of the adherence of verb to semantic object, in number, person and specially in gender. Meanwhile, according to some evidence in this dialect, apart from past transitive verbs, some intransitive verbs are influenced by the ergative structure.Ergative in Tāti Dialect of Khalkhāl, Jahandust Sabzalipoor

Phonology

=Consonants=

The phonology is based on the Southern Tati dialects:{{Cite book|title=A grammar of southern Tati dialects|last=Yar-Shater|first=Ehsan|publisher=The Hague: Mouton|year=1969}}

class="wikitable" style="text-align:center"

! colspan="2" |

!Labial

!Dental/
Alveolar

!Palatal

!Velar

!Uvular

!Glottal

colspan="2" |Nasal

|{{IPA link|m}}

|{{IPA link|n}}

|

|

|

|

rowspan="2" |Plosive/
Affricate

!voiceless

|{{IPA link|p}}

|{{IPA link|t}}

|{{IPA link|t͡ʃ}}

|{{IPA link|k}}

|{{IPA link|q}}

|({{IPA link|ʔ}}){{efn|A glottal stop /{{IPA|ʔ}}/ may only appear after some elongated vowel sounds, and is likely adopted from Persian loanwords.}}

voiced

|{{IPA link|b}}

|{{IPA link|d}}

|{{IPA link|d͡ʒ}}

|{{IPA link|ɡ}}

|

|

rowspan="2" |Fricative

!voiceless

|{{IPA link|f}}

|{{IPA link|s}}

|{{IPA link|ʃ}}

|

|{{IPA link|χ}}, ({{IPA link|χʷ}}){{efn|A labialized sound /{{IPA|χʷ}}/ occurs only before the vowel sound /{{IPA|ɑ}}/.}}

|{{IPA link|h}}

voiced

|{{IPA link|v}}

|{{IPA link|z}}

|({{IPA link|ʒ}}){{efn|The sound /{{IPA|ʒ}}/ only occurs before a voiced plosive /{{IPA|d}}/, and is most likely an allophone of /{{IPA|d͡ʒ}}/.}}

|({{IPA link|ɣ}}){{efn|In the Takestani dialect, /{{IPA|ɡ}}/ may have the allophone {{IPA|[ɣ]}}.}}

|

|

colspan="2" |Approximant

|

|{{IPA link|l}}

|{{IPA link|j}}

|({{IPA link|w}}){{efn|The sound {{IPA|[w]}} does not occur as a phoneme, but it does occur when /{{IPA|u}}/ is preceding another vowel.}}

|

|

colspan="2" | Trill

|

|{{IPA link|r}}

|

|

|

|

{{notelist}}

The following sounds /{{IPA|r, v, q}}/ may allophonically range to the sounds {{IPA|[ɾ, β, ʁ]}}.

=Vowels=

class="wikitable" style="text-align:center"

!

! colspan="2" |Front

!Central

!Back

align="center"

!Close

| colspan="2" |{{IPA link|i}}

|

|{{IPA link|u}}

rowspan="2" |Mid

|{{IPA link|e}}

|{{IPA link|ø}}

| rowspan="2" |({{IPA link|ə}})

| rowspan="2" |{{IPA link|ɔ}}~{{IPA link|o}}

align="center"

| colspan="2" |{{IPA link|ɛ}}

align="center"

!Open

| colspan="2" |{{IPA link|æ}}

|

|{{IPA link|ɑ}}

The vowel sound for /e/ is recognized as two sounds {{IPA|[ɛ, e]}}, and allophonically as {{IPA|[ə]}}.

In the Chali dialect, the /o/ phoneme is only realized as a diphthong {{IPA|[ɔu]}}, whereas in Takestani, it is only recognized as ranging from {{IPA|[ɔ~o]}}.

Dialects

Tati has four main dialects:

  1. South of Qazvin province (Tākestāni, Eshtehārdi, Chāli, Dānesfāni, Esfarvarini, Ebrāhim-ābādi, Sagz-ābādi)
  2. Ardabil province (Khalkhāli)
  3. Alborz mountains range (Damāvandi). This dialect was, probably, used to be spoken around the northern part of Tehran City.
  4. North Khorasan province (Khorāsāni)

=Comparison of various Tati dialects<ref>{{Cite web|url=http://www.mehremihan.ir/language-and-dialect/2956-tati-ghazvini.html|title=نگاهی به گویش قزوینی و زبان تاتی استان قزوین}}</ref>=

class="wikitable" style="border:1px solid #aaa; border-collapse:collapse; text-align: center; background:white;"
style="width:80px;"|English

!style="width:80px;"|Persian

!style="width:80px;"|Tākestāni Tāti

!style="width:80px;"|Sagzābādi Tāti

!style="width:80px;"|Ebrāhimābādi Tāti

!style="width:80px;"|Ardabilaki Tāti

!style="width:80px;"|Ziārāni Tāti

!style="width:80px;"|Tikhuri Tāti

!style="width:80px;"|Tat

!Kurmanji Kurdish

!Sorani Kurdish

Child{{lang|fa|بچه}}
Baĉĉe
zārin/bālā
{{lang|fa|بالا}}/{{lang|fa|زارين}}
zāru
{{lang|fa|زارو}}
zāru
{{lang|fa|زارو}}
vaĉa
{{lang|fa|وچه}}
eyāl
{{lang|fa|عيال}}
vaĉa
{{lang|fa|وچه}}

|Ayal

|Zārok

Mendal

baĉa

| {{lang|fa|منداڵ}}
Mendāl / baĉka {{lang|fa|بەچکە}}

Rooftop{{lang|fa|پشت بام}}
Poŝtebām/Bālābun
bon
{{lang|fa|بُن}}
bun
{{lang|fa|بون}}
bön
{{lang|fa|بون}}
bom
{{lang|fa|بوم}}
bum
{{lang|fa|بوم}}
bum
{{lang|fa|بوم}}

|Sarbun

|Bān{{lang|fa|بان}}
Bān
Hand{{lang|fa|دست}}
Dast
Bāl
{{lang|fa|بال}}
bāl
{{lang|fa|بال}}
Bāl
{{lang|fa|بال}}
Bāl
{{lang|fa|بال}}
Bāl
{{lang|fa|بال}}
bāl
{{lang|fa|بال}}

|Dast

|Dest / lep{{lang|fa|دەست}}
Dast
Sharp{{lang|fa|تيز}}
Tiz
Tij
{{lang|fa|تيج}}
tij
{{lang|fa|تيج}}
tij
{{lang|fa|تيج}}
tij
{{lang|fa|تيج}}
tij
{{lang|fa|تيج}}
tij
{{lang|fa|تيج}}

|Tij

|Tûž{{lang|fa|تیژ}}
Tiž
Sister{{lang|fa|خواهر}}
Xāhar
Xāke
{{lang|fa|خاکه}}
Xawaĉe
{{lang|fa|خواچه}}
xawāke
{{lang|fa|خوآکه}}
xāxor
{{lang|fa|خاخور}}
xoār
{{lang|fa|خُوآر}}
xoār
{{lang|fa|خُوآر}}

|Xuvār

|Xûşk / xweng{{lang|fa|خوشک}}
Xûşk
Ablution/Wozu{{lang|fa|وضو}}
Wozu/Dastnamāz
dasnemāz
{{lang|fa|دسنماز}}
dasta māz
{{lang|fa|دست ماز}}
dasnemāz
{{lang|fa|دسنماز}}
dasnemāz
{{lang|fa|دسنماز}}
dastnemāz
{{lang|fa|دست نِماز}}
dastnemāz
{{lang|fa|دست نِماز}}

|Dastimāz

|Destnimêj{{lang|fa|دەستنوێژ}}
Destniwêj
Housewife{{lang|fa|کدبانو}}
Kadbānu
keyvuniye/kalontare zeyniye
{{lang|fa|کلُونتَره زينيه}}/{{lang|fa|کيوونيه}}
ĉeybānu
{{lang|fa|چي بنوه}}
Keywānu
{{lang|fa|کيوانو}}
Keywānu
{{lang|fa|کيوانو}}
Kalentar
{{lang|fa|کلنتر}}
xojirezan
{{lang|fa|خوجيره زِن}}

|

|Kebanî{{lang|fa|کابان}}
Kaban
Lentil{{lang|fa|عدس}}
Adas
marjomake
{{lang|fa|مرجومکه}}
marjewa
{{lang|fa|مرجوه}}
marjewa
{{lang|fa|مرجوه}}
marju
{{lang|fa|مرجو}}
marju
{{lang|fa|مرجو}}
marju
{{lang|fa|مرجو}}

|Marjimak

|nîsk{{lang|fa|نیسک}}
Nîsk
Calm{{lang|fa|آرام}}
Ārām/Denj
dinj
{{lang|fa|دينج}}
dinj
{{lang|fa|دينج}}
dinj
{{lang|fa|دينج}}
dinj
{{lang|fa|دينج}}
dinj
{{lang|fa|دينج}}
dinj
{{lang|fa|دينج}}

|Dinj

|aram{{lang|fa|ئارام / بێدەنگ}}
Aram / Bêdeng
Shout{{lang|fa|فرياد}}
Faryād
Harāy
{{lang|fa|هرای}}
Harāy/qia
{{lang|fa|قيه}}/{{lang|fa|هرای}}
harāy/qeya
{{lang|fa|قيه}}/{{lang|fa|هرای}}
harāy/qiyu
{{lang|fa|قيو}}/{{lang|fa|هرای}}
Qālmeqāl/harāy
{{lang|fa|هرای}}/{{lang|fa|قال مِقال}}
Mara
{{lang|fa|هَرَه}}

|Jirā/Faryād

|Hewar/qîr{{lang|fa|هاوار}}
Hawar

class="wikitable" style="border:1px solid #aaa; border-collapse:collapse; text-align: center; background:white;"
style="width:80px;"|English

!style="width:80px;"|Persian

!style="width:80px;"|Pahlavi

!style="width:80px;"|Avestan

!style="width:80px;"|Tākestāni Tāti

!style="width:80px;"|Sagzābādi Tāti

!style="width:80px;"|Ebrāhimābādi Tāti

!style="width:80px;"|Ardabilaki Tāti

!style="width:80px;"|Ziārāni Tāti

!style="width:80px;"|Tikhuri Tāti

!Kurmanji Kurdish

!Sorani Kurdish

Dog{{lang|fa|سگ}}
Sag
segespanasbe/māĉĉiye
{{lang|fa|ماچيه}}/{{lang|fa|اَسبه}}
Asba
{{lang|fa|اَسبه}}
asba
{{lang|fa|اَسبه}}
Sag
{{lang|fa|سگ}}
Sage/māĉĉe
{{lang|fa|ماچه}}/{{lang|fa|سَيگ}}
Sag/Māĉĉe
{{lang|fa|ماچه}}/{{lang|fa|سَيگ}}

|Kûçik / Seg

{{lang|fa|سەگ}}
Seg
Bone{{lang|fa|استخوان}}
Ostexān
ast/xastakastesqonj
{{lang|fa|اسقُنج}}
Xaste
{{lang|fa|خسته}}
Xaste
{{lang|fa|خسته}}
Esdeqān
{{lang|fa|اسدقان}}
Hasta
{{lang|fa|هَستَه}}
hasta
{{lang|fa|هَستَه}}

|estî / hestî

{{lang|fa|ئێسک / هێسک}}
Êsk / Hêsk
Lie{{lang|fa|دروغ}}
Doruq
drog/droodrojduru
{{lang|fa|دورو}}
deru
{{lang|fa|درو}}
doru
{{lang|fa|دُرو}}
duru
{{lang|fa|دورو}}
duru
{{lang|fa|دورو}}
duru
{{lang|fa|دورو}}

|Derew / vir

{{lang|fa|درۆ}}
Diro
Needle{{lang|fa|سوزن}}
Suzan
darzik/darziderezadarzone
{{lang|fa|درزُنه}}
darzena
{{lang|fa|درزنه}}
darzena
{{lang|fa|درزنه}}
darzan
{{lang|fa|درزَن}}
darzen
{{lang|fa|درزِن}}
darzen
{{lang|fa|درزِن}}

|Derzî, Şûjin (big needle)

{{lang|fa|دەرزی}}
Derzî
Face{{lang|fa|چهره}}
Ĉehre
ĉihr/ĉihrakdim
{{lang|fa|دیم}}
dim
{{lang|fa|دیم}}
dim
{{lang|fa|دیم}}
dim
{{lang|fa|دیم}}
dim
{{lang|fa|دیم}}
dim
{{lang|fa|دیم}}

|Dêm

{{lang|fa|دەم و چاو/ ڕوو}}
Dem û çaw / Rû
Groom{{lang|fa|داماد}}
Dāmād
zāmātzāmātarzomā
{{lang|fa|زُما}}
Zummā
{{lang|fa|زوما}}
zeymā
{{lang|fa|زیما}}
zāmā
{{lang|fa|زاما}}
zāmā
{{lang|fa|زاما}}
zāmā
{{lang|fa|زاما}}

|Zava

{{lang|fa|زاوا}}
Zawa
House{{lang|fa|خانه}}
Xāne
Mābānkekiye
{{lang|fa|کیه}}
čia
{{lang|fa|چیه}}
kia
{{lang|fa|کیه}}
Xāne
{{lang|fa|خانه}}
Xāneh
{{lang|fa|خانه}}
Xāneh
{{lang|fa|خانه}}

|Xanî

{{lang|fa|خانوو / خانی}}
Xanû / Xanî
Man{{lang|fa|مرد}}
Mard
martmeretamardak
{{lang|fa|مردک}}
miarda
{{lang|fa|میرده}}
miarda
{{lang|fa|میرده}}
Mardi
{{lang|fa|مِردی}}
Mardak
{{lang|fa|مَردِک}}
Mardak
{{lang|fa|مَردِک}}

|Mêr

{{lang|fa|پیاو / مەرد}}
Piyaw / Merd
Lamb{{lang|fa|بره}}
Barre
varrakWare
{{lang|fa|وَره}}
Wara
{{lang|fa|وره}}
Wara
{{lang|fa|وره}}
vara
{{lang|fa|وره}}
vara
{{lang|fa|وره}}
vara
{{lang|fa|وره}}

|Berx

{{lang|fa|بەرخ}}
Berx
Bride{{lang|fa|عروس}}
Arus
vazyokvazeWeye
{{lang|fa|ویه}}
Weya
{{lang|fa|ویه}}
veya
{{lang|fa|ویه}}
ayris/eris
{{lang|fa|عریس}}/{{lang|fa|عَی ریس}}
ayris/eris
{{lang|fa|عریس}}/{{lang|fa|عَی ریس}}

|Bûk

{{lang|fa|بووک}}
Bûk
Nose{{lang|fa|بینی}}
Bini
PiniPinivinniye
{{lang|fa|وینیه}}
venia
{{lang|fa|ونیه}}
venia
{{lang|fa|ونیه}}
vini
{{lang|fa|وینی}}
vini
{{lang|fa|وینی}}
vini
{{lang|fa|وینی}}

|Poz (nose) /Bîhn (smell)

{{lang|fa|لووت / کەپوو / بۆن}}
Lût / Kepû / Bon (smell)
Wolf{{lang|fa|گرگ}}
Gorg
Gourgvehrakavarg
{{lang|fa|ورگ}}
varg
{{lang|fa|ورگ}}
varg
{{lang|fa|ورگ}}
verg
{{lang|fa|وِرگ}}
gurg
{{lang|fa|گورگ}}
gurg
{{lang|fa|گورگ}}

|Gur

{{lang|fa|گورگ}}
Gurg

Other Tati dialects are Vafsi, Harzandi, Kho'ini, and Kiliti Eshtehardi.

=Vafsi Tati=

Vafsi is a dialect of Tati language spoken in the Vafs village and surrounding area in the Markazi province of Iran. The dialects of the Tafresh region share many features with the Central Plateau dialects; however, their lexical inventory has many items in common with the Talysh subgroup.

Vafsi has six short vowel phonemes, five long vowel phonemes and two nasal vowel phonemes. The consonant inventory is basically the same as in Persian.

Nouns are inflected for gender (masculine, feminine), number (singular, plural) and case (direct, oblique).

The oblique case marks the possessor (preceding the head noun), the definite direct object, nouns governed by a preposition, and the subject of transitive verbs in the past tense.

Personal pronouns are inflected for number (singular, plural) and case (direct, oblique).

A set of enclitic pronouns is used to indicate the agent of transitive verbs in the past tenses.

There are two demonstrative pronouns: one for near deixis, one for remote deixis.

The use of the Persian ezafe construction is spreading; however, there is also a native possessive construction, consisting of the possessor (unmarked or marked by the oblique case) preceding the head noun.

The verbal inflection is based on two stems: present and past stem. Person and number are indicated personal suffixes attached to the stem. In the transitive past tense the verb consists of the bare past stem and personal concord with the subject is provided by enclitic pronouns following the stem or a constituent preceding the verb. Two modal prefixes are used to convey modal and aspectual information. The past participle is employed in the formation of compound tenses.

Vafsi is a split ergative language: Split ergativity means that a language has in one domain accusative morphosyntax and in another domain ergative morphosyntax. In Vafsi the present tense is structured the accusative way and the past tense is structured the ergative way. Accusative morphosyntax means that in a language subjects of intransitive and transitive verbs are treated the same way and direct objects are treated another way. Ergative morphosyntax means that in a language subjects of intransitive verbs and direct objects are treated one way and subjects of transitive verbs are treated another way.

In the Vafsi past tense subjects of intransitive verbs and direct objects are marked by the direct case whereas subjects of transitive verbs are marked by the oblique case. This feature characterizes the Vafsi past tense as ergative.

The unmarked order of constituents is SOV like in most other Iranian languages.

=Harzandi Tati=

{{main|Harzandi dialect}}

Harzani is considered an endangered language with a little less than 30,000 speakers in present day.[https://www.ethnologue.com/language/hrz Harzani] at Ethnologue (17th Edition, 2014)] Its speakers principally reside in the rural district of Harzand, particularly in the village known as Galin Qayah/Kohriz. Harzani is also present in the neighboring villages of Babratein and Dash Harzand.Karimzadeh, J. 1994: "The Verbal Constructions in Azari (Harzani Dialect)." Master’s thesis, Tarbiat Modarres University.

As of now, Harzani has not been formally recognized by the Islamic Republic of Iran, and thus receives no government support.[http://languageserver.uni-graz.at/ls/desc?id=279&type=r Harzani] {{Webarchive|url=https://web.archive.org/web/20140502232703/http://languageserver.uni-graz.at/ls/desc?id=279&type=r |date=2014-05-02 }} at Languages of the World (LLOW)

Like other languages and dialects of the Iranian language family, Harzani follows a subject–object–verb (SOV) word order. It has nine vowels, and shares a consonant inventory with Persian. It further exhibits a split-ergative case system: its present tense is structured to follow nominative-accusative patterning, while its past tense follows ergative-absolutive.

One characteristic that distinguishes Harzani from related Northwestern Iranian languages is its change from an intervocalic /d/ to an /r/.{{Cite web|url=https://archive.org/stream/HeningTati/2011_6_10-theAncientLanguageOfAzerbaijan_djvu.txt|title=Hening Tati}} It also has a tendency to lengthen its vowels. For instance, it has the closed vowel /oe/.{{Citation needed|date=May 2014}}

Nouns and pronouns in Harzani do not reflect grammatical gender, but they do express case. Nouns, in particular, encode two cases: direct and oblique case, the first of which is not rendered morphologically, but the second is by attaching a suffix. Meanwhile, personal pronouns have three cases: direct, oblique, and possessive.

Verbs in Harzani are inflected for present tense and past tense. Information concerning person and number is reflected in suffixes that attach to these two verb stems. Modal and aspectual information is expressed using prefixes.

=Kho'ini Tati=

{{main|Kho'ini dialect}}

It is spoken in the village of Xoin and surrounding areas, about {{convert|60|km}} southwest of Zanjan city in northern Iran. The Xoini verbal system follows the general pattern found in other Tati dialects. However, the dialect has its own special characteristics such as continuous present which is formed by the past stem, a preverb shift, and the use of connective sounds. The dialect is in danger of extinction.

Nouns have two cases: direct and oblique. Contrary to the often case in Persian, adjective is not Post-positive.

The suffixes may be attached to the verb; the agent of the verb in an ergative construction; an adverb; a prepositional or postpositional phrase; and in a compound verb to its nominal Complement.

The same set of endings is used for the present and the subjunctive. The endings of the preterit and the present perfect are basically the enclitic present forms of the verb 'to be' (*ah-, here called base one). For pluperfect and subjunctive perfect the freestanding auxiliary verb 'to be' (*bav-, here called base two) is utilized. There is no ending for singular imperative and it is -ân for plural. For the inflections of "to be" see "Auxiliary inflection" below.

The past and present stems are irregular and shaped by historical developments, e.g.: wuj- / wut- (to say); xaraš-/xarat- (to sell); taj-/tat- (to run). However, in many verbs the past stem is built on the present stem by adding -(e)st; e.g.: brem-bremest- (to weep).

The imperative is formed by the modal prefix be- if the verb contains no preverb, plus the present stem and without ending in the singular and with -ân in the plural. be- is often changed to bi-, bo- or bu- according to the situation, and appears as b- before a vowel of a verbal stem.

=Kiliti Tati=

Kiliti is a Tati dialect of Azerbaijan that is closely related to Talysh. It is spoken in the villages around Kilit, located 12 kilometers southwest from the city of Ordubad in a district with the same name of Nakhchivan in Azerbaijan.

Tati and Talysh

Tati and Talysh are Northwestern Iranian languages which are closely related. Although Talysh and Tati are two languages that have affected each other in various levels, the degree of this effect in different places are not the same. In fact, the very closeness of the two languages has been a major reason for impossibility of drawing clear borderlines between them. It happens that Tati varieties can be seen in the heart of Talysh districts, or Talysh varieties are found in the center of Tati districts. This claim is supported by focusing on linguistic characteristics of Tati and Talysh, the history of the interrelation between the two languages, geographical parameters of the area, as well as the phonological, morphological, and lexical examples.Tāleshi Indications in Tāti Districts of Khalkhāl, Jahandust Sabzalipoor

=Comparison of Talysh and various Tati dialects=

class="wikitable" style="border:1px solid #aaa; border-collapse:collapse; text-align: center; background:white;"
style="width:80px;"|English

!style="width:80px;"|Persian

!style="width:80px;"|Astārāi Talysh

!style="width:80px;"|Tākestāni Tāti

!style="width:80px;"|Sagzābādi Tāti

!style="width:80px;"|Ebrāhimābādi Tāti

!style="width:80px;"|Ardabilaki Tāti

!style="width:80px;"|Ziārāni Tāti

!Kurmanji Kurdish

Down{{lang|fa|پایین}}
pāyin
jina
{{lang|fa|جینه}}
jir
{{lang|fa|جیر}}
jirā
{{lang|fa|جیرا}}
jirā
{{lang|fa|جیرا}}
jir
{{lang|fa|جیر}}
jir/jirā
{{lang|fa|جیرا}}/{{lang|fa|جیر}}

|žêr, jêr

Father{{lang|fa|پدر}}
pedar
dādā
{{lang|fa|دادا}}
dādā
{{lang|fa|دادا}}
dada
{{lang|fa|دده}}
dada
{{lang|fa|دده}}
dādā/piyar
{{lang|fa|پیر}}/{{lang|fa|دادا}}
dada/piyar
{{lang|fa|پیر}}/{{lang|fa|دده}}

|bav

Bitter{{lang|fa|تلخ}}
talx
tel
{{lang|fa|تِل}}
tal
{{lang|fa|تل}}
tal
{{lang|fa|تل}}
tal
{{lang|fa|تل}}
tal
{{lang|fa|تل}}
tal
{{lang|fa|تل}}

|tel / tahel

Girl{{lang|fa|دختر}}
doxtar
kela
{{lang|fa|کِلَه}}
titiye
{{lang|fa|تیتیه}}
titia
{{lang|fa|تی تیه}}
titia
{{lang|fa|تی تیه}}
detari
{{lang|fa|دتری}}
detari
{{lang|fa|دتری}}

|dot (daughter)

keçek (girl)

Mad{{lang|fa|دیوانه}}
divāne
tur
{{lang|fa|تور}}
tur
{{lang|fa|تور}}
tur
{{lang|fa|تور}}
tur
{{lang|fa|تور}}
tur
{{lang|fa|تور}}
tur
{{lang|fa|تور}}

|tûre, dîn

Woman{{lang|fa|زن}}
zan
žen
{{lang|fa|ژِن}}
zeyniye
{{lang|fa|زینیه}}
zania
{{lang|fa|زنیه}}
zania
{{lang|fa|زنیه}}
zen
{{lang|fa|زِن}}
zenek
{{lang|fa|زنک}}

|žen, jin

White{{lang|fa|سفید}}
sefid
ispi
{{lang|fa|ایسپی}}
isbi
{{lang|fa|ایسبی}}
esbi
{{lang|fa|اسبی}}
sebi
{{lang|fa|سبی}}
sivid
{{lang|fa|سوید}}
isbi
{{lang|fa|ایسبی}}

|sepî

Chicken{{lang|fa|مرغ}}
morq
kāg
{{lang|fa|کاگ}}
karke
{{lang|fa|کرکه}}
čarga
{{lang|fa|چرگه}}
karga
{{lang|fa|کرگه}}
kerg
{{lang|fa|کرگ}}
kerg
{{lang|fa|کرگ}}

|mirîşk [merishk]

Ladder{{lang|fa|نردبان}}
nardebān
serd
{{lang|fa|سِرد}}
aselte
{{lang|fa|اَسلته}}
sorda
{{lang|fa|سورده}}
sorda
{{lang|fa|سورده}}
palkān/palkāna
{{lang|fa|پلکانه}}/{{lang|fa|پلکان}}

|nêrdevan, pêlik

Face{{lang|fa|چهره}}
čehre
dim
{{lang|fa|دیم}}
dim
{{lang|fa|دیم}}
dim
{{lang|fa|دیم}}
dim
{{lang|fa|دیم}}
dim
{{lang|fa|دیم}}
dim
{{lang|fa|دیم}}

|dêm

Distribution

See also

References

{{Reflist}}

Further reading

  • {{cite book |last1=Majidifard |first1=Ehsan |last2=Mahdi Hajmalek |first2=Mohammad |last3=Rezaei |first3=Saeed |editor1-last=Sedighi |editor1-first=Anousha |title=Iranian and Minority Languages at Home and in Diaspora |date=2023 |publisher=De Gruyter |isbn=978-3110694277 |pages=83–110 |chapter=Attitudes Towards Tati Language Among its Native Speakers in Western Iran}}
  • {{Cite JIPA|first1=Neda|first2=Scott|last1=Taherkhani|last2=Nelson|title=Southern Tati: Takestani Dialect|pages=559–574|doi=10.1017/S0025100323000270|printdate=2024-04-01|soundfiles=yes}}