Farsi bhasa

(Persian language se bheja gais)

Persian, ek Iranian bhasa hae jon Iran (Persia), Afghanistan aur Tajikistan ke official language hae. Iske Uzbekistan, Turkmenistan, Azerbaijan, Pakistan, Georgia, Southern Russia, aur bagal ke aur desme bola jaae hae Pahile ii sab des Persian Empire me rahin.

Persian
فارسی, دری, تاجیکی,форсӣ-тоҷикӣ
pārsi (one of the local names for Persian) in Perso-Arabic script (Nasta`liq style)
Naam ke bole ke dhang [fɒːɾˈsi]
Jahan baat karaa jaae hae  Iran
 Afghanistan
 Tajikistan
 Azerbaijan
 Pakistan
 Uzbekistan
 Bahrain
 Iraq
Iranian diaspora
Ilaaka Western Asia, Central Asia
Ketnaa jan baat kare hae ca. 60-70 million, as first language (2006 estimates)[1]
Bhasa ke palwaar Indo-European
Dialects
Writing system Perso-Arabic script, Cyrillic
Official status
Official language in  Iran
 Afghanistan
 Tajikistan
Regulated by Academy of Persian Language and Literature (Iran)
Language codes
ISO 639-1 fa
ISO 639-2 per (B)  fas (T)
ISO 639-3 fasMacrolanguage
individual codes:
pes – Iranian Persian
prs – Afghan Persian
tgk – Tajik
aiq – Aimaq
bhh – Bukharic
drw – Darwazi
haz – Hazaragi
jpr – Dzhidi
phv – Pahlavani
Linguasphere 58-AAC (Wider Persian) > 58-AAC-c (Central Persian)

Map of areas where Persian is spoken as a mother tongue

Persian alphabet, Arbii ke rakam hae lekin ii duusra bhasa ke family ke hae aur iske vocabulary aur grammar different hae.

Isme dher French sabd hae. Persian me dher dialect hae. Persian bhasa ke is locally Farsi, Parsi aur Dari bola jaae hae.

Persian me ginti

badlo
Number Persian me Number Fiji Hindi me
yak ek
du: dui
si tiin
chaha:r chaar
panj paanch
shash chhe
haft saat
hasht aath
nu nau
dah das

[2]

Hafta ke din

badlo
Fiji Hindi Farsi
Sombaar Do shanbeh
Mangar Se shanbeh
Budh Chaar shanbeh
Bif Panj shanbeh
Suk Jome
Sanichar Shanbeh
Etwaar Yek shanbeh

[3]

References

badlo
  1. Iran Archived 2012-02-03 at the Wayback Machine, 36 M (51%) – 46 M (65%) Loc.gov, Afghanistan Archived 2017-09-20 at the Wayback Machine, 16.369 M (50%), Tajikistan Archived 2007-06-12 at the Wayback Machine, 5.770 M (80%), Uzbekistan Archived 2019-01-05 at the Wayback Machine, 1.2 M (4.4%)
  2. Numbers in Million-Speaker Languages
  3. "Irpedia". Archived from the original on 2011-10-27. Retrieved 2011-10-27.