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What Is the English Name of Iran's Language?
Payvand ^
| 12/13/03
| Pejman Akbarzadeh
Posted on 12/13/2003 12:37:23 PM PST by freedom44
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1
posted on
12/13/2003 12:37:23 PM PST
by
freedom44
To: freedom44
Who cares...the country's full of foreigners.
To: Joe 6-pack
Called educating yourself.
3
posted on
12/13/2003 12:42:43 PM PST
by
freedom44
To: freedom44
Lighten up killer. Maybe log off and go look for your sense of humor.
To: freedom44
Do things really *have* names?
I thought people just offered names to things, but in most cases the things didn't accept them.
And, like sticky labels, the names eventually fall off.
To: freedom44
Typical ploy of Islamic Fundamentalism. The whole culture is designed to make the people forget they had a history before Muhammed showed up. To make them forget that the most backwards part of the world was the most advanced for most of human history.
6
posted on
12/13/2003 12:46:45 PM PST
by
Blackyce
(President Jacques Chirac: "As far as I'm concerned, war always means failure.")
To: freedom44
From the CIA world factbook:
Persian and Persian dialects 58%
Turkic and Turkic dialects 26%
Kurdish 9%
Luri 2%
Balochi 1%
Arabic 1%
Turkish 1%
other 2%
To: Blackyce
Very true. They've tried to destroy everything about Iran's history.
Unfortunately for them they've been unable to even inside Iran where books about Cyrus the Great, Darius, Xerxes, the culture and history are springin up everywhere
8
posted on
12/13/2003 12:53:18 PM PST
by
freedom44
To: freedom44
No mention of Parsi. Because Arabs can't say "P"?
9
posted on
12/13/2003 1:00:16 PM PST
by
nuconvert
To: freedom44
4- Fortunately, FARSI has never been used in any research paper or university document in any Western language... Hmmm, I'm not sure that this is accurate. The linguistic community in USA uses the term Farsi to distinguish the old Persian languages from the other languages spoken in Iran.
I was once asked to learn Farsi, but chose Chinese Mandarin instead.
10
posted on
12/13/2003 1:02:19 PM PST
by
jimtorr
To: Blackyce; freedom44
They DID have a history beofre Muhammad showed up and used his crusading pseudo culture to destroy it. They had a very long, rich history. The FOOLING part is when modern propagandists try to pretend that Islamic history is ancient Egyptian history or Persian history...it isn't. Islamic history was born when Muhammad invented Islam out of a ...probably sincere...wish to cinvert his people to an early form of Judaeo-Christianity which was easily acceptable to people of common Semitic culture, but the opium-laced wine he took for his ailments - and probable agendist politics by his biographers - drove him into the nutzo zone.
Freedom, both are correct as far as I know. Farsi has other historical implications, but for all modern intents and purposes, including common culture and history, is equally correct. It has connotations from India, when the various local tribes, boundaries and political structures were considerably different. Due to the normal evulotion of language, combined with Pesia's turbulant history, only time and chance could turn up a an older Persian language...but it's very possible the people who spoke it weren't even "Persian" as we consider it today...or 1,400 years ago, before the subsumation of the Persian culture by Islamic crusadors.
11
posted on
12/13/2003 1:04:20 PM PST
by
cake_crumb
(UN Resolutions = Very Expensive, Very SCRATCHY Toilet Paper)
To: freedom44
Ragheadese ? Towlheadian ?
12
posted on
12/13/2003 1:05:57 PM PST
by
BSunday
(I'm not the bad guy)
To: freedom44
The ancient Medes were very similar to the Persians and the two are often named together (as in the Book of Esther). The Greeks tended to refer to the Persians as Medes (those who sided with the Persians in 480 B.C. were said to have Medized).
One of the noteworthy features of the Persian Empire was the Royal Road which ran from Sardis to the capital. We still honor this accomplishment by calling the empty space between opposing lanes of divided highways Median strips.
To: nuconvert
Iranians are not Arabs.
They are Parsis (Persian), or Farsis (same thing).
To: Spell Correctly
"Iranians are not Arabs."
Yes, I'm well aware of that. Farsi is the Arab name for Parsi.
To: Spell Correctly
Arabs have great difficulty pronouncing "P".
Hence a Pepsi, is a "Bebsi". Easier to change the "P" to an "F", and call it Farsi.
To: nuconvert
Ahh thank you.
Kind of like how Cuban's cannot pronouce "y."
The New York Yankees are the "New Jork Jankees."
To: Spell Correctly
Yep. The same can be said for most currently Islamic countries. The Arabs are the invaders who gained a bit of ligitimacy via the obviously failed idea of Pan Arabism.
18
posted on
12/13/2003 1:38:02 PM PST
by
cake_crumb
(UN Resolutions = Very Expensive, Very SCRATCHY Toilet Paper)
To: cake_crumb
They DID have a history beofre Muhammad showed up and used his crusading pseudo culture to destroy it. They had a very long, rich history. Darn right they did. They had a very rich culture of mixed Christians, Jews, and Zoroastrians who lived in peace and prosperity until the Mohammedan wackos showed up and ruined everything.
I've got a few good friends and neighbors who are Persian. They are wonderful people, definitely an asset to this country, and they absolutely loathe the Islamonazis.
If you want to insult a Persian/Iranian, call him an Arab. They rightfully consider themselves a much older and more accomplished culture, and hold the tribal camel herders and ignorant wild-eyed jihadis of the Arab world in contempt.
-ccm
19
posted on
12/13/2003 2:16:03 PM PST
by
ccmay
To: freedom44
My one and only Iran-born friend felt sure the native language he grew up speaking was Farsi. Hey! but then what does he know?
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