Tirahi | |
---|---|
Tirāhī, Dardu | |
Native to | Afghanistan |
Ethnicity | perhaps 5,000 (no date)[1] |
Native speakers | (undated figure of 100)[1] |
Language codes | |
ISO 639-3 | tra |
Glottolog | tira1253 |
ELP | Tirahi |
![]() Tirahi is classified as Critically Endangered by the UNESCO Atlas of the World's Languages in Danger |
Tirahi is a nearly extinct if not already extinct[2] Indo-Aryan language[3] spoken in a few villages in the southeast of Jalalabad in the Nangarhar Province of eastern Afghanistan. It is spoken by older adults, who are likewise fluent in Pashto.[1]
The Tirahis were expelled from Tirah in the present-day Khyber District of Khyber Pakhtunkhwa, Pakistan, by the Afridi Pashtuns.[4] Georg Morgenstierne claimed that Tirahi is "probably the remnant of a dialect group extending from Tirah through the Peshawar district into Swat and Dir."[5]
It is very likely that this language is extinct. The Tirahi are "a group of unclear origin, almost completely assimilated by Pashtun" (Pstrusinska and Gray 1990).
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