2024
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Browsing 2024 by Author "DAWOOD SHAH"
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Item Investigation of phonemic variations of /kh/ and /sh/ sounds in Kandahari and Yousafzai dialects of Pushto language(UMT.Lahore, 2024) DAWOOD SHAHLanguage is a living organic entity. Language can be changed in the progression of time. How we talk today is different the manner in which our predecessors had spoken quite a while back. Pushto is a different communicating in language in Pakistan. This is on the grounds that there are multiple lingos in Pushto language, and every vernacular has more accents and variety. The significant tongues are Kandahari, and Yousafzai vernacular. Additionally, Pashto has two (significant) tongues delicate and loud. The loud tongue is spoken in northern Pashtun domains including Nangarhar, Kabul, Jalalabad (in Afghanistan) and Peshawar, Swat, Mardan, and Dir (in Pakistan). The delicate tongue is spoken in Quetta, Waziristan, Kandahar, and other southern Pashtun regions. The writing of Pashto went through a period of improvement where it had to adjust to current times and get correspondence from other phonetic frameworks. It presently comprises adjusted Persian letters in order, which are somewhat plummeted from Arabic letter sets. According to the assertion made by (Husain, 1962) , the Smack ruler Miangul Abdul Wadud in 1926 arranged that the Pashto script be changed to Nastaliq. The letters in order comprise of 44 letters and 4 diacritical imprints, some of which are special sounds and letters. Labov has given four suppositions about language and change. He said, synchronic language frameworks should be concentrated independently from the diachronic frameworks. Also, he said sound change can't be straightforwardly noticed, thirdly sentiments about language are blocked off. Finally, he said the utilization of non-semantic information to make sense of etymological change is disallowed.