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This volume introduces Alikāyi, an Iranian language spoken on the southern fringe of the Alborz Mountains south of the Caspian Sea. The book offers a fresh perspective on Caspian linguistics. Highlighting the language’s most significant features—such as its unique possession marker, pronominal clitics in nominal morphosyntax, and an innovative verbal system marked by drift toward periphrastic constructions—the book situates Alikāyi within the wider Caspian-language continuum through typological and lexical comparisons. It also explores sociocultural, ecological, and historical dimensions of the Alikāyi tribe, providing insights into patterns of contact, migration, and identity. Texts included at the end of the volume enrich the sociolinguistic portrait and illuminate broader issues in Iranic philology, including tribal formation in medieval Persia. This concise but multifaceted study will appeal to scholars of Iranian linguistics and to researchers engaged in comparative and typological work.
List of contents
1. Introduction.- 2. Phonology.- 3. Noun Phrase.- 4. Verb Phrase.- 5. Verb Conjugation.- 6. Verb List.- 7. Typology.- 8. Lexis.- 9. Culture, Identity, History.
About the author
Habib Borjian
is a leading scholar of Iranian historical linguistics and Persianate cultural history. Educated at Columbia University, the University of Tehran, and Yerevan State University, he has held research appointments at both Columbia University and Rutgers University and serves on the board of the Endangered Language Alliance. His work encompasses nearly the entire spectrum of Iranian languages—including Median, Tatic, Caspian, Semnani, Gorgani, Kurdish, Balochi, Lori, Larestani, Persic, Kermanic, and Pamiri—and has led to the coinage of influential classifications such as Komisenian, Tabaroid, Perso-Tabaric, Biabanaki, and Garmsiri, now widely used in the field. He is the author of multiple monographs, numerous scholarly articles, and more than a hundred encyclopedia entries.
Summary
This volume introduces Alikāyi, an Iranian language spoken on the southern fringe of the Alborz Mountains south of the Caspian Sea. The book offers a fresh perspective on Caspian linguistics. Highlighting the language’s most significant features—such as its unique possession marker, pronominal clitics in nominal morphosyntax, and an innovative verbal system marked by drift toward periphrastic constructions—the book situates Alikāyi within the wider Caspian-language continuum through typological and lexical comparisons. It also explores sociocultural, ecological, and historical dimensions of the Alikāyi tribe, providing insights into patterns of contact, migration, and identity. Texts included at the end of the volume enrich the sociolinguistic portrait and illuminate broader issues in Iranic philology, including tribal formation in medieval Persia. This concise but multifaceted study will appeal to scholars of Iranian linguistics and to researchers engaged in comparative and typological work.