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Languages > Pashto
Most Popular Pashto Language Product Types
Children's Books
The Clever Boy and the Terrible, Dangerous Animal in Pashto & English
Classroom/Schools
Pushto - A Grammar of the Pukhto or Pushto Language by Bellew H.W.
Dictionary
Word to Word Pashto / English Dictionary (Paperback)
Games
Your First 100 Words in Pashto: Pashto for Total Beginners Throught Puzzles and Games (Paperback)
Handheld Dictionary
The ECTACO -SpeechGuard GI-5 Pashto
Keyboard Stickers
Keyboard Stickers (Black Opaque) for Dari, Pashto
Learn
Introduction to Pushtu (Pashtu) An Official Language of Afghanistan Romanized
Software - Windows
Universal Word Arabic Word Processor
Translation
TranSphere Translation English <> Pashto
All Pashto language product types


Language Information


Pashto, also known as Pashtu, is one of the two major languages of Afghanistan. It is spoken by about 10 million people there—about 60 percent of the population- mostly in the eastern half of the country. It is also spoken in northwestern Pakistanby about 10 million people.

Pashto is the language of the Pathans, the indigenous inhabitants of Afghanistan. Like Persian, it is one of the Iranian languages, and thus part of the Indo-European family. It is written in the Perso-Arabic script, but the alphabet contains a number of letters not to be found in either Persian or Arabic. The term "Pashto" actually refers to the more important of the two dialects- the so-called soft dialect of Afghanistan which preserves the ancient sh and zh sounds. For those parts of Pakistan where the "hard" kh and gh prevail, the language is generally referred to as Pakhto.


Pashto is spoken/used in the following countries:
Afghanistan, Pakistan.

Language Family
Family: Indo-European
Subgroup: Indo-Iranian
Branch: Iranian


Copyright © Kenneth Katzner, The Languages of the World, Published by Routledge.


Writing Sample


Writing Sample

Translation


When her petall'd lips are parting,
Whitest pearls do lose their lustre;
When her glance to me is darting.
Fades the fairest flower cluster;
Roses shamed, forget to blossom
Brighter radiance to discover
In the budding of a bosom
Flaunting as to bee the clover;
She the rose, her grace bestowing
On the thorn, that waits her pleasure,
I the fountain, faintly glowing,
Mirror of a garden's treasure,
Lover, loved, together knowing
Rapture passing dream or measure.

—KHUSHHAL KHAN KHATAK, Love in a Garden


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