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Pashto

NOUN
  1. an Iranian language spoken in Afghanistan and Pakistan; the official language of Afghanistan

How To Use Pashto In A Sentence

  • Their repertoire consists of anything you might have heard during the glory days of Afghan Radio: songs in Persian and Pashto, romantic gazals, sufi songs and ragas.
  • Most words in Pashto are inherently conceptualized as either masculine or feminine, but some Pashto words can assume both masculine and feminine forms, while others are basically gender neutral. Belongings: Property, Family, and Identity in Colonial South Africa
  • Pashto has a rich agreement mechanism, but one that is manifested differently in the present and past tenses.
  • On one recent day, the sound of men speaking in Pashto crackled over the Marines' scanner five minutes after the troops left the base to conduct a patrol. Yahoo! News: Business - Opinion
  • Living languages of the Iranian subbranch include Farsi, Tajik, and Dari all descended from Middle Persian, the language of such celebrated poets as Rumi and Hafez, as well as Kurdish, Baluchi, Pashto, and Ossetic. The English Is Coming!
  • Pashto Pashto also known as Pakhto, Pushto, Pukhto‎, Pashtoe, Pashtu, Pushtu or Pushtoo is a language spoken by Pashtuns living in Afghanistan and western Pakistan. Planet-x.com.au » Afghan
  • There is a much larger array of dialects in Pashto, which means that a number of phonemes have a range of alophones. Connecting Histories in Afghanistan: Market Relations and State Formation on a Colonial Frontier
  • Afghanistan Islam Ramazan Mubarak islam muslim kabul balkh herat mazar afghan afghanistani panjshir kandahar farsi khorasan tajik hazara pashto pashtun hamid karzai ahmad shah masood massoud iran tajikistan tajik parwan kapisa helmand kandahar khost paktia paktika ghazni ghor badakhshan kunduz kabuli khurasani tolo tv ariana tv khorasan tv hamid qaderi habib qaderi ehsan aman farhad darya wahid qasimi wahid saberi naghma mangal nashinas gul zaman peshawar WN.com - Photown News
  • Currently, the focus is on Pashto, a native Afghani tongue, but NIST has also assessed machine translation systems for Dari—also spoken in Afghanistan—and Iraqi Arabic.
  • Claudia Kramatschek gives a very instructive insight into Pakistani literature - pardon, into Urdu, Sindhi, Pashto, Punjabi and Balochi literature.
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