• Aucun résultat trouvé

DARI BASIC COURSE

N/A
N/A
Protected

Academic year: 2022

Partager "DARI BASIC COURSE"

Copied!
38
0
0

Texte intégral

(1)

DARI

BASIC COURSE

Samples of Handwriting

Originally Published by Nezam Soha

VALIDATION EDITION 2005

DEFENSE LANGUAGE INSTITUTE FOREIGN LANGUAGE CENTER

(2)

DARI Basic Course

Samples of Handwriting

Originally Published by Nezam Soha

Reprinted with Permission of the Author

December 2005

DEFENSE LANGUAGE INSTITUTE FOREIGN LANGUAGE CENTER

(3)

ii

Acknowledgments

Permission to use text and/or graphic images in this Dari language course has been received from the following copyright holders:

Nezam Soha, through his brother Latif Mahjoob (the illustrated Dari alphabet) Luke Powell (photographs from www.lukepowell.com)

Permission to use copyrighted material was granted on the condition that it be used exclusively for nonprofit educational purposes. Further reproduction is unauthorized.

Cover photograph by Luke Powell.

(4)

1

(5)

2

(6)

3

(7)

4

(8)

5

(9)

6

(10)

7

(11)

8

(12)

9

(13)

10

(14)

11

(15)

12

(16)

13

(17)

14

(18)

15

(19)

16

(20)

17

(21)

18

(22)

19

(23)

20

(24)

21

(25)

22

(26)

23

(27)

24

(28)

25

(29)

26

(30)

27

(31)

28

(32)

29

(33)

30

(34)

31

(35)

32

(36)

33

(37)

34

(38)

35

Références

Documents relatifs

In conversational and occasionally in formal Dari we drop the personal ending for the third person singular in the present perfect tense. You may have noticed this in the last two

The easiest way to express the above in Dari is to use the preposition ﯼاﺮﺑ ‘for’ together with the infinitive form of the verb: .ﺖﻓر ﺪهاﻮﺧ ﻒیﺮﺷراﺰﻣ ﻪﺑ شا ﻩداﻮﻥﺎﺧ

.دﻮﺸﻴﻣ ﻩداد ﻪﻳاﺮﮐ ﻪﺑ لﺎﺳ ﮏﻳ تﺪﻣ ﯼاﺮﺑ ﻪﻧﺎﺧ ﻦﻳا ‘This house is being rented for a period of one year.’. Present

• Grammar: Verb ‘to be’ in present tense; sentence structure in short statements; negation; personal pronouns; yes-no questions; who questions; where questions; how questions.. •

Compare the future tense conjugation of the verb ﻦﺘﻓر /raf-tan/ ‘to go’ in both formal and conversational Dari:.. Formal

Conversational Dari is different from formal (or literary) Dari in two major ways: there is a change in part of a word and/or a change in choice of word. Look at the

The easiest way to express the above in Dari is to use the preposition ﯼاﺮﺑ ‘for’ together with the infinitive form of the verb: .ﺖﻓر ﺪهاﻮﺧ ﻒیﺮﺷراﺰﻣ ﻪﺑ شا ﻩداﻮﻥﺎﺧ

Descriptive word(s).. When constructing the passive voice of such compound verbs, we often omit the past participle of ندﺮﮐ, which is ﻩدﺮﮐ, in both formal and