Escolar Documentos
Profissional Documentos
Cultura Documentos
A Reference Grammar
with Selected Readings
W. M. Thackston
ii
CONTENTS
PHONOLOGY
Alphabet and sounds 1 ......................................................................................
The aspirated and unaspirated stops 3 ...............................................................
Stress 4 ..............................................................................................................
Orthographic variants 4 .....................................................................................
Doubled consonants 4 .......................................................................................
The furtive i....................................................................................................4
SUBSTANTIVES
1. The Noun 7 .................................................................................................
1.1. Gender 7 ..................................................................................................
1.2. Inection 7 ..............................................................................................
2. Demonstrative Adjectives and Her Every 9 ............................................
3. The Indenite State 10 ...............................................................................
4. The Primary Construct Case 11 .................................................................
4.1 The Adjectival Construct 12 ....................................................................
5. The Secondary Construct: The Construct Extender 14 ..............................
6. Synopsis of Noun States of Cases 16 .........................................................
7. Personal Pronouns 17 .................................................................................
7.1 The Reexive Pronoun Xwe 19 ................................................................
8. Prepositions, Postpositions, Circumpositions 19 .......................................
8.1. Contracted Prepositions 21 .....................................................................
9. Numbers 21 ................................................................................................
9.1. Ordinal Numbers 24 ................................................................................
9.2. Months of the Year and Days of the Week 25 ........................................
9.3. Telling Time 26 .......................................................................................
10. Comparative and Superlative Adjectives 26 ............................................
iii
THE VERB
11. Present Copulas 29 ...................................................................................
12. To Have and the Existential Verb Hebn 30 .........................................
13. The Innitive 31 .......................................................................................
14. The Present Tense 32 ...............................................................................
15. Compound Verbs 34 ................................................................................
16. The Formation of the Present Subjunctive 35 ..........................................
16.1 Uses of the Present Subjunctive 37 ........................................................
16.2. The Future Tense 40 ..............................................................................
16.2. Xwestin To Want 41 ...........................................................................
16.3. Karn To Be Able 41 ..........................................................................
17. The Imperative 42 ....................................................................................
17.1. The Vocative 43 ....................................................................................
18. The Simple Past (Intransitive) 43 .............................................................
18.1. The Past Habitual/Progressive (Intransitive) 44 ...................................
18.2 The Simple Past (Transitive): The Ergative 45 ......................................
18.3 Number Agreement in Extended Ergative Verbs 48 ..............................
18.4 The Past Tense of Xwestin 49 ................................................................
18.5. Loss of Ergativity 49 .............................................................................
19. The Past Participle 49 ...............................................................................
20. The Present Perfect Tense (Intransitive) 50 .............................................
20.1. The Present Perfect Tense (Transitive/Ergative) 50 .............................
21. The Past Perfect Tense (Intransitive) 52 ..................................................
21.1. The Past Perfect Tense (Transitive/Ergative) 53 ..................................
21.2. The Past Perfect Tense of Karn and Zann 57 .....................................
22. The Past Subjunctive 55 ...........................................................................
23. The Future Perfect Tense 56 ....................................................................
24. The Modal of Karn 57 ............................................................................
25. The Irrealis Mood 57 ................................................................................
25.1. The Past Conditional 58 ........................................................................
iv
25.2. The Past Perfect Conditionals 59 ..........................................................
26. The Passive Voice 62 ...............................................................................
27. Postposed Verbal Complements 63 .........................................................
28. Factitive Verbs 64 ....................................................................................
28.1. The Periphrastic Factitive Construction 65 ...........................................
OTHER SYNTACTICAL FEATURES
29. Subordinate Clauses and Subordinating Conjunctions 66 .......................
30. Relative Clauses 67 ..................................................................................
31. The Emphatic J 70 ..................................................................................
32. Expressions of Temporal Duration 71 .....................................................
33. Sequence of Tenses after Past Verbs of Perception 71 ............................
34. Questions with Ma 72 ..............................................................................
Synopsis of Verb Tenses and Moods 74 ...........................................................
Common Verbs with Irregular Present Stems 79 ..............................................
Conversion Table for Arabic and Cyrillic 81 ....................................................
Grammatical and Orthographic Differences between Standard Kurmanji
and Ex-Soviet Kurmanji 83 .......................................................................
READINGS
Qedrcan, Rojn Derbasby 86 ...............................................................
Osman Sebr, ar Leheng: Leheng I: Ferzende Beg 91 .........................
Kurdo Husn, Baoke 94 ........................................................................
ahn B. Sorekl, Vegera Mal 101 ........................................................
Cumhriyeta Kurd ya Mehabad 107 ...................................................
Firat Cewer, Kzika Bnav 111 ............................................................
__________, Li Mala Rewen Bedir-Xan 116 .......................................
__________, Sedsaliya Celadet Al Bedir-Xan 120 ...............................
Nredn Zaza, Xurd 130 ......................................................................
__________, Gul 133 ...........................................................................
Zeynelabdn Zinar, Bav Naz 138 .......................................................
v
Mahmut Baks, ar Aliy Me Agir E 145 ..............................................
Hesen Met, Labrenta Cinan 152 ...........................................................
Reading Selections in Cyrillic-Script Kurmanji
157 ........................................................................
158 ..........................................................................
162 ............................................
: - 165 ....................................................
: 173 .......................................
Reading Selections in Arabic-Script Kurmanji
Celadet Ali Bedir-Xan, # (# , -. /Kurd Kurdistan
Bi av Biyaniyan 175 .........................................................................
__________, ( /x Evdirehman Garis
Rehmet 180 ...................................................................................
Perwz Cihan, /Gur Tekane 187 ...........................................
KurdishEnglish Vocabulary 196 .....................................................................
Ex-Soviet KurdishEnglish Vocabulary 245 ....................................................
General Index 264 .............................................................................................
vi
PREFACE
KURDISH BELONGS to the Western Iranian group of the Indo-Iranian branch
of the Indo-European family. The two principal branches of modern literary
Kurdish are (1) Kurmanji, the language of the vast majority of Kurds in
Turkey, Syria, Armenia, and Azerbaijan, and of a few in Iraq and Iran, the
area designated by Kurdish nationalists as North Kurdistan (Kurdistana
Bakr),
1
with an estimated fteen to seventeen million speakers, and (2)
Sorani, the language of most Kurds in Iraq (four to six million speakers)
and Iran (ve to six million speakers), the area designated as South
Kurdistan (Kurdistana Bar). Although the two languages are closely
related, Kurmanji and Sorani are not mutually intelligible and differ at the
basic structural level as well as in vocabulary and idiom. Since all varieties
of Kurdish are not only closely related to Persian but have also been mas-
1
The line dividing Kurmanji from Sorani runs roughly diagonally from northeast
to southwest. The extreme northwest of Iran and the northernmost tip of Iraq fall
into the Kurmanji-speaking area. An article in Hawar (No. 2 [1932], p. 9) explains
the geographical distribution as follows: La langue Kurde se divise en trois dia-
lectes principaux: 1- Le dialecte du Nord, 2- Le dialecte du Sud, 3- Le dialecte du
Nord-Ouest. (1) Le dialecte du nord est parl par tous les Kurdes du Kurdistan
occup par les turcs, par les Kurdes de la Caucasie jusqu Kere-Bax [Qarabagh],
par ceux de la rpublique dErivan, par les Kurdes de la Syrie, par une partie des
Kurdes de lIrak habitant le Mont Sindjar et la contre situe au nord dune ligne
partant du sud du Sindjar par Mosil, et atteignant lest la ville de Rewandiz,
ensuite par les Kurdes de la Perse habitant le nord et louest du lac de Urm, par les
Kurdes du Khorasan, au nord-est de la Perse. (2) Le dialecte du sud est parl par
les Kurdes de lIrak et de la Perse partir du sud de la ligne MosilRewandiz et du
lac de Urm vers le sud et sud-est, jusquaux limites mridionales des Kurdes
Bextiyar. (3) Le dialecte Nord-ouest est le dialecte des Kurdes Dumil. Du Dumil
on ne peut pas tracer une limite xe quelconque, parce que trop melang avec les
Kurdes Qurdmanc parlant le dialecte du Nord le Qurdmanc. Tout de mme les
points de condensation de ce dialecte sont: Drsm, Palo, Genc, epekr, Maden,
Pran, Egil, Swereq, Par, ermiq.
vii
sively inuenced by Persian, the dominant literary and cultural language of
the area for the last millennium, Kurdish is best approached with a knowl-
edge of Persian, and for that reason reference to Persian syntax has been
freely made throughout the presentation of the grammar.
Sorani has been the second ofcial language of Iraq since the creation of
that country after World War I and has many decades of literary activity
behind it. Kurmanji, which was given its present written form by Jeladet Ali
Bedir-Khan in the early 1930s, is still far from being a unied, normalized,
or standardized language. For historical and political reasons it has not been
a written means of communication in the largest area in which it is spoken,
and only recently has publication in Kurmanji begun in earnestand that
mostly among migr communities in Europe, Sweden in particular. With
the abundance of regional dialects, it is not possible to give a description of
all the variants that may be encountered, although every effort has been
made to describe the main ones that occur in the written language. There
are, for example, regions in which the umlauted of Turkish is a regular
feature of the spoken language, but it is not indicated in the writing system.
There are areas in which Kurdish has become so inextricably entangled with
Turkish and/or Arabic and/or Persian that the grammatical structure of the
language has been affected, while the Kurmanji of former Soviet areas like
Azerbaijan and Armenia, which has been written in Cyrillic letters since the
late 1930s, has been inuenced by Russian.
1
The language described herein
is, to the extent possible, what has been adopted as a norm by the majority
of writers.
The readings, chosen to give samples of a broad range of prose writing,
are provided with running vocabulary glosses beneath the texts, and the
glosses in the readings are also contained in the KurdishEnglish vocabu-
lary at the end of the book. Words considered to be absolutely basic vocab-
ulary are not glossed in the notes, since it is assumed that these words either
are known already or will be actively acquired by looking them up in the
1
Like most regional and ethnic languages of the early Soviet Union that did not
have a traditional alphabet and a long history of literature, Kurmanji was given a
Latin-based alphabet in 1929, but it, like the others, was Cyrillicized by Stalins
decree in 1937. Since the collapse of the Soviet Union, Azerbaijan has switched to a
modied Latin alphabet, and it is assumed that the little Kurdish written in Azerbai-
jan has followed suit. Kurdish produced in Armenia is now written in both Cyrillic
and a slightly modied form of the normal Latin Kurmanji letters (see the conver-
sion table for Arabic and Cyrillic on p. 80).
KURMANJI KURDISH
viii
vocabulary in the back. Generally words are not glossed more than once in
the notes because any word encountered a second time should be learned
actively. Words are glossed after the rst instance only if they are rare
enough to warrant being ignored for acquisition. The KurdishEnglish
vocabulary contains over 3,000 words, which should represent a good basic
working vocabulary for the language.
Kurmanji has been and is written in a variety of alphabets. Foremost
today is the Kurmanji used in Turkey and Europe, which is written in a
modied Turkish Latin alphabet. In Armenia and Azerbaijan,
1
Kurmanji is
written in Cyrillic letters, and enough readings in Cyrillic Kurmanji have
been given, together with a brief analysis of the main differences between
Turkey Kurmanji and ex-Soviet Kurmanji, to enable the student to develop
a facility in reading that medium. There were once Kurdish-speaking Arme-
nians in the Ottoman Empire, and they wrote Kurmanji in the Armenian
alphabet. With the exception of Syria, Kurmanji is not widely spoken in
countries that use the Arabic alphabet, and since Syrian Kurds use the Latin
script when they write Kurdish, the Arabic script is little used for modern
Kurmanji. In the early days of literary Kurdish, however, when the Arabic
alphabet was still widely known in Turkey and Latin-script Kurdish was
new in Syria, Arabic was used in tandem with the Latin. Two articles by
Jeladet Ali Bedir-Khan from early issues of the journal Hawar, when it was
published in both alphabets, are given as examples. Some Iranian Kurdish
journals include a few pages of Arabic-script Kurmanji for the Kurmanji-
speaking Kurds who live in Iran, and a specimen of this type, a story by
Perwz Chan, is given at the end of the reading selections both in the
Sorani-based Arabic script in which it was printed in the Iranian Kurdish
journal Sirwe in 1990 and in the Latin Kurmanji in which it was re-
printed in Alole (pp. 2327), a collection of his stories published by Doz
Yaynlar in Istanbul in 2005. There are some minor differences between
the two versions, and they are signaled by asterisks in the Latin text.
The readings, chosen to give a fair sample of the range of prose writing
1
The major concentrations of Kurdish population in the former Soviet Union are
in Armenia and Azerbaijan. From 1923 to 1929 there was an autonomous Kurdish
region in Azerbaijan called Kurdistana Sor (Red Kurdistan). There are a few Kurds
in Georgia, and there is a Kurmanji-speaking Kurdish population of more than half a
million people in northeastern Iran and Turkmenistan, to which they were exiled in
the seventeenth century.
PREFACE
ix
today, are provided with running glosses beneath the texts, and the glosses
in the readings are also contained in the KurdishEnglish vocabulary at the
end of the book. Words considered to be absolutely basic vocabulary are not
glossed in the notes, since it is assumed that these words either are known
already or will be actively acquired as they occur. Generally words are not
glossed more than once in the notes because any word encountered a second
time should be learned actively. Words are glossed after the rst instance
only if they are considered rare enough to warrant being ignored for acquisi-
tion. The readings and biographical sketches of authors have been taken
mainly from Mehmet Uzun, Antolojiya Edebiyata Kurd, 2 vols. (Istanbul:
Tmzamanlar Yaynclk, 1995), which may be consulted for further read-
ing. The readings in Cyrillic Kurmanji, which have not been glossed but
have a separate vocabulary at the end of the book, have been taken from
Rya Teze, a Kurdish newspaper published in Armenia.
For dictionaries of Kurmanji, the following may be consulted:
Chyet, Michael L. KurdishEnglish Dictionary. New Haven: Yale Uni-
versity Press, 2003.
, .
. Ufa, 2000.
zoli, D. Ferheng KurdiTrki TrkeKrte. Istanbul: Deng Yayn-
lar, 1992. A comprehensive dictionary for those who know Turk-
ish. Unfortunately the gender of Kurdish nouns is not indicated.
, . . - . Moscow,
1960.
Rizgar, Baran. KurdishEnglish EnglishKurdish Dictionary. London:
M. F. Onen, 1993. With around 25,000 Kurdish words and phrases,
this is a useful dictionary for reading.
Saadallah, Salah. Saladins EnglishKurdish Dictionary. Istanbul:
Avesta, 2000. Contains around 80,000 entries.
, .
. Moscow: , 2001.
For on-line and downloadable dictionaries and word lists for Kurdish and
a variety of languages, see www.ferheng.org.
KURMANJI KURDISH
x
The Phonology of Kurmanji Kurdish
Alphabet and sounds. The Kurdish alphabet is based on the Turkish adap-
tation of the Latin alphabet, and for the most part words are written as they
are pronounced, although there are several important features that are not
indicated in the writing system. These are noted below. International Pho-
netic Alphabet (IPA) equivalents are given in square brackets.
Vowels:
i u
o
e a
is like the ee in beet, IPA [i], as in nv [niv] half.
i is like the i in bit, IPA [I] as in dil [dIl] heart; in closed syllables
ending in m, i is often pronounced as a close central unrounded vowel
[], i.e. very close to the Turkish , as in vedixwim [vQdIxwm] I
drink.
is like the ai in bait, IPA [e], without the y-offglide of English, as in
hz [hez] power.
e is like the a in bat, IPA [Q],
1
as in berhem [bQRhQm] product, ex-
cept (1) in the sequence ew, where it is pronounced [] as in ew [w]
that and dewlet [dwlQt] state, (2) when it is followed by y but not
in the same syllable, in which case it is pronounced like the e in bet
[E], as in odeya [odEyA] room, and (3) in post-stress positions, partic-
ularly word-nally, where it is pronounced [E], as in mirvek [mIro-
1
The [Q] pronunciation of this vowel is taken as standard; for many speakers,
however, it is closer to [E], the vowel of English bet, in all environments.
1
vEk] a man and de [dItSE] he goes.
is like the oo in boot, IPA [u], as in bn [bun] to be.
u is like the u in put and bull, IPA [U], as in du [dU] two; the se-
quences gu and ku are pronounced by some as [gE] and [kE], partic-
ularly in closed syllables like gur wolf, pronounced either [gER] or
[gUR].
o is like the oa in boat, IPA [o], without the w-offglide of English, as
in nod [nod] ninety.
a is like the a in father and balm, IPA [A], as in bav [bAv] father.
Consonants:
bilabial labiodental dental/alveolar palatal velar uvular glotto-pharyngeal
plosive p, p t, t k, k q
b d g
fricative f s x h, h
v z x
,
j c
nasal m n
approximate w y
ap, trill r, r
lateral l
b is the b of English [b]
c is pronounced like the j in judge [dZ]
is the aspirated ch like the ch in church [tSH] (see below)
is the unaspirated ch of English eschew plus pharyngealization [tS
]
(see below)
d is like the d of English [d]
f is like the f of English [f]
g is the hard g of English, as in go [g]
h is like the h of English [h]
KURMANJI KURDISH
2
h is pronounced, in areas in which it occurs, like the of Arabic (a voice-
less pharyngeal fricative, []); in areas where it is not so pronounced, it
is not differentiated from h
j is the j of French, the English g in beige [Z]
k is the aspirated k of English key [kH] (see below)
k is the unaspirated k of English sky plus pharyngealization [k
] (see
below)
l is a liquid l as in Persian, like the l in lee [l]
m is the m of English [m]
n is the n of English [n]
p is the aspirated p of English pie [pH] (see below)
p is the unaspirated p of English spy plus pharyngealization [p
] (see
below)
q is a voiceless uvular stop, like the Arabic [q]; it is pronounced like
k but farther back in the throat
r is a ap as in Persian and Italian [R]; does not occur word-initially
r is a trill, like the rr of Spanish [r]; all initial rs are trilled; the trilled r
is only sporadically indicated in the orthography by rr (e.g. pir very,
which is sometimes written pirr), otherwise it is not indicated in the
writing system
s is the s of English [s]
is pronounced like the sh in ship [S]
t is the aspirated t of English tie [tH] (see below)
t is the unaspirated t of English sty plus pharyngealization [t
] (see
below)
v is the v of English [v]
w is the w of English we [w] except before i, , and , when it is a
close back unrounded semivowel [], like the u in French cuire and
huit
x is pronounced like the ch in German Bach and the Arabic , a voice-
less uvular fricative [x]
x is a voiced uvular fricative [], the ghayn () of Arabic; it is the voiced
counterpart to x
PHONOLOGY
3
y is the y of English yes [j]; also indicates the diphthongs ay and ey
z is the z of English [z]
is not part of the orthographic system, but it is given in the vocabulary
to indicate the Arabic ayn (). In parts of the Kurmanji-speaking area,
particularly those closer to Arabic-speaking areas, the ayn is pro-
nounced as in Arabic (a voiced pharyngeal fricative, []). Vowels pro-
nounced with a preceding ayn are marked with an underscore (e = e,
as in ereb Arab)
The aspirated and unaspirated stops.
p, t, k, and are aspirated stops, as in English pie, tie, key, and chew
p, t, k, and are unaspirated stops, as in English spy, sty, and ski, and
eschew, and are accompanied by slight pharyngealization. They are
not indicated in the writing system, and they are not universally ob-
served by all speakers, but where they occur they contrast on the pho-
nemic level. They are indicated in the this book by an underscore: cf.
plav [pHelAv] wave and plav [p
in] heat, al
[tSHAl] speckled and al [tS
And] swal-
lowed it, and wrgerand [wQRgQrAnd] translated it.
(3) The modal prexes di- and bi-, as in daxiftim [dIAxIftm] I was
speaking, and baxive [bIAxIvE] let him speak.
KURMANJI KURDISH
4
(4) When there are no prexes on nite verbal forms, the nal syllable
of the verb stem is stressed, as in axftine [AxIftInE] they have spoken.
(5) The innitive is stressed on the nal syllable, as in axiftn [AxIftIn]
to speak.
Orthographic variants. Some writers prefer to use the Turkish undotted
for i and the dotted i for . They write dizanim as dzanm and zann as
zanin.
Doubled consonants. Doubled consonants are quite rare in Kurdish, and
almost all the doubled consonants of Arabic and Persian loanwords are
reduced to a single consonant, e.g. muddat > mudet, mull > mele,
muassasa > muesese, and shiddat > idet. The few double con-
sonants that survive are in learned borrowings like ummet religious com-
munity, welle by God, seff class, and muswedde draft copy.
The furtive i. Kurdish does not tolerate all nal consonant clusters. When
an intolerable nal consonant cluster appears, it is broken by the vowel i,
called the furtive i, which disappears when a vowel-initial enclitic or suf-
x is added to the word. Words like aql mind, intelligence, esl origin,
emr age, and emr order are aqil, esil, emir, and emir
1
when by them-
selves or when followed by a consonant-initial sufx (aqil mind, kmaqil
foolish, ew kmaqil b he was foolish, and aqilmend intelligent). When
followed by a vowel-initial enclitic or sufx the i is dropped, as in aql te
your mind, ew kmaql e he is foolish, kmaql foolishness, bi esl xwe
in ones origin, originally, emr min my age and emra serdar com-
manders order. The furtive i is indicated in the vocabulary by an italicized
i, e.g. aqil, esil, emir, fhim. Kurdish writers are not in agreement on the
1
Aqil mind (with furtive i), from the Arabic , is to be distinguished from the
homograph aqil that means intelligent, reasonable (from the Arabic S ). The latter
is stable as aqil even in compounds (aqilane intelligently). There are two words
spelled emir, emir (a variant of umr ) age and emir (from the Arabic ) order;
they both contain furtives is.
PHONOLOGY
5
writing of the furtive i, and many omit it, particularly when it is unstressed,
i.e. some write ez fhim dikim I understand while others write ez fhm
dikim.
For practicing Kurdish pronunciation, there are stories with printed text
and audio available on the internet at www.dibistanakurdi.com. For the
stories, select rok in the Hilbijart list. The words in the stories are
included in the vocabulary at the end of the book.
KURMANJI KURDISH
6
THE GRAMMAR OF KURMANJI KURDISH
SUBSTANTIVES
1. The Noun. A Kurdish noun in the absolute state, i.e. without any end-
ing of any kind, gives (1) the generic sense of the noun and (2) the denite
sense. It is also the lexical form of the noun, i.e. the form in which a noun
is given in a vocabulary list or dictionary. Thus, a noun like kitb book
may, depending upon the context, mean books (in general) or the book
(the one that has already been introduced). There are no articles of any kind
in Kurdish.
1.1. Gender. All Kurmanji nouns are either masculine or feminine. Each
and every word must be learned along with its gender, and there is little
helpful that can be said concerning determining gender, as grammatical
gender appears to be randomly assigned. Beings that are male or female by
nature are assigned to the corresponding grammatical gender class, and as a
rule, the names of towns, cities, and countries are feminine; all abstract
nouns ending in - are feminine; all innitives used as nouns are feminine;
and nouns ending in vowels tend to be feminine.
Words borrowed from Arabic, which has gender, do not necessarily cor-
respond to the gender assignment in Arabic. Kitb book is feminine in
Kurdish; the Arabic word from which it is derived, $ $ kitb, is masculine.
Words borrowed from Persian and Turkish, neither of which has gender, are
randomly assigned gender.
1.2. Inection. Nouns are inected in four cases, nominative, oblique,
construct, and vocative. The construct case will be treated in 4 below, and
the vocative will be treated in 17.1.
There are no particular endings for the nominative, and the nominative
7
plural is identical to the nominative singular. Nouns are actually masculine
or feminine only in the singular; the plural is common, and there is no gen-
der differentiation of plural nouns.
In the oblique case, feminine singular nouns add unstressed - (or -y if
the noun ends in a vowel; feminine nouns that end in e either add -y or
change the e to ), unmodied masculine singular nouns do not change,
1
and all plural nouns add stressed -an (or -yan if the noun ends in a vowel).
Words that end in - change the to -iy- before adding any endings. An
example of a masculine noun is mirov man, and examples of feminine
nouns are jin woman and ode room:
NOMINATIVE OBLIQUE
MASC. SING. mirv + mirv
FEM. SING. jn + jn
od
+ y ody
or e > od
PLURAL mirov + n mirovn
jn + n jinn
od + yn odeyn
gund > iyn gundiyn
The nominative case is used for (1) unmodied subjects and predicates of
equational sentences (see 11)
Ode paqij e. The room is clean.
Ev mekteb e. This is the school.
(2) subjects of all intransitive verbs (see 14)
Gund di mvanxana Reo de rni-
tbn daxaftin.
The villagers were sitting and talking
in Reshos reception room.
and (3) the patients of all past-tense transitive verbs (see 18.2).
1
When a masculine singular noun is modied by a demonstrative (see 2) or in-
denite (see 3), it does change.
KURMANJI KURDISH
8
The oblique case is used for (1) direct objects of present-tense verbs:
Ez mirv dibnim. I see the man.
Ez mirovn dibnim. I see the men.
Ez jn dibnim. I see the woman.
Ez jinn dibnim. I see the women.
(2) complements of prepositions:
ji mirv from the man
ji mirovn from the men
ji jn from the woman
ji jinn from the women
di ody de
di od de
in the room
(3) the second member of a construct chain (see below 4):
gundn kurdan villages of Kurds
(4) agents of past-tense transitive verbs (see below 18.2).
In the case of nouns coordinated by the conjunction and, only the last
member of a series shows a case ending if there is one.
Tu kitb kovaran dibn? Do you see the books and journals?
Ji bo rojn b, ez plan bernaman
dikim.
Im making plans and programs for
the coming days.
There are a few nouns that contain the vowel a, usually in the nal sylla-
ble, like ba wind, bajar city, ziman language, mar snake, welat
country, and agir re, that may show an internal change of the a to for
the oblique case, i.e. b, bajr, zimn, mr, welt, and gir. The use of the
internal oblique is optional.
2. Demonstrative Adjectives and Her Every. When functioning as
attributive adjectives, the nominative demonstratives are ev this, these and
ew that, those. They modify both singular and plural nouns and show no
differentiation between masculine and feminine. In the oblique, however, ev
SUBSTANTIVES
9
and ew become v and w respectively with masculine nouns, and the noun
echoes the ending by adding -; with feminine nouns ev becomes v, and ew
becomes w, and the noun echoes the ending by adding -; in the plural ev
becomes van and ew becomes wan, and the plural nouns echo them by
adding -an.
When modied by her every, masculine singular nouns, which are not
distinguished in the oblique case when they are unmodied, take the
oblique ending - and feminine nouns add the regular oblique ending -.
NOM. SING. & PL. OBL. SING. OBL. PL.
MASC. ev v van n
ew w wan n
her her
FEM. ev v van n
ew w wan n
her her
ev mirv this man, these men (masc. nom. sing. & pl.)
ji v mirv from this man (masc. obl. sing.)
ji her mirv from every man
ji van mirovn from these men (obl. pl.)
Ez w mirv dibnim. I see that man.
Ez wan mirovn dibnim. I see those men.
perey
pereyek
pereyn
per pern
FEM.
odeya odeyeke
odeyn
oda odake
Nouns ending in (like xan m house and piran f majority) change
the to iy and then add the endings:
MASC. xaniy xaniyek xaniyn
FEM. piraniya piraniyeke piraniyn
There are very few nouns that end in u and , but for the few that exist
the following endings may take the place of the u or :
MASC. iw iwek iwn
FEM. iwa iweke iwn
A noun or pronoun in the second part of a construct, the limiter, is in the
oblique case, as in the following:
w (m) he/it/that
ew wan they/those
w (f) she/it/that
ev
v (m) he/it/this
ev van they/these
v (f) she/it/this
There are no third-person pronouns other than the demonstratives. The ew
set is the third-person pronoun of default; the ev set is used to direct atten-
tion to a nearby third person. Note that both ew and ev distinguish gender
only in the oblique singular. Subject pronouns are necessarily expressed, as
in English, except in impersonal constructions where English uses it (as in
its raining) and occasionally in connected prose where the referent of a
third-person pronoun has already been introduced and is obvious from con-
text.
The nominative pronouns are used as subjects of equational sentences,
present-tense verbs, and past-tense intransitive verbs
Ez kurd im. Im a Kurd.
Ew w mirov dibne. He sees that man.
Em rnitin. We sat down.
and (2) as patients of past-tense transitive verbs (see 18.2).
Min tu dt. I saw you.
W em dtin. He saw us.
The oblique pronouns are used as (1) possessors in a construct
kitba min, kitbn min my book, my books
kitbeke min a book of mine
1
In some dialects hun is hn.
KURMANJI KURDISH
18
kitbeke n ya min a new book of mine
xaniy me our house
(2) direct objects of all present-tense verbs (and all verbs formed from the
present stem of the verb)
Tu min dibn? Do you see me?
Ez te dibnim. I see you.
Ew me dibne. He sees us.
Em nikarin wan bibnin. We cannot see them.
(3) complements of prepositions and circumpositions
ji min from me
ji w from him
ji w from her
bi wan re with them
(4) agents of all past transitive verbs (see 18.2 below)
Te ez dtim. You saw me.
Min ew dtin. I saw them.
7.1 The Reexive Pronoun Xwe. The reexive pronoun xwe has, in and
of itself, no person or number but takes its person and number from the sub-
ject of the verb in the clause in which it occurs. It can thus mean, as a pos-
sessive, my own, your own, his/her own, our own, or their own as
well as the objective myself, yourself, him/herself, ourselves, your-
selves, or themselves. Xwe must be used as both possessive pronoun and
object pronoun to refer to the subject of the verb, i.e. the personal pronouns
cannot be so used. Constructions like kitba min my book and hevaln
min my friends are viable in any clause in which I is not the subject of
the verb, but not in sentences like I see my book and I went with my
friends, where kitba xwe and hevaln xwe must be used.
Dlikek teva du cewrn xwe li ser riya
min xuya dibn.
A bitch used to appear on my route with
her two pups.
SUBSTANTIVES
19
Li dora xwe dinrim. I look around myself.
Ferzende di ran xwe da birn b. Ferzende was wounded in his thigh.
With past transitive verbs (see 18.2), xwe takes its person and number
from the logical subject (= agent).
Ez vegeriyama am, min hevaln
xwe n li wir bidtana.
I would have returned to Damascus; I
would have seen my friends there.
Te xwe ji br dikir te em bajar
xwe tan bra xwe.
You forgot yourself, and you remem-
bered the river of your town.
8. Prepositions, Postpositions, Circumpositions. Certain prepositions,
particularly bi, di, ji, and li, occur as circumpositions that envelop the
complement, that is, the preposition itself marks the beginning of the prepo-
sitional phrase, and the end of the complement is marked by one of the post-
positions, ve, de, or re (or the variants, va, da, and ra).
The postpositional element does not always, in and of itself, add anything
substantial to the meaning of the prepositional phrase, and most preposi-
tions occur without the postpositional element without any signicant dis-
tinction in meaning. Others need the postpositional element to dene the
signication of the preposition, as di de in vs. di re with and ji
ve from vs. ji re to, for, with. Generally the postpositions have the
following signications: de indicates stationary position in or at; re indi-
cates accompaniment; and ve indicates motion away from.
Common prepositions and circumpositions:
ba to, towards
ber in front of, toward
b (by, by) without
ber before
bi with, by means of (see below)
bi re with, along with
bi ten except for
bi xra due to, thanks to
dervey outside of
di de in
di re by, via, with
di ve through
di bareya de about, concerning
digel with
di nav de among, amidst,
inside of
di navbera de between
heta until, as far as
ji from, of (partitive)
ji re to, for, with
KURMANJI KURDISH
20
ji ve from; as of, since
ji bil other than, aside from
ji bo for, for the sake of
ji nava from amongst
ji xeyn other than, aside from
li ( de) in, at, to
li cem together with
li ber in front of, before
li dij against
li dora around
ligel together with
li gora according to
li pey after, behind
li p in front of
li rex beside
li ser on, above, about
mna like
pit after
ser on, to
ta until, up to
tev along with
wek(e) like
As a rule, prepositions are followed by nouns and pronouns in the oblique
case. The exception is the preposition bi: when it is used to create an adverb
(like bi ermdar modestly) or a compound adjective (like bi quwet
powerful), the complement is in the nominative case.
Pln bay hnik bi ermdar derbas
hundir oda te dibn.
Waves of cool breeze were passing
modestly into your room.
bi rast tu mna gula ji lla tung
derkeve, tu ji mal derket
And truly you went out of the house like
a bullet shot from the barrel of a rie.
yek ji ar nivskarn her bi quwet one of the most powerful poets and
writers
Since a circumposition envelopes the whole of its complement, it may ex-
tend through a relative clause (for which see 30), as in the following:
Gelo mirov kane ji {berhemn ku bi
zimann din tne nivsandin} re bib-
je berhemn kurd an j edebiyata
kurd?
I wonder if one can speak of works that
are written in other languages as Kurd-
ish works or Kurdish literature.
Ew bixwaze bi {yek ku nrna w
nzk nrna w ye} re bizewice.
He would like to get married to someone
whose outlook is close to his own.
8.1. Contracted Prepositions. Four prepositions have contracted forms
SUBSTANTIVES
21
with third-person singular complements:
bi + w/w > p ji + w/w > j
di + w/w > t li + w/w > l
If there is a postposition, it appears along with the contracted form of the
preposition (j re, t de, etc.).
Kes ku heval, hogir agirt w b
p re dimeiya
The person who was his friend, com-
panion, and pupil and who walked with
him
Mrik odaya min nivn ku ez t de
razm, nan min da.
The man showed me my room and the
bed in which I would be sleeping.
Mizgn digihje Emn Al Bedir-Xan,
ku j re lawikek bye.
The news reaches Emin Ali Bedir-Khan
that a son has been born to him.
Mela l nr got The mulla looked at him and said
Te l vegerand. You replied to him.
9. Cardinal Numbers. The cardinal numbers are as follows:
1 yek
2 du, didu
3 s, sis
4 ar
5 pnc
6 e
7 heft
8 het
9 neh
10 deh
11 ya(n)zdeh
12 dwanzdeh
13 szdeh
14 ardeh
15 panzdeh
16 anzdeh
17 hivdeh
18 hijdeh
19 nozdeh
20 bst
21 bst yek
22 bst du
23 bst s, &c.
30 s (sih)
40 il
50 pnc
60 st
70 heft
80 het
90 nod
100 sed
101 sed yek
102 sed du, &c.
200 dused
300 ssed
400 arsed
500 pncsed
600 esed
700 heftsed
800 hetsed
900 nehsed
1,000 (yek) hezar
2,000 du hezar
3,000 s hezar
4,000 ar hezar
5,000 pnj hezar
6,000 e hezar
7,000 heft hezar
KURMANJI KURDISH
22
8,000 het hezar 9,000 neh hezar 10,000 deh hezar &c.
Compound numbers are formed with the conjunction , as in
il yek forty-one
pnc heft fty-seven
The number yek and all subsequent compound numbers ending in yek are
ordinarily declined as feminine singular with construct in -a and oblique in
-.
di 91 de di nod yek de in 91
L ew yeka han w bhv nake. But that one (thing just mentioned) does
not make him despair.
Ev yeka han ji tradisyona Celadet
Bedir-Xan bi xra kovara w
Hawar dibe.
This one (thing just mentioned) is from
the tradition of Jeladet Bedir-Khan and
is thanks to his journal Hawar.
When yek is used as a pronoun referring to a person, however, it takes the
appropriate gender.
ew yek wan that one (masc.) of them
ew yeke wan that one (fem.) of them
The numbers du through neh, and all subsequent compounds ending in 2
through 9, as well as the thousands, are inected as plurals with a regular
oblique in -an.
di sala 1984an de di sala hezar nehsed
het aran de
in the year 1984
li 4a aprla 1946an de li ara aprla hezar
nehsed il ean de
on April 4, 1946
All numbers ending in zero (except the thousands) are declined as mascu-
line with construct ending in -n, but the oblique ends in -(y).
di saln 1300 de di saln hezar ssed de in the 1300s
SUBSTANTIVES
23
di navbera 196870y de di navbera hezar neh-
sad est het hef-
ty de
between 1968 and 1970
Oidupusa Sofokles bi k-
man ber niha bi 2450
sal hatiye nivsandin.
Oidupusa Sofokles bi
kman ber niha bi du
hezar arsed pnc
sal hatiye nivsandin.
Sophocles Oedipus was
written at least 2450
years ago.
Numbers that modify nouns are indeclinable and are followed immedi-
ately by the noun counted, and the noun is pluralof course this will show
only in the oblique and construct cases.
The numbers 2 and 3 by themselves are didu and sis; when they
modify nouns and when they are part of a compound number they are du
and s, and nouns following them are construed as plural, as are the nouns
after all numbers.
Ap min du kes n nava ikeft. My uncle and the two men went inside
the cave.
pit du rojn din after two more days
Her du avn w sor, wek du pizotn
gir bn.
Its two eyes were red, like two brands of
re.
S hefte ar roj mabn. Three weeks and four days remained.
pit e meh 14 (ardeh) rojan after six months and fourteen days
Temporal expressions of duration of time (for X amount of time) and
instance (X number of times) are in the oblique case.
S roj s evan di w cih da ma. He stayed in that place for three days
and three nights.
Ez het caran hatim girtin. I was arrested eight times.
Pnc, het, deh caran ew lat bilind
dibn ber ku giranbna wan wan
bikine bin gol.
Five, eight, ten times those stones
skipped before their weight pulled them
to the bottom of the lake.
9.1. Ordinal Numbers. With the exception of 1st, ordinal numbers are
KURMANJI KURDISH
24
formed from the cardinal numbers plus the sufx -(y)an, as in the follow-
ing:
1st ewel()
2nd diduyan, duduyan
3rd sisiyan
4th aran
5th pncan
6th ean
7th heftan
8th hetan
9th nehan
10th dehan
11th yanzdehan
12th dwanzdehan &c.
The ordinals are construed as normal adjectives.
Bi hatina cunta fast a diduyan re ez
j hatim avtin.
With the coming of the second Fascist
junta I was thrown out of there.
di hejmara Hawar ya 4an [aran] de in the fourth issue of Hawar
Roja sisiyan la kur xwe da pita
xwe bir mal.
On the third day he put his sons body
on his back and carried him home.
Xeyn ji deng segek tu dengn din ne
dihatin guhan, l dirj ne kir, dema
deng segek b y duduyan sisiyan
aran.
Aside from the sound of a dog no other
sounds could be heard, but it wasnt
long before there was the sound of a
second, third, and fourth dog.
There is an alternative set of ordinals formed in the Persian manner with
the sufxes -em and -emn, as follows:
1st yekem(n)
2nd duyem(n)
3rd syem(n)
4th arem(n)
5th pncem(n)
6th eem(n)
7th heftem(n)
8th hetem(n)
9th nehem(n)
10th dehem(n)
11th yanzdehem(n)
12th dwanzdehem(n) &c.
These ordinals tend to be used in set phrases like er chan y yekemn
the First World War and cara yekem the rst time.
9.2. Months of the Year and Days of the Week. There are several no-
menclature systems in use for the months. The names of the rst set are
borrowed from French, and they are as follows:
janvye/januar January fevrye February
SUBSTANTIVES
25
mars March
aprl April
m May
jen June
jya July
t August
september September
oktober October
november November
desember December
The names of the second set either correspond to or were borrowed directly
from the Arabic versions of the ancient Semitic month names that were ad-
justed to t the Julian calendar months of the Roman Empire. May and July
have fallen out of use in this set. The names are given with their Arabic
equivalents in parentheses:
ileya pan January ( )
sibat February (()
adar March ()
nsan April (.)
hezran June ([)
ab August ()
eyll September ()
iriya pn October ( [d e )
iriya pan November ([d
)
ileya pn December ( e )
The third set consists of traditional Kurdish names for a few months:
reeme February
avdar March
gulan May
trmeh July
gelawj August
lon September
Dates are written and read as follows:
31 adara 1947an s yek adara hezar
nehsed il heftan
March 31, 1947
di 26 nsana 1893an de di bst e nsana
hezar hetsed nod
sisiyan de
on the 26th of April 1893
di 25.07.1974an de di bst pnc trmeha
hezar nehsed heft
aran de
on 25 July 1974
The days of the week (all feminine) are as follows. The b of emb is nor-
mally deleted in the nominative case and restored in the oblique and con-
KURMANJI KURDISH
26
struct cases, as in em (nom.) but roja emb (obl.):
em(b) Saturday
yekem(b) Sunday
duem(b) Monday
sem(b) Tuesday
arem(b) Wednesday
pncem(b) Thursday
n Friday
9.3. Telling Time. In all expressions for telling time, the basis of the ex-
pression is saet (or the variant seet) hour.
Saet i ye? What time is it?
Saet deh e. Its ten oclock.
Saet nzk dudiy pit nvroje (nro)
b.
It was nearly two oclock in the after-
noon.
saet sis sibeh/ev three oclock in the morning/at night
10. Comparative and Superlative Adjectives. The comparative degree
of the adjective is made by sufxing -tir. There are only a few irregularly
formed comparatives, viz. pir much > btir more, ba good > tir
better, and mezin big > meztir (as well as the regularly formed mezin-
tir) bigger, older. Adjectives ending in t drop the t before the addition of
-tir (pwist > pwistir, not *pwisttir, and xurt > xurtir, not *xurttir). The
preposition of comparison is ji, as in the following examples.
Min ji her tit btir ji wan hez dikir. I liked them more than anything.
Hin ji wan, bi baleran, ya j bi
gemiyn mezin drtir b.
Some of them had gone further in planes
or large ships.
Ew pwist e ku nivskarn me li ser
jiyana gund axayan biaxivin, l
pwistir e ku ew ji br nekin ku kurd
li ehran j dijn.
It is important that our writers speak of
the life of villagers and lords, but it is
more important that they not forget that
Kurds live in cities too.
Ez ten e salan ji te mezintir im. Im only six years older than you.
Erebiya min ji kurd turkiya min
tir b tir e j.
My Arabic was and still is better than
my Kurdish and Turkish.
Tu her roj xurtir dib. You get stronger every day.
SUBSTANTIVES
27
More than followed by a number is expressed by btir (or pirrtir) +
the number:
Hn btir pnc mitr di bin zemna
Pars de bn.
You were more than fty meters beneath
the ground of Paris.
Pirrtir dused pnc kut ji lekern
tirkan heb.
There were more than two hundred fty
slain among the soldiers of the Turks.
The superlative is indicated by context, not by a special form. The rst
example in this section could just as well be translated as I liked them the
most of anything. A comparative adjective followed by a construct usually
gives the superlative sense, and a following construct is the equivalent of
the English in.
Xurd dewlementir gund b. Khurshid was the richest (person) in the
village.
W li kur xwe dinr xwe bextyartir
din dizan.
He used to look at his son and consider
himself the luckiest (person) in the
world.
A true superlative adjective is made by adding -tirn to the adjective, and
such superlatives precede the nouns they modify:
Mezintirn nav ku bi ziman
edebiyata kurd ya klask re bye
yek, Ehmed Xan ye.
The greatest name that has occurred in
the classical Kurdish language and lit-
erature is Ahmad Khani.
A second type of superlative is made with her preceding the adjective.
Like -issimo in Italian, her gives a superlative sense of really, e.g. her
girng means most important in the sense of really important. Superla-
tives of compound adjectives like bi quwet powerful and past participles
used adjectivally like lipamay backward, where the addition of -tir
would be awkward or impossible, are signaled by her.
Ew yek ji ar nivskarn her bi
quwet mekteba Hawar b.
He was one of the most powerful poets
and writers of the Hawar school.
Nirvanek her dilr j newir b bi
roj di nav re derbas bibya.
Even a really intrepid hunter would not
have dared to pass through in the day-
time.
KURMANJI KURDISH
28
Cumhriyeta Mehabad di droka
Kurdistan ya nzk de yek ji
byern her girng e.
The Republic of Mahabad is one of the
most important events in the recent
history of Kurdistan.
Kurdistan herma Tirkiyey ya her
lipamay ye; Mrdn bajar Tirki-
yey y her lipamay ye; Nisbn
qeza Mrdn ya her bi derd e; Still
nehiya Nisbn ya her belengaz e;
Ziving gund Still y her lipamay
ye. Li gor nifsa min ez li ikefta
jimar dido ya v gund hatime dinya-
y.
Kurdistan is the most backward part of
Turkey; Mardin is the most backward
city in Turkey; Nusaybin is the most
wretched district of Mardin; Still is the
most destitute part of Nusaybin; Ziving
is the most backward village in Still.
According to my identity card, I was
born in cave number two of this village.
SUBSTANTIVES
29
THE VERB
11. Present Copulas. The present-tense copulas (am, is, are) are enclit-
ics, i.e. unstressed, but they are usually written as separate words.
POSTCONSONANTAL POSTVOCALIC
im in me ne
in y ne
e in ye ne
Examples of postconsonantal copulas:
ez kurd im I am Kurdish em kurd in we are Kurdish
tu kurd you are Kurdish hun kurd in you are Kurdish
ew kurd e s/he is Kurdish ew kurd in they are Kurdish
Examples of postvocalic copulas:
ez bi w re me Im with him em bi w re ne we are with him
tu bi w re y youre with him hun bi w re ne you are with him
ew bi w re ye s/hes with him ew bi w re ne they are with him
The negative ne (stressed) is positioned before the complement (or what-
ever is negated, but not before the copula). Examples of copulas with nega-
tives:
ez ne kurd im Im not Kurdish em ne kurd in we arent Kurdish
tu ne kurd you arent Kurdish hun ne kurd in you arent Kurdish
ew ne kurd e s/he isnt Kurdish ew ne kurd in they arent Kurdish
Other examples are as follows:
Tu xwndekr . You are a student.
Tu xwndekrek b . You are a good student.
Tu n xwndekrek b . You are not a good student.
B e. It is good.
30
N b e. It is not good.
Ev xanyek e. This is a house.
Ev xan ne. These are houses.
Ev n xanyek e. This is not a house.
Ez ne ji era we me, ez ne iyay ne
j det me; ez bajar me. L beriya
hertit, ez j merivek im.
I am not from your tribe; I am not a
mountaineer or from the plains either; I
am an urbanite, but before anything else
I am a person.
The combination of an oblique plural ending in -an and the rst-person
singular enclitic im usually becomes -a me instead of -an im.
Ez yek ji wan nivskara me. I am one of those writers.
Ez j yek ji wan kurda me ku I too am one of those Kurds who
Ez bi xwe yek ji wan kesa me ku I myself am one of those people who
12. To Have and the Existential Verb Hebn. The existential verb to
exist is hebn, the present and past conjugations of which are as follows:
PRESENT PAST
ez hme em hne ez hbm em hbn
tu hy hun hne tu hby hun hbn
ew hye ew hne ew hb ew hbn
The third-persons singular and plural are used for there is and there
are respectively.
Gotineke piyn me heye. There is a saying of our ancestors.
Ger xwendevann kurd tunebin
sedem w hene.
If there are no readers of Kurdish, there
are reasons for it.
Pir kes li dora min hebn ku ji iran
hez dikir ir dinivsandin.
There were many people around me who
enjoyed poetry and wrote poems.
Di avn w da ronahiyeke dijwar
heb.
There was a hard light in his eyes.
The negative of heye is tune there is not any, there is no, and the
THE VERB
31
negative of heb is tuneb there was not any, there was no.
Madem ku zimannivs tune, ev dewlet-
kirin i ye?
As long as there are no writers, whats
the use of creating this state?
Di v war da otorteyeke resm tune. In this regard there is no ofcial author-
ity.
Divab ku ew kzik w ev bihata
kutin an na xew li min tuneb.
That bug would have to be killed that
night or else there would be no sleep
for me.
There is no verb in Kurdish equivalent to the English verb to have.
Kurdish expresses possession by the possessive construct followed by the
appropriate third person of the existential verbheye there is, hene there
are, heb there was, or hebn there were.
Pirsiyareke min heye. I have a question.
Pirsiyareke min heb. I had a question.
Pnc zarokn w hene. He has ve children.
Cihek bajar Mehabad y taybet di
dil me de heye.
The city of Mahabad has a special place
in our hearts.
13. The Innitive. Kurdish innitives end in -in, -n, -an, or -n, are
stressed on the nal syllable (dtn to see, meiyn to walk, tirsn to
fear), and are construed as feminine nouns. The use of the innitive as a
noun occasionally coincides with English usage, but it is more often used
where the English gerund (-ing) is used.
Axaftin, xwendin nivsna bi ziman
zikmak, ji her mirov re pwstiyek
e.
To speak, to read, and to write in ones
native language is a requirement for
every person.
pit weandina kovara xwe bi salek
pit avakirina Cumhriyeta Tirkiy
bi deh salan
a year after publishing his journal and
ten years after the founding of the Re-
public of Turkey
An unmodied direct object of an innitive precedes the innitive and
forms a generic compound with it. Thus, qehwe vexwarin to drink coffee,
KURMANJI KURDISH
32
rojname xwendin to read newspapers, kovar weandin to publish jour-
nals, and hotl yn to frequent hotels are generic compounds. A modi-
ed direct object of an innitive is linked to the innitive by an objective
genitive construct. So, vexwarina qehweya xwe to drink ones coffee,
xwendina rojnameya xwe ya bi kurd to read ones newspaper in Kurd-
ish, weandina kovara xwe to publish ones journal, and yna min ya
hotl my going to the hotel, where the objects and complements are de-
nite, indenite, or modied (i.e. not generic), become construct phrases.
Ez dixwazim her sibeh bi vexwarina
qehweya xwe re rojnameya xwe ya bi
kurd j bixwnim.
I want to read my newspaper in Kurdish
every morning while drinking my cof-
fee.
Bi yna min ya hotl dil xwe girtin. They were offended by my going to the
hotel.
The innitive is also used with the preposition ji bo to express purpose:
Ji bo dtina wan ez me Sriy. I went to Syria in order to see them.
Min bihst ku li welatn Rohelat il sal
xebat divt ji bo kirina erbikek
ferfr.
I have heard that in the countries of the
Orient forty years of labor are needed in
order to produce a porcelain vase.
14. The Present Tense. The present tense corresponds to the English
present used for habitual action (I work) and to the present progressive
(Im working). It is formed from the present stem of the verb.
The present stems of a few very common verbs are totally irregular and
must be learned as a principal part of the verb (e.g. dtin to see > bn-,
xwestin to want > xwaz-). With few exceptions, verbs with innitives
ending in -an, -iyan, -n, and -n are regular and form the present stem by
dropping those endings. Verbs that end in -andin (for which type see 28
below) form their present stems by changing the -andin ending to -n- (e.g.
mirandin to cause to die > mirn-).
To form the present tense, the stressed progressive/habitual modal marker
d is prexed to the present stem, and the following sufxed personal end-
ings are added to the stem.
THE VERB
33
CONSONANT STEMS VOWEL STEMS
-im -in -m -n
- -in -y -n
-e -in -n
Examples of conjugation are as follows. In Kurmanji, pronominal sub-
jects are not optional and must be expressed.
N/-- GO (CONSONANT STEM) USTIN/-O- WASH (VOWEL STEM)
ez dim em din ez dom em don
tu d hun din tu doy hun don
ew de ew din ew do ew don
In the negative, the modal marker di is replaced by stressed n-.
ez nim em nin ez nom em non
tu n hun nin tu noy hun non
ew ne ew nin ew no ew non
If the present stem begins with a- or -, the prex di- may drop its vowel
and becomes d-, as in axaftin/axiv- speak and andin/n- to hurt, the
present tenses of which are either daxivim or diaxivim I speak and either
dnim or dinim I hurt.
There are two verbs with irregular conjugations in the present tense, ha-
tin to come and ann to bring. In both these verbs the d- modal marker
has assimilated to the present stem and appears as t-. Their present conju-
gations, afrmative and negative, are as follows:
HATIN ANN
ez tm em tn ez tnim em tnin
tu tey hun tn tu tn hun tnin
ew t ew tn ew tne ew tnin
ez naym em nayn ez naynim em naynin
tu nayey hun nayn tu nayn hun naynin
ew nay ew nayn ew nayne ew naynin
KURMANJI KURDISH
34
There are also two verbs, zann to know and karn to be able, that are
irregular in the negative. They form the negative with n instead of na.
ZANN KARN
ez nizanim em nizanin ez nikarim em nikarin
tu nizan hun nizanin tu nikar hun nikarin
ew nizane ew nizanin ew nikare ew nikarin
The present tense is used for (1) present habitual action (I go) and (2)
present progressive action (Im going), and context usually makes it clear
which tense should be used in English. Normal word order in Kurdish is
subject, object, verb.
1
Complements of verbs of motion (where one comes,
goes, brings, etc.) tend to follow the verb in the oblique case, as in the rst
example below.
Ez naim doktor. Ez derman vena-
xwim. Derziy j naxwazim.
Im not going to the doctor. Im not
taking medicine. I dont want stiches
either.
Xelkn Mehabad w roja han mna
karnevalek proz dikin, dehol zur-
nevann bajr ldixin, Mehabad j bi
destn hev digirin direqisin.
The people of Mahabad celebrate that
day like a carnival, they play the city
drums and clarions, and Mahabadis join
hands and dance.
Du jinn gund nzktir dibin, heta ber
der lojman tn, Mamoste Kevanot
av li wan dikeve bi matmayn
dibje
Two village women get closer. They
come up to the door of the lodging.
Master Kevanot looks at them and says
with astonishment
15. Compound Verbs. Compound verbs, which do not differ signicantly
from their counterparts in Persian and Sorani, consist of a nonverbal ele-
ment (preverb or complement) and a verb. In Kurmanji some compound
verbs are consistently written as one word, like hildan to lift, which con-
sists of the preverb hil and the verb dan to give (present stem d-), vekirin
1
Full normal word order is: (1) temporal expression, (2) subject, (3) direct object,
(4) miscellaneous prepositional phrases, (5) verb, (6) directional complement. Many
other orders are possible, but when any element is moved from its normal position it
is highlighted or emphasized in some way.
THE VERB
35
to open, which consists of the preverb ve and the verb kirin to do (pres-
ent stem k-), and rnitin to sit down, which consists of the preverb r
and the verb nitin (present stem n-); others are written as two separate
words, like behs kirin to discuss and alkar kirin to help. The di- pre-
x is added to the verbal part of the compound, i.e. after the nonverbal part.
Stress in the afrmative is on the preverb.
ez vdikim em vdikin ez bhs dikim em bhs dikin
tu vdik hun vdikin tu bhs dik hun bhs dikin
ew vdike ew vdikin ew bhs dike ew bhs dikin
ez hldidim em hldidin ez rdinm em rdinn
tu hldid hun hldidin tu rdiny hun rdinn
ew hldide ew hldidin ew rdin ew rdinn
In the negative the stressed prex n- takes the place of di- in compound
verbs:
ez venkim em venkin ez behs nkim em behs nkin
tu venk hun venkin tu behs nk hun behs nkin
ew venke ew venkin ew behs nke ew behs nkin
ez hilndim em hilndin ez rnnm em rnnn
tu hilnd hun hilndin tu rnny hun rnnn
ew hilnde ew hilndin ew rnn ew rnnn
Depending upon the semantics of a given compound, many compound
verbs can be extended to include any and all matter that complements the
nonverbal part of the compound. For instance, compound verbs like alkar
kirin to help and behs kirin to discuss can be extended through a con-
struct (or multiple constructs) as in the following examples. In extended
constructs the construct takes care of modications and relationships that
are expressed by various means in English, usually with prepositions.
Ew j alkariya kovara Ensttuya kurd
ya Pars dike.
He also helps out on the journal of the
Paris Kurdish Institute.
KURMANJI KURDISH
36
Em behsa be kurdn Kurdistana
Tirkiyey dikin.
We are discussing the role of the Kurds
in Turkeys Kurdistan.
Close compound verbs of the hildan to raise and vekirin to open type
do not admit extension through a construct. They take normal direct objects
before the verb.
Ji peyayn gund hinek ji dr ve silav
li w hildidin.
A few of the village men raise a greeting
to him from afar.
Soviyet pirtkn dersan yn bi kurd
ap dikin dibistann kurd vedikin.
The Soviets print schoolbooks in Kurd-
ish and open Kurdish schools.
16. The Formation of the Present Subjunctive. Like the present indica-
tive, the present subjunctive is formed from the present stem of the verb and
the personal sufxes. The modal marker for the subjunctive is b-. Unlike
the d prex, b does not usually drop its vowel in favor of an initial a in the
stem, but in some dialects it may do so (i.e. baxivim for biaxivim).
ez bim em bin ez baxivim em baxivin
tu b hun bin tu baxiv hun baxivin
ew be ew bin ew baxive ew baxivin
In compound verbs, the b- prex is optional, and it is usually omitted
with close compounds (generally speaking, those that are written together as
one word and, by and large, verbs compounded with kirin unless there is an
extended complement). When the b- prex is omitted, the absence of a
modal prex identies the verb as subjunctive, as in ve-xwarin (ve-xw-) to
drink and hil-dan (hil-d-) to lift:
ez vxwim em vxwin ez hldim em hldin
tu vxw hun vxwin tu hld hun hldin
ew vxwe ew vxwin ew hlde ew hldin
The negative prex for the subjunctive is n-, which replaces b- where it
occurs. Where there is no bi- prex, the negative is attached to the verbal
part of compounds.
THE VERB
37
ez nim em nin ez hilndim em hilndin
tu n hun nin tu hilnd hun hilndin
ew ne ew nin ew hilnde ew hilndin
There are two present subjunctives of the verb bn to be, become, with
and without the subjunctive marker bi-. The conjugation without the marker
is used when the verb means be; the conjugation with the marker is used
when the verb means become and when it is part of a compound verb.
BE BECOME
ez bim em bin ez bbim em bbin
tu b hun bin tu bb hun bbin
ew be ew bin ew bbe ew bbin
In the negative the distinction between be and become is lost, and there
is only one negative present subjunctive.
ez nbim em nbin
tu nb hun nbin
ew nbe ew nbin
There are two present subjunctives of hatin to come. One is regularly
conjugated based on the stem wer- without the bi- prex; the other is regu-
larly conjugated based on the stem b-, a contraction of bi- and y-, the
present stem of hatin.
WER- STEM Y- STEM
ez werim em werin ez bm em bn
tu wer hun werin tu by hun bn
ew were ew werin ew b ew bn
The negative present subjunctive of these two variants is as follows:
ez nwerim em nwerin ez nym em nyn
tu nwer hun nwerin tu nyy hun nyn
ew nwere ew nwerin ew ny ew nyn
There are also two present subjunctives of n to go. One is regularly
KURMANJI KURDISH
38
congujated based on the stem - with the b- subjunctive marker; the other
is regularly conjugated based on the stem her- without the subjunctive
marker.
- STEM HER- STEM
ez biim em biin ez herim em herin
tu bi hun biin tu her hun herin
ew bie ew biin ew here ew herin
Negatives are predictably formed:
ez nim em nin ez nherim em nherin
tu n hun nin tu nher hun nherin
ew ne ew nin ew nhere ew nherin
16.1 Uses of the present subjunctive. The present subjunctive is used in
the following instances:
(1) independentlyi.e. not dependent upon a preceding constructionas
a deliberative (English should).
Ez ro bm? Should I come today?
car em i bikin? Now what should we do?
(2) in the rst persons singular and plural as a cohortative (let me, lets)
and in the 3rd persons as a hortatory (let him, may he ). The hortatory
is often preceded by bila let.
Pe ez bibjim ku First let me say that
Ew der veke. Let him open the door.
Em herin! Lets go!
Bi siyaset bila ew mijl bibin. Let them get involved in politics.
(3) as complement to all verbs and constructions of desire and wanting
(see 16.2), ability (see 16.3), necessity, deciding, ordering, etc.
Lazim e tu Kurmanc biaxiv. Its necessary that you speak Kurmanji.
THE VERB
39
Di v babet de ez naxwazim titek
bibjim.
I dont want to say anything in this
regard.
Tu dikar hinek behsa xwe jiyana
xwe bik?
Can you speak a bit about yourself and
your life?
Em kurd in kurd gereke ber hem
zimanan, bi ziman xwe biaxivin,
bixwnin binivsin.
We are Kurds, and Kurds ought to
speak, read, and write in their own
language before all other languages.
Ber her tit gereke ez nan bidim ku
ji mefhma kovara slam ez i tit
fehim dikim.
Before anything else, it is necessary for
me to indicate what I understand by the
concept of an Islamic journal.
Gereke kovar xwe zencr nekin. It is necessary that journals not fetter
themselves.
W pirr caran biryar dab ku d li
xurn cixar nekine.
Many times he had decided not to smoke
cigarettes any more on an empty stom-
ach.
Doktor div ryek nan me bide
derman binivsine.
The doctor must show us a way and
write a [prescription for a] remedy.
(4) after a number of conjunctions like ber ku before (which is usually
followed by the subjunctive), ax ku when (which is followed by the
subjunctive when it refers to the future), and mna ku as though. See 30.
Ber ku ez derkevim dervey welt, min
soran nebihstib.
Before I went outside the country, I had
not heard Sorani.
ax ku rseta min bibe, ez bi ev
rojan bo ziman edebiyata kurd
biixulim.
When I get the opportunity, I will work
day and night for Kurdish language and
literature.
Mna ku di ber de naxoiyek di
navna wan de hebe
As though there was some unpleasant-
ness between them before
(5) in the protasis (the if clause) of a possible conditional with refer-
ence to the present or the future:
Ger ev rast be, If this is true,
Ger ew bibin yek, ew dikarin her tit
bikin.
If they unite, they can do anything.
KURMANJI KURDISH
40
(6) in all purpose clauses, usually introduced by ji bo ku in order that:
Ez diim xwendegeh ji bo ku ez
bixwnim.
I go to school in order to study.
Ez dixwnim ji bo ku bibim mamoste. Im studying in order to become a
teacher.
Ji bo ku tu ji nexweiy bilit, div
doktor li te binre bi nexweiya te
bizanbe.
In order for you to get rid of your illness,
it is necessary for the doctor to have a
look at you and diagnose your illness.
(7) in clauses complementary to adjectives, where English usually has a
complementary innitive:
1
Gel me, gotin kelmeyn ku dizane
j ne amede ye ku ji sembol herfan
bixwne.
Our society is not ready to read even
words it knows from symbols and
letters.
(8) In relative clauses introduced by indenite relative pronouns like her-
kes ku anybody who &c.:
Herkes ku bi kurd binivse, di dest-
pk de heta demeke dirj, perg
zehmetiyn mezin were.
Anybody who writes in Kurdish will en-
counter major difculties at the begin-
ning and for a long time.
(9) In relative and result clauses after negative expressions:
Titek ne dihat xuya kirin ku mirov
bibje ev bikaribe bibe sedema ewte
ewta kikn gund.
Nothing could be made out that one
might say it could be the reason for the
barking of the dogs of the village.
Saln min ne ewqas zde ne ku ez
bibjim, ez pir jiyame min gelek
dtiye.
My years are not so many that I could
say I have lived a lot and seen much.
1
But not in clauses dependent upon adjectives that describe situations or actions
that actually pertain or have taken place, which are in the indicative mood, as:
Ez xwe bextiyar dibnim ku mamoste-
tiya gundeki weha bye para min.
I count myself lucky that a teaching job
in such a village has been my lot.
THE VERB
41
(10) In relative clauses with indenite antecedents, often preceded by
wek or mna like. See 22 (3).
Mna gula ji lla tung derkeve, tu ji
mal derket.
You lit out of the house like a bullet shot
from the barrel of a rie.
Dtina w b mna kra ku tu di birn
de bigern.
Seeing him was like a knife you twist in
a wound.
Two verbs, karn to be able and zann to know, do not form their
present subjunctives as other verbs do but use the form of the past subjunc-
tive (see 22 below) instead.
16.2. The Future Tense. The future tense is formed by adding - or d to
the personal pronouns followed by the present subjunctive conjugation. Tu
+ is often contracted to t (t and tiw also exist), and ew + may be
contracted to w, although the contraction is not mandatory. The conjuga-
tion of the future tense of n (afrmative and negative) is:
ez (ez d) biim em (em d) biin ez (ez d) neim em (em d) nein
t (tu d) bi hun (hun d) biin t (tu d) ne hun (hun d) nein
ew (ew d) bie ew (ew d) biin ew (ew d) nee ew (ew d) nein
When the subject of a future-tense verb is a noun, w, , or d comes af-
ter the noun. All the future markers are reexes of the present stem ( w)
of the verb f wstin to want, which still exists in Sorani Kurdish and
which has produced this synthetic tense much like the English future com-
pounded with will.
Dema em d bighjin Ewropa,
1
ken
porzer li Ferensa li Swd w li ser
por me dn bibin.
When we get to Europe, the blonde girls
in France and Sweden will go crazy for
our hair.
Ew dibje ku ew bi siyaset ve mijl
nebe.
He says he wont get involved in politics.
1
Kurdish, like French (quand nous arriverons en Europe), uses the future after
when when it has a future implication.
KURMANJI KURDISH
42
Ya meriv israr bike bi kurd bini-
vse, yan j meriv zimanek din ku ji
kurd gelek pkettir e, terch bike.
Either a person will insist and write in
Kurdish, or a person will prefer another
language that is much more advanced
than Kurdish.
Ya reb, ez i bikim? min di dil
xwe de got.
O Lord, what will I do? I said to my-
self.
16.2. Xwestin, To Want. The Kurmanji verb for to want is xwestin
(present stem xwaz-). Verbal complements are in the present subjective. A
full inection of the present tense of to want to go is as follows:
ez dixwazim biim em dixwazin biin
tu dixwaz bi hun dixwazin biin
ew dixwaze bie ew dixwazin biin
When the subject of xwestin and the subject of the following subjunctive
complement are the same, the subjunctive follows in the same person, as in
the following examples.
Ez naxwazim v behs dirj bikim. I dont want to prolong this discussion.
Ew dixwaze ji avakirina Cumhriyet
re bibe pitgir alkar.
He wants to become a supporter and
helper in the founding of the republic.
When the subjects are different, however, the conjunction ku usually inter-
venes, and the subject of the subjunctive verb must be expressed.
Bav w dixwaze ku ew bixwne. His father wants him to study.
Bav min dixwaze ku ez bixwnim. My father wants me to study.
See note on the past tense of xwestin at 18.3 below.
16.3. Karn, To Be Able. The verb to be able is karn (present stem
kar-). Karn is regularly conjugated in the present, often without the di-
prex, and it is followed by a subjunctive complement. The negative pres-
ent is formed with ni- instead of na-. Below is given the full present conju-
gation, afrmative and negative, of I can go/I cant go:
THE VERB
43
ez dikarim biim em dikarin biin ez nikarim biim em nikarin biin
tu dikar bi hun dikarin biin tu nikar bi hun nikarin biin
ew dikare bie ew dikarin biin ew nikare bie ew nikarin biin
Heval hja, tu kar xwe bi me bid
nasandin?
Dear friend, can you introduce yourself
to us?
Tu dikar, ji kerema xwe re, hinek
behsa xwe jiyana xwe bik?
Can you please talk a bit about yourself
and your life?
Meriv nikare di hengamek de li end
cihan be.
A person cannot be in several places at
once.
Karn does not form its present subjunctive in the normal manner. For it,
see 22 below. For the past tense of karn see 21.1 and note 3 on p. 54.
A dialectal variant of this verb, kann, is used by some writers.
17. The Imperative. The singular imperative of verb stems ending in
vowels is formed from b- + the present stem. To present stems that end in
consonants is also sufxed an unstressed -e. The plural imperative is identi-
cal to the 2nd-person plural subjunctive. As is the case in the subjunctive of
close compound verbs, the b- prex is usually omitted; in open compounds
it is generally found but may be omitted.
INFINITIVE PRESENT STEM SING. IMPT. PL. IMPT.
bn be b- bbe bbin
-bn become -b- -be -bin
n - be bin
girtin gir- bgire bgirin
hildan hil-d- hlde hldin
kirin k- bke bkin
rnitin r-n- rn rnn
ustin o- bo bon
vekirin ve-k- vke vkin
Hatin and n form imperatives on their second present stems, wer- and
KURMANJI KURDISH
44
her- respectively.
hatin wer- were werin
n her- here herin
The negative imperative prex is n-.
bn b- nbe nbin
n - ne nin
girtin gir- ngire ngirin
hildan hil-d- hilnde hilndin
kirin k- nke nkin
rnitin r-n- rnn rnnn
ustin o- no non
vekirin ve-k- venke venkin
17.1. The Vocative. In the vocative the stress shifts to the rst syllable of
the noun and the following endings are added:
MASC. SING. FEM. SING. PLURAL
-o - -n/-no
Hi be, kro! Be quiet, boy!
Were, k! Come here, girl!
Krkern, yekgirin! Workers, unite!
Z bin, hevalno! Be quick, friends!
The difference between the -n ending and the -no ending for the plural is
dialectal.
18. The Simple Past (Intransitive). The simple past (preterite) of intran-
sitive verbs is formed by adding unstressed personal sufxes to the past
stem of the verb. The past stem is derived by deleting the -(i)n ending of the
innitive; this will leave a past stem in a consonant, , , or a.
AFTER CONSONANTS AFTER VOWELS
THE VERB
45
-im -in -m -n
- -in -y -n
-in -n
Examples of the simple past inection are from hatin to come, bn to
be, tirsn to fear, and man to remain.
HATIN BN
ez hatim em hatin ez bm em bn
tu hat hun hatin tu by hun bn
ew hat ew hatin ew b ew bn
TIRSN MAN
ez tirsm em tirsn ez mam em man
tu tirsiy hun tirsn tu may hun man
ew tirs ew tirsn ew ma ew man
The negative is formed by prexing n-:
ez nhatim em nhatin ez nbm em nbn
tu nhat hun nhatin tu nby hun nbn
ew nhat ew nhatin ew nb ew nbn
ez ntirsm em ntirsn ez nmam em nman
tu ntirsiy hun ntirsn tu nmay hun nman
ew ntirs ew ntirsn ew nma ew nman
The Kurdish simple past tense usually corresponds closely to the English
past tense.
Tu bi pelikan y jor. You went down the stairs.
Demek j midr dibistan bm. For a time I was a school principal.
Hem man bdeng. They all remained silent.
However, since the Kurdish simple past tense indicates anything that took
place or has taken place in the past, it sometimes corresponds to the English
present perfect tense. In journalistic and advertising usage, the simple past
tense is used in headlines and story titles, where English normally uses the
KURMANJI KURDISH
46
present, as in the following:
Kaset cd derket li hem mzk
marketan.
The cassette and CD have come to (are
available in) all music stores.
Konferansa Tevgera Jinn Azad bi
daw b.
The conference of the Liberated
Womens Movement has ended.
Li bar Kurdistan di 10 saln daw
de 2733 kes mirin, 4913 kes j
birndar bn.
2,733 people have died and 4,913 people
have been wounded over the last ten
years in the south of Kurdistan.
A distinction between the two meanings of the verb bn, to be and to
become, is shown in the past tense by the placement of the verb. When it
means to be it follows the predicate, but when it means to become the
verb comes between the subject and the predicate, as in the following:
Ew zabitek jr jhat b. He was a talented and worthy ofcer.
Ew b zabitek jr jhat. He became a talented and worthy ofcer.
18.1. The Past Habitual/Progressive (Intransitive). The past habitual (I
used to go) and progressive (I was going) is formed by adding the habit-
ual/progressive prex d- to the simple past.
ez dhatim em dhatin ez dm em dn
tu dhat hun dhatin tu dy hun dn
ew dhat ew dhatin ew d ew dn
Gava dim dibistan vedigeriyam,
dlikek teva du cewrn xwe li ser riya
min xuya dibn bi min da direyan.
When I was going to school and coming
back, a dog and her two pups used to
appear in front of me and bark at me.
Lekern tirk wek pelkn daran di ser
pita hespan de dihatin xar.
Turkish soldiers were coming down
from the backs of horses like leaves of
trees.
For past habituals in di-, the negative is regularly formed by prexing n-
to the afrmative (and not, as in the present tense, by combining the nega-
tive prex with di-):
THE VERB
47
ez nedihatim em nedihatin ez nedim em nedin
tu nedihat hun nedihatin tu nediy hun nedin
ew nedihat ew nedihatin ew nedi ew nedin
Xwe t bra min xew nediket avn
min, heya diya min rokek ji min re
negota.
I remember well that sleep used not to
come to my eyes until my mother had
told me a story.
Rojek derbas nedib, b ku ew
mirin li avn hev ne nihrin.
Not a day used to go by that he and death
did not look each other in the eye.
18.2. The Simple Past (Transitive): The Ergative. The simple past tense
of transitive verbs exhibits a phenomenon called ergativity, whereby (1) the
agent is marked, (2) the patient is unmarked, and (3) the verb agrees with
the patient.
The tense is formed from the past stem of the verb, and to it are added the
personal endings of the intransitive past, but these endings agree in person
and number with the patient (what we call the direct object). The agent (our
subject) is in the oblique case, and the patient is in the nominativei.e. just
the reverse of the present tense.
AGENT
OBL. CASE
PATIENT
NOM. CASE
VERB
AGREES WITH PATIENT
min ew dt
I him saw-him
w ez dtim
he me saw-me
w jin tu dt
that woman you saw-you
te ew dtin
you them saw-them
The rst conjugation below reects changing agents, and even if the 3rd-
person singular patient ew were not expressed, it would still be inextricably
KURMANJI KURDISH
48
built into dt. The second conjugation reects changing patients.
DIFFERENT AGENTS; STABLE PATIENT
min ew dt I saw him me ew dt we saw him
te ew dt you saw him we ew dt you saw him
w ew dt he saw him wan ew dt they saw him
STABLE AGENT; DIFFERENT PATIENTS
w ez dtim he saw me w em dtin he saw us
w tu dt he saw you w hun dtin he saw you
w ew dt he saw him w ew dtin he saw them
Negatives are formed by prexing n- to the afrmative.
w ez nedtim he didnt see me w em nedtin he didnt see us
w tu nedt he didnt see you w hun nedtin he didnt see you
w ew nedt he didnt see him w ew nedtin he didnt see them
The past habitual/progressive is regularly formed by adding the d- prex
to the verb and ndi- for the negative.
min ew didt I used to see him w ez nedidtim he didnt use to see
me
Pronouns in the oblique case are the clearest indicators of agency. Noun
agents are also in the oblique case; however, masculine singular nouns are
not marked for the oblique.
Alfred Nobel pit mirina xwe, serwe-
teke mezin li d xwe hit.
Alfred Nobel left behind a large fortune
after his death.
Mrik bi kenek ne ji dil got The fellow said with a smile not from
the heart
Feminines, of course, are marked in the oblique, as are masculines modied
by a demonstrative and all plurals.
Jinikek aya me an. A woman brought our tea.
W mirov ay an. That man brought tea.
Gundiyan titek negot. The villagers didnt say anything.
THE VERB
49
If any one in a series of co-ordinated verbs in the past tense is transitive,
the ergative construction takes precedence and the agent is marked.
Rewen Xanim demek bdeng ma,
kr kr kir cigarek vxist.
Mme Rewshen remained silent for a
moment, lost in her thoughts, and lit a
cigarette.
In the example above, neither ma nor kir is transitive, but since the nal
verb in the series, vxist, is transitive and therefore ergative, the agent,
Rewen Xanim, is in the oblique case.
The ergative verb agrees in person and number with its patient (logical
object), but since the patient is in the nominative case and unmodied plural
nouns do not have an external plurality, the number is indicated only by the
verb, as in the following examples. Compare:
W kaxiz ji dest w girt. She took the page from his hand.
W kaxiz ji dest w girtin. She took the pages from his hand.
In the second example only the plural verb girtin indicates the plurality of
the patient kaxiz.
Me ew helbest xwend. We read that poem.
Me ew helbest xwendin. We read those poems.
Here only the plural verb xwendin indicates the plurality of the patient ew
helbest.
Just as in a series of co-ordinated nouns only the last noun shows case, in
a series of co-ordinated past transitive verbs with a plural patient, only the
last in the series shows the plural. In the following example, the patient,
destn xwe their hands, is plural, but only the second of the two verbs,
ann, shows the plurality.
Havalan destn xwe bi hustiwn hev
re bir ann.
The friends reached out and put their
hands on each others necks.
18.3. Number Agreement in Extended Ergative Verbs. In the past
tenses of compound verbs whose complements can be extended through the
construct (like behs kirin to discuss, which can be extended as behsa
KURMANJI KURDISH
50
kirin to discuss something, and bal kiandin to attract attention, which
can be extended as bala kiandin to attract the attention of someone),
the verb agrees in number (singular or plural) with with the last element
(not necessarily the last word) in the extension, i.e. if the last element in the
extension is plural, it attracts a plural verb, as in the following:
W ji min re behsa serphatiyn xwe
kirin.
He discussed his adventures with me.
Here the extended patient is behsa serphatiyn xwe discussion of his
adventures, and the past verb kirin agrees in the plural with the last ele-
ment in the sequence, serphatiyn xwe his adventures.
Wneyn min bala rojname
hunermendan kiandin.
My pictures attracted the attention of
newspapers and artists.
In this example the extended patient is bala rojname hunermendan the
attention of newspapers and artists, and the plural verb kiandin agrees
with the last element in the sequence, the plural hunermendan artists.
Kemalstn tirk fermana bi darda-
kirina Emn El Bedirxan hers
kurn w j derxistin.
The Turkish Kemalists issued an order to
hang Emin Ali Bedirkhan and all three
of his sons.
In this example the extended patient is fermana bi dardakirina Emn El
Bedirxan hers kurn w an order to hang Emin Ali Bedirkhan and all
three of his sons, and the plural verb derxistin agrees with the last element
in the extended patient, hers kurn w all three of his sons.
18.4. The Past Tense of Xwestin. The past tense of a transitive verb like
xwestin is ergative, but the following subjunctive complement is not.
Therefore, even when the subject of the two verbs is the same, the two pro-
nounsone oblique for the ergative and the other nominative for the sub-
junctivemust be expressed, and optionally ku may intervene between the
two verbs. An example is the conjugation of the phrase I wanted to say:
min xwest (ku) ez bibjim me xwest (ku) em bibjin
te xwest (ku) tu bibj we xwest (ku) hun bibjin
w xwest (ku) ew bibje wan xwest (ku) ew bibjin
THE VERB
51
Min xwest ku ez ji gund derkevim ji
xwe re ber ber em bimeim.
I wanted to get out of the village and
walk by myself along the river.
Ew tit ku di ser dil min de b
min dixwest ez bidim, pk nehat.
The thing that was in my heart and mind,
and which I wanted to give, didnt
come to be.
18.5. Loss of Ergativity. For stylistic reasons ergativity may be lost in
past transitive verbs. Normally this happens only in expressions like I saw
that and I said that when the verb is followed by a subordinate
clause as its complement:
Min gotim ku I said that (not min got)
Min dtim ku I saw that (not min dt)
Otherwise all tenses and moods constructed on the past stem of transitive
verbs are normally ergative. In some eastern dialects, however, ergativity is
sporadically lost. The criteria for this loss have not been determined.
Di hundur kl da sosreteke re
giran dtin.
Inside the hut/hole ??? they saw
something unusual, black and heavy.
19. The Past Participle. The past participle is formed by adding - to the
past stem of verbs whose stems end in consonants. With past stems that end
in -a and - the participle is formed by adding -y to the past stem. With
past stems that end in -, the past participle is identical to the past stem.
CONSONANT STEMS VOWEL STEMS
hatin > hat > hat come man > ma > may remained
ustin > ust > ust washed n > > y gone
kirin > kir > kir done kirn > kir > kir bought
In meaning the past participle corresponds fairly closely to the English past
participle: hat come, vekir opened, ust washed as in
ciln ust washed clothes
welatek pket an advanced country
KURMANJI KURDISH
52
welatek lipamay a backward country
kitbeke apkir a published book
Negative participles are formed by prexing ne-, as in
kitbn neapkir unpublished books
ciln neust unwashed clothes
benn nexuyay unseen bonds
titn negot unsaid things
20. The Present Perfect Tense (Intransitive). The present perfect tense
of intransitive verbs is formed from the past stem with the following end-
ings:
STEMS ENDING IN CONSONANTS STEMS ENDING IN VOWELS
-ime -ine -me -ne
-iye -ine -ye -ne
-iye -ine -ye -ne
Note that the second and third persons singular are identical. Examples
from hatin to come and n to go are:
ez hatime em hatine ez me em ne
tu hatiye hun hatine tu ye hun ne
ew hatiye ew hatine ew ye ew ne
The negative is formed by prexing n-
ez nehatime em nehatine ez neme em nene
tu nehatiye hun nehatine tu neye hun nene
ew nehatiye ew nehatine ew neye ew nene
20.1. The Present Perfect Tense (Transitive/Ergative). The present per-
fect tense of transitive verbs is made from the agent pronouns plus the
endings given above, but the construction is ergative, as in the simple past.
THE VERB
53
Examples reect changing agents (I, you, &c. have seen him/her/it) and
changing patients (he has seen me, you, &c.). The negative is formed by
prexing n- to the verb.
DIFFERENT AGENTS;
3rd-PERSON SINGULAR PATIENT
3rd-PERSON SINGULAR AGENT;
DIFFERENT PATIENTS
min ew dtiye me ew dtiye w ez dtime w em dtine
te ew dtiye we ew dtiye w tu dtiye w hun dtine
w ew dtiye wan ew dtiye w ew dtiye w ew dtine
min ew nedtiye me ew nedtiye w ez nedtime w em nedtine
te ew nedtiye we ew nedtiye w tu nedtiye w hun nedtine
w ew nedtiye wan ew nedtiye w ew nedtiye w ew nedtine
Generally, the present perfect tense of Kurdish corresponds fairly closely to
the English present perfect (I have come).
Min heta niha ar kitb ap kirine. Until now I have published four books.
Gelo ew j wek min winda bye. I wonder if he too, like me, has become
lost.
But the Kurdish present perfect is in all respects the exact equivalent of the
Persian past narrative (hatime = , maye = ). In Kurdish, as in
Persian, the present perfect tense is used for anything that happened in the
past, the effects or results of which are felt to be relevant to the present or to
the topic at hand. Compare, for instance, the following two examples with
their literal translations:
W tu caran titek wilo negot. He never said any such thing.
W tu caran titek wilo negotiye. He has never said any such thing.
The rst example in Kurdish is a simple statement of fact, as in English.
The second example can only be said in English if the person about whom it
is said is still alive; if he is dead, we have to say, He never said any such
thing. In Kurdish, however, the present state of the person is irrelevant;
what pertains is whether his not having said any such thing is or is not felt
to be relevant to the presenti.e., is it still true and relevant to the topic at
KURMANJI KURDISH
54
hand that he never said such a thing? If so, present perfect; if not, simple
past.
Other examples of usage are as follows:
Jiyana min gelek bi equdeq bihuri-
ya. Ten d bi kurt bibjim: Ez di
Sibata 1953an de, li Hedhedk hati-
me din. P, min xwendina ol li
cem bav xwe xwendiye. car pitre ez
derketime feqtiy li hin medrese-
yn Kurdistan geriyame.
My life has been spent mostly in misery
and hardship. I will only say in brief: I
was born in February 1953 in Hedhe-
dik. First I had religious instruction
with my father. Then I became a reli-
gious student and made the rounds of
some schools in Kurdistan.
In this example, the writers rst verb, bihuriya, is in the simple past tense
as a statement of fact, while English demands the present perfect. There-
after, that the writer was born in 1953, studied with his father, became a
religious student, etc. are all relevant to his having had a miserable life,
which is the topic at hand. Therefore he uses the present perfect tense.
Diya min li wir bye meriyn w roj
li her du hln xeta hesin bi ch dibin.
My mother was from there, and today
her people live on both sides of the
Iron Line.
1
In this example the writer says literally, my mother has been from there
because the fact that his mother was from there explains why he has rela-
tives on both sides of the border.
21. The Past Perfect Tense (Intransitive). For intransitive verbs with
past stems ending in a consonant, the past perfect tense, which is function-
ally equivalent to the English past perfect (I had come, you had gone), is
formed from the past stem + i + the past tense of bn to be. Verbs with
past stems ending in a vowel form the past perfect tense from the simple
stem + the past tense of bn. Some writers shorten a nal in the stem to i
(i.e. ez tersibm I had feared for ez tersbm). Examples of conjugation
are from hatin and n.
ez hatibm em hatibn ez bm em bn
1
The Iron Line, coined on the model of the Iron Curtain, is Turkeys border
with Syria and Iraq, which divides Kurdistan.
THE VERB
55
tu hatiby hun hatibn tu by hun bn
ew hatib ew hatibn ew b ew bn
The negative is formed by prexing n- to the verb:
ez nehatibm em nehatibn ez nebm em nebn
tu nehatiby hun nehatibn tu neby hun nebn
ew nehatib ew nehatibn ew neb ew nebn
Tu caran neketib bra min ku ez
rojek ji hv j nefret bikim.
Never had it occurred to my mind that
one day I would hate the moon.
Pirraniya mirovn bajr bn havna
xwe li ber lvn der dengizn
bar derbas kin.
Most of the people of the city had gone
to spend their summers on the shores of
the seas in the south.
Heta demek pir dirj bi heval dostn
xwe re j nepeyivb.
He hadnt spoken to his friends and bud-
dies for a very long time.
21.1. The Past Perfect Tense (Transitive/Ergative). The past perfect
tense of transitive verbs is formed, like that of intransitive verbs, from the
past stem + -i- + the past tense of bn on the ergative model. Past stems that
end in vowels add b directly without the -i-.
min dtib I had seen (it) me dtib we had seen (it)
te dtib you had seen (it) hun dtib you had seen (it)
w dtib he had seen (it) wan dtib they had seen (it)
w ez dtibm he had seen me w em dtibn he had seen us
w tu dtiby he had seen you w hun dtibn he had seen you
w ew dtib he had seen him w ew dtibn he had seen them
ngilzan ziman hindiyan qedexe
nekiribn.
1
The English had not banned the Indians
language.
W pirr caran biryar dab ku Many times he had decided that
1
For the reason for the plural verb, see 18.3.
KURMANJI KURDISH
56
W roj, germa havn tu gj kiriby. On that day the heat of summer had
made you dizzy.
Bi kira ku belk mrik li hember
polsan rabe titek bi kar bne,
polsek demanca xwe j kiandib.
Thinking that the man might resist the
police and use something [as a weap-
on], a policeman had drawn his pistol.
As in Persian, the past perfect tense in Kurmanji is not necessarily tied to
a temporal reference as it is in English. It is often used independently for a
past tense with a somewhat more remote signication where English would
have a simple past, particularly in narratives.
Gava min di hevpeyvneke bi Osman
Sebr re, pirsa ku w keng dest bi
nivsandin kiriye kirib, w gotib
ku
When, during a conversation with Os-
man Sebr, I asked (not had asked)
when he had started writing, he said
(not had said) that
1
Tu heta niha li ku b? Ez bsk
bm mala Ehmed. Ji wir j em n
komel.
Where have you been till now? I went
to Ahmads house for a bit. From there
we went to the society.
2
21.2. The Past Perfect Tense of Karn and Zann. The past perfect form
of the verbs karn to be able and zann to know is used as the normal
past tense. Thus ez/min dikaribm means I was able, I could, and min
dizanib means I knew. As in the present tense, the negatives of these
verbs are formed with ni-, as in ez/min nikaribm I wasnt able, I
couldnt and min nizanib I didnt know. Negatives with di- (past per-
fect progressive) are nedi-. Complements of the past perfect of karn are
either in the present subjunctive or in the past conditional (see 25.1 be-
low). For sequence of tenses in clauses following the past perfect of zann,
1
In this example, both Persian and Turkish might very well have the past perfect
tense in both positions ( $ $ $ $ , sormutum and $ $ $ $ , demiti) to imply that
signicant time has passed since the exchange occurred. Since the example is with-
out a secondary time reference, English would not use the past perfect.
2
Here the rst verb is in the past perfect because the speaker wants to convey that
he had gone to Ahmads house before he and the others went somewhere else.
THE VERB
57
see 33.
avn Naz nedikaribn d hstiran
pa ve vegernin.
Nazs eyes couldnt keep back the tears
any longer.
W ba dizanib ku w r a ne kiriye. He well knew that he hadnt made a
mistake.
A rast me nizanib em bi ku da diin. We really didnt know where we were
going.
Although, strictly speaking, karn is intransitive, in the past tenses the
choice of nominative or oblique subject pronoun is generally dictated by the
complementary verb. When the complementary verb is intransitive, the
nominative pronoun is used and karn is conjugated as an intransitive, as in
the following:
Ez d nikarbm li ser lingan rawesti-
yama.
I was still not able to get up on my legs.
Ez nikarbm j re bibma alkar. I wasnt able to be helpful to him.
When the complementary verb is transitive, the oblique pronoun is used and
karn is conjugated as an ergative, as in the following:
Te nikarib awirn xwe ji dest akt
vala dr bik.
You couldnt take your eyes off the
empty sleeve of the jacket.
Qeder mehek min nikarb dora xwe
bidta.
For a month I wasnt able to see my sur-
roundings..
22. The Past Subjunctive. The past subjunctive is formed like the past
perfect, but instead of the past tense of bn, the present subjunctive of bn
is added, and to the whole is added the b- subjunctive prex (which may be
omitted for stylisic reasons) or n- for the negative. As with all past tenses,
the past subjunctive is nonergative with intransitives and ergative with tran-
sitives.
INTRANSITIVE TRANSITIVE/ERGATIVE
ez bihatibim em bihatibin min bidtibe me bidtibe
tu bihatib hun bihatibin te bidtibe we bidtibe
KURMANJI KURDISH
58
ew bihatibe ew bihatibin w bidtibe wan bidtibe
ez nehatibim em nehatibin min nedtibe me nedtibe
tu nehatib hun nehatibin te nedtibe we nedtibe
ew nehatibe ew nehatibin w nedtibe wan nedtibe
The past subjunctive is used (1) after all constructions that take subjunc-
tive complements (see 16.1) when the complement is in the past.
Gereke baran barbe. It must have rained.
1
Ger car caran di hin cihan de irskin
pketibin j, dewlet bi xurt ye ser
wan, bi girtin, ldan kenc deng
wan birne.
If occasionally in some places some
sparks have caught re, the state has
attacked them forcefully and silenced
them through arrest, beating, and tor-
ture.
(2) In past relative clauses with indenite antecedents and in past clauses
introduced by indenite relatives like whoever, whatever, no matter
who, no matter what, however much, &c.
Kurdn ku navn Salih Celadet
Bedir-Xan nebihstibin pir km in.
Kurds who havent heard the names of
Salih and Jeladet Ali Bedir-Khan are
very few.
Heriqas me berhemn van nivskaran
ba nexwendibin j
However much we havent read the
works of these writers well
Te ev i kiribe div tu ji min re
bibj.
Whatever youve done tonight, you have
to tell me.
K bi i away nerazbna xwe ya li
dij dewlet anbe ziman, k bi i
away li dij dewlet derketibe, k bi i
away ji bo bidestxistina mafn gel
kurd tkon dabe, dewlet heta niha
bi eyn metodn nemirovane ye ser
wan.
Whoever has expressed by any means
whatsoever his discontentment with the
state, whoever has combatted the state
by any means whatsoever, whoever has
made an effort by any means whatso-
ever to attain the goals of Kurds, until
now the state has attacked them with
the same base methods.
(3) after weke ku as though in the past for hypothetical situations and in
1
Compare this with the present subjunctive: gereke baran bibare it must rain.
THE VERB
59
relative clauses with an antecedent preceded by wek or mna like.
wek peza ku o li ser ketibe like a sheep on whose head a stick has
landed
(4) The past subjunctive form of two verbs, karn to be able and zann
to know, is normally used as the present subjunctive.
nsan naxwazin ku kesn din bizanibin
ew titn weha dixwne.
People dont want others to know that
they read such things.
Em dixwazin bizanibin. We want to know.
Ev girng e ku mirov bizanibe Its important that one know that
Ez ne bawer im ku tu kes bikaribe
bibje ku rewa ziman edebiyata
kurd ba e.
I dont believe that anybody could say
that the style of Kurdish language and
literature is good.
Km berhemn gel miletn din yn
evqas kevin hene ku mirov b al-
kariya ferhengan bikaribe j tbigih.
There are few works belonging to other
such ancient groups and nations that
one could understand without the help
of a dictionary.
Ji bo ku bikaribim razm, min di ser
xwe de plana ku ez awa bi i awa-
y bikaribim w benderuh bikujim,
dikir.
In order that I be able to sleep, I was for-
mulating a plan in my head how and by
what means I would be able to kill that
creature.
23. The Future Perfect Tense. The future perfect is formed, like the fu-
ture, by adding to pronominal subjects or w to nominal subjects, and the
verb is in the past subjunctive. Effectively only two verbs, zann and karn,
occur in this tense, and they are used for a past modal of know and can,
like the English modal would know and would be able (and not like the
English future perfect I will have known), as in the following conjuga-
tions:
zann karn
ez bizanbim em bizanbin ez bikarbim em bikarbin
t bizanb hun bizanbin t bikarb hun bikarbin
KURMANJI KURDISH
60
ew bizanbe ew bizanbin ew bikarbe ew bikarbin
d her kes w bizanbe ku kar me
iqas bi zehmet e.
Now everybody would realize how dif-
cult our work was.
Titek ne dihat xuya kirin ku mirov
bibje ev bikaribe bibe sedema ewte
ewta kikn gund.
Nothing could be made out that one
might say it could be the reason for the
barking of the village dogs.
24. The Modal of Karn. The verb karn to be able in the past subjunc-
tive and future perfect corresponds to the English modal could or would
be able. When the modal indicates present or future time it is followed by
the present subjunctive, as in the following examples:
Gava mirov pirsek wilo ji te bike, tu
nav kjan romana xwe bid? Mi-
xabin, ez nikaribim bersiva v
bidim.
When someone asks you such a ques-
tion, which novel of yours would you
name? Unfortunately I wouldnt be
able to give him an answer.
Ji bo ku ew bikaribe alfabeya xwe di
nava kurdan de belav bike, ew bir-
yara derxistina kovarek dide.
So that he could spread his alphabet
among the Kurds he decided (hist.
pres.) to bring out a journal.
Asr, ereb, ermen, faris crann me
ne yn her kevin in, l mixabin di
bareya edebiyata wan de titek
nizanim ku bikaribim ya me yn
wan bidim ber hev.
Assyrians, Arabs, Armenians, and
Persians are our neighbors, and very
anciently so, but unfortunately I dont
know anything about their literatures
that I could compare ours with theirs.
25. The Irrealis Mood. Kurmanji Kurdish is particularly rich in irrealis
or contrafactualmodals. There are two modal tenses devoted to the irre-
alis, a past conditional and a past perfect conditional, of which there are two
varieties.
25.1. The Past Conditional. The past conditional is made by prexing b-
and adding the following endings to the past stem. In close compound verbs
the b- prex may be omitted.
THE VERB
61
CONSONANT-FINAL STEM VOWEL-FINAL STEM
b- stem -ama b- stem -ana
b- stem -ma b- stem -na
b- stem -ay b- stem -ana
b- stem -ya b- stem -na
b- stem -a b- stem -ana
b- stem -ya b- stem -na
The past conditional of intransitives is intransitive and non-ergative; the
past conditional of transitives is ergative.
INTRANSITIVE ERGATIVE
ez bihatama em bihatana w bidtama w bidtana
tu bihatay hun bihatana w bidtay w bidtana
ew bihata ew bihatana w bidta w bidtana
ez nehatama em nehatana w nedtama w nedtana
The past conditional of bn does not normally have the bi- prex when it
means be. Its conjugation is as follows:
ez bma em bna
tu bya hun bna
ew bya ew bna
In compound verbs and when it means become, the past conditional of
bn does have the bi- prex.
Nirvanek her dilr j newir b bi
roj di nav re derbas bibya.
Even a really intrepid hunter would not
have dared to pass through in the day-
time.
W ferqiyeta herdu zaravayn kurd
yn mezin hd hd hindiktir bibya.
The difference between the two large
Kurdish dialects would gradually have
decreased.
The past conditional is used (1) as the complement to the past perfect
tense of karn, which is, as has been stated, the normal equivalent to the
English past tense of be able. While the present tense of karn is followed
by the present subjunctive, in some dialects the past perfect is followed by
the past conditional. See the following examples.
KURMANJI KURDISH
62
Wek ber d nikarib bar giran hil-
girta.
He wasnt able to carry heavy loads any
more like before.
Heta destpka saln 1930 j, Celadet
Ali Bedir-Xan nikarib nameyek bi
kurd binivsanda.
Until the beginning of the 1930s Jeladet
Ali Bedir-Khan couldnt write a letter
in Kurdish.
Her milet di hundur snorn mpere-
toriy de dikarib hunera xwe bi p
bixista, edebiyata xwe biaranda, bi
ziman xwe perwerdeya xwe bikira.
Every nationality within the borders of
the empire could advance its own art,
create its own literature, and carry out
its education in its own language.
(2) It is similarly used as the complement to the past tense of diviya or
diva b, the past and past perfect tenses of div must, have to, and in
some dialects as the complement to the past tense of xwestin to want.
Mr Zoro nedixwast nav sultan
bibihsta.
Mir Zoro did not want to hear the sul-
tans name.
Di v ders de her agirtek diva b li
ser serphatiyek xwe bipeyiviya yan j
rokek ji rokn ku bihstib bigota.
In that class every student had to speak
about an adventure or to tell a story he
had heard.
Li gor peymana ngilz Sovyetiyan
li gor biryara Yektiya Neteweyan,
diviyab Sovyet di demeke kurt de ji
ran derketa.
In accordance with the Anglo-Soviet
pact and in accordance with the deci-
sion of the League of Nations, the
Soviets were supposed to withdraw
from Iran in a short time.
(3) It is used for the verb bn to be in both parts of a past contrafactual
conditional (see 25.2).
25.2 The Past Perfect Conditionals. There are two past perfect condi-
tionals in use, but they seem to be mutually exclusive, i.e. depending on
dialect a given speaker will use either one or the other. (1) The rst past
conditional is formed by prexing the subjunctive prex b- for the afrma-
tive or n- for the negative and sufxing -(y)a to the past perfect:
INTRANSITIVE ERGATIVE
ez bhatibma em bhtibna min bdtibya me bdtibya
THE VERB
63
tu bhatibya hun bhatibna te bdtibya we bdtibya
ew bhatibya ew bhatibna w bdtibya wan bdtibya
ez nhatibma em nhatibna min ndtibya me ndtibya
tu nhatibya hun nhatibna te ndtibya we ndtibya
ew nhatibya ew nhatibna w ndtibya wan ndtibya
(2) The second past conditional is formed by prexing the subjunctive b-
or n- and substituting ba- in place of b in the past perfect.
INTRANSITIVE ERGATIVE
ez bhatibam em bhatiban min bdtiba me bdtiba
tu bhatibay hun bhatiban te bdtiba we bdtiba
ew bhatiba ew bhatiban w bdtiba wan bdtiba
ez nhatibam em nhatiban min ndtiba me ndtiba
tu nhatibay hun nhatiban te ndtiba we ndtiba
ew nhatiba ew nhatiban w ndtiba wan ndtiba
The past conditional mood is used in the following instances:
(1) In past contrafactual conditional sentences, the verb of the protasis
(the if clause) is in the past perfect conditional mood (with or without
bi-), and the verb of the apodosis (the result clause) is in either the past per-
fect conditional or the future perfect conditional. When either part of a past
contrafactual conditional contains the verb bn, it is in the past conditional,
not the past perfect conditional. When the apodosis contains the verb karn,
it is usually in the future perfect conditional.
Ma eger Aristo ne yunan, l n bya,
w bikaribya felsefa xwe pk bne?
If Aristotle had been not Greek but
Chinese, would he have been able to
put his philosophy together?
Mewlana eger ne pars, l meselen bi
tirk nivsandibya, ma w bikarbya
Mesnew biarne?
If Mevlana had written not in Persian
but, for instance, in Turkish, he
wouldnt have been able to create the
Masnavi, would he?
Ger ez nebma Drik, min Gir
Trcel nedtiba.
If I hadnt gone to Drik, I wouldnt
have seen Turjel Hill.
KURMANJI KURDISH
64
Ez bawer im ger ez ne kurd bma j,
min dsa li ser kurdan binivsanda.
I believe that, even if I werent a Kurd, I
would have written about Kurds any-
way.
Ger wilo dom bikira ew erpeze dn
bibya.
If it had continued like that, he would
have gone crazy.
Ger w dest xwe ji siyaset bikianda,
w hewcedariya ku ew nameyeke
dirj ji Mustefa Kemal Atatrk re
bine, nedta.
If he had given up politics, he would not
have considered it necessary to send a
long letter to Mustafa Kemal Atatrk.
The phrase ne ji bya were it not for is a past conditional con-
struction.
Ne ji Celadet Beg bya, me nizanb
ku ziman kurd ziman nivsandin
ye an na.
Were it not for Jeladet Beg, we wouldnt
have known whether Kurdish was a lan-
guage for writing or not.
(2) as a past or modal complement of past constructions that demand a
subjunctive, like lazim in the rst example and complement to an indenite
antecedent in the second:
1
Lbel lazim b ku me ji derek ve
dest bi v kar bikira me kir.
On the other hand, it was necessary that
we begin this labor somewhere, and so
we did.
Rskeke mezin heb ku wan ez tewqif
bikirama.
There was a great risk that they would
arrest me.
Diviyab Sovyet di demeke kurt de ji
ran derketa.
The Soviet [Union] was supposed to
have withdrawn from Iran in a short
time.
Xelk w ax newrbn xwe nzk
kesn sosyalst bikirana.
People at that time didnt dare to get
close to socialist persons.
1
Some writers follow the Persian model and use the present subjunctive after
these expressions, but the past conditional is much more commonly used.
THE VERB
65
Te dixwest jinek porzer la sp
dagirt bi te re baya.
You wanted there to be a blond-haired,
white-skinned, well-built woman with
you.
Some writers use it after ber ku before with reference to past time:
1
Aw nivsarn ku ji Hawar re dihatin
andin, ber ku bihatana weandin
kes ew di ber av re derbas dikirin?
Did anyone review the writings that
were sent to Hawar before they were
published?
(3) Following a past perfect or modal of karn to be able for an unful-
lled, unfulllable, or unrealized situation, i.e. what one couldnt do,
couldnt have done, could have done but didnt, or should or shouldnt have
done.
Di mehn destpk de ez nikaribm j
re bibma alkar.
In the initial months I wasnt able to be
helpful to him.
Ew dikarib bibya yek ji arn dema
xwe y her navdar.
He could have become one of the most
famous poets of his age.
Meriv dikarib ew bi her tit bi nav
bikirina, l ne
One could call them anything but not
mkann min ku ez bikaribma vegeri-
yama Batman, Srt an j Diyarbe-
kir bimama, bijiyama, tune b.
There were no possibilities for me that I
could return to Batman, Siirt, or even
Diyarbekir and remain and live there.
Kesn ku bikaribana binivsiyana j
gelek km bn.
Persons who could write were very few.
With the addition of /w/d to the past conditional, a future conditional
modal (would, should) is produced.
Ber min, kesin din ev ixul bi ser
xistibn. ima min nekira?
Others before me had put this business
in their heads. Why shouldnt I do it?
L w biryara xwe dab, w bi-
xwenda.
But he had made his decision: he would
study.
1
Other writers prefer the present subjunctive exclusively after ber ku.
KURMANJI KURDISH
66
Ez p bawer bm ku meriv bikari-
bya, bi ziman kurd, romanek ava
bikira.
I believed that one should be able to pro-
duce a novel in Kurdish.
Ji rnitevann w, mirov d bigotaya
Kurdistan e.
To judge by the inhabitants of it, one
would say it was Kurdistan.
Ew gelek neba bibya. It would have been very bad.
(4) After xwez would that, I wish or the verb xwiziyan to wish for
unfulllable wishes in the past, often without the bi- prex.
Ax, xwez w zanbya ez iqas bi v
peyv diiyam.
Oh, would that he had known how
pained I was by those words.
Xwiziya w satila Naz j bi xwe re an
ba bo tij av bike.
He wished he had brought Nazis bucket
too to ll it with water.
26. The Passive Voice. The passive voice is constructed from the verb
hatin (conjugated in all persons, moods, and tenses) plus the innitive. Ex-
amples of the passive are the following conjugations of hatin dtin to be
seen. For any other passive verb, simply substitute the innitive for dtin.
PRESENT INDICATIVE PRESENT SUBJUNCTIVE
I am seen, &c. that I be seen, &c.
ez tm dtin em tn dtin ez bm dtin em bn dtin
tu ty dtin hun tn dtin tu by dtin hun bn dtin
ew t dtin ew tn dtin ew b dtin ew bn dtin
FUTURE SIMPLE PAST
I will be seen, &c. I was seen, &c.
ez bm dtin em bn dtin ez hatim dtin em hatin dtin
t by dtin hun bn dtin tu hat dtin hun hatin dtin
ew b dtin ew bn dtin ew hat dtin ew hatin dtin
PRESENT PERFECT PAST PERFECT
I have been seen, &c. I had been seen, &c.
ez hatime dtin em hatine dtin ez hatibm dtin em hatibn dtin
THE VERB
67
tu hatiye dtin hun hatine dtin tu hatiby dtin hun hatibn dtin
ew hatiye dtin ew hatine dtin ew hatib dtin ew hatibn dtin
PAST SUBJUNCTIVE PAST CONDITIONAL
that I have been seen, &c. had I been seen, &c.
ez hatibim dtin em hatibin dtin ez bihatama dtin em bihatana dtin
tu hatib dtin hun hatibin dtin tu bihatay dtin hun bihatana dtin
ew hatibe dtin ew hatibin dtin ew bihata dtin ew bihatana dtin
PAST PERFECT CONDITIONAL I PAST PERFECT CONDITIONAL II
I would have been seen, &c.
I would have been seen, &c.
ez bhatibma dtin em bhtibna dtin ez bhatibam dtin em bhatiban dtin
tu bhatibya dtin hun bhatibna dtin tu bhatibay dtin hun bhatiban dtin
ew bhatibya dtin ew bhatibna dtin ew bhatiba dtin ew bhatiban dtin
In the present and present subjunctive of hatin, the third-person singular
forms are sometimes tte and bte (cf. Sorani j k bet) instead of t and b,
as in the rst two examples below. The agent of a passive verb is expressed
by the circumposition ji aliy ve.
Em hvdar in ew j di nzk de bte
ap kirin.
We are hopeful it will soon be published.
Her ziman edebiyat bi hin nav
kesan ve tte nasn.
Every language and literature is known
by a few names and persons.
Ji xwe ez ji welat xwe hatibm dr-
xistin.
I had been exiled from my country by
my own self.
Bi salan bi v nav ve hatiye naskirin. He has been known for years by this
name.
Ew di nava kurdn her ar pereyn
welt de t naskirin hezkirin.
It is known and loved among Kurds of
all four parts of the country.
l carek hatib vxistin divab ku
were kiandin.
but once it had been lit it would have to
be smoked.
Gavn w bi lez p ve dihatin avtin. His steps were being taken quickly.
KURMANJI KURDISH
68
S r hebn; an ez d bihatama girtin,
di girtgeh de biriziyama, an ez ji
aliy MT ve bihatma kutin, an j
min welat xwe terk bikira.
There were three alternatives: I would be
caught there and thrown into prison, or
I would be killed by the MIT,
1
or I
would leave my country.
Strann ku heta niha nehatine gotin,
ziman ku nehatiye vejandin,
edebiyata ku nehatiye nivsandin,
klaskn ku nehatine apkirin
belavkirin, kultura ku nehatiye
nasandin gelek titn din
Songs that havent been sung yet, a
language that hasnt been revived,
literature that hasnt been written,
classics that havent been printed or
published, a culture that hasnt been
recognized, and a lot of other things
27. Postposed Verbal Complements. Directional complements often fol-
low the verb directly and are in the oblique case without a preposition.
Min pniyaza xwe and Swsrey. I sent my proposal to Switzerland.
ew end libn ku digihtin wan
welatan j
even those few copies that reached those
countries
Ew ji welat xwe dengbj stranbjn
tne Stenbol.
He brings singers from his country to
Istanbul.
The postposed complement is sporadically indicated by the addition of e
to the verb, but this is not so regular a feature of Kurmanji as it is in Sorani
(see Sorani 44). The addition of the directional -e to most forms of the past
tense makes most resulting verbs indistinguishable from the present perfect
tense, although the third-person singulars are different (pres. perf. hatiye
has come vs. directional hate came to). Context usually makes the tense
clear.
Ez me Sriy. I went to Syria.
Me ji gund barkire Nisbn. We moved from the village to Nusaybin.
Deng xixiek hate min. A scratching sound came to me (=
reached my ears).
A postposed third-person pronominal complement is indicated by the ad-
1
MIT, Mill stihbarat Tekilat, National Intelligence Organization, the Turkish
secret police.
THE VERB
69
dition of -(y) to the verb.
Min got. I said to him/her.
Bav w dest avt, l ne gihay. His father stretched out his hand to him,
but it didnt reach him.
28. Factitive Verbs. The factitive innitive, by which an intransitive verb
is rendered transitive, is formed from the present stem of the base verb +
-andin. The present stem of all such verbs is in -n-.
INFINITIVE PRES.STEM FACTITIVE
mirin to die > mir- > mirandin mirn- to make die, kill
ewitan to burn > ewit- > ewitandin ewitn- to make burn,
set re to
tirsn to be afraid > tirs- > tirsandin tirsn- to scare
, , ,
, w ?
, ,
, w
, w , .
.
3
.
. -
, , w
1
In the original this is the Feast of the Mother of God, August 15th. The translator
has substituted a Yazidi female saint, usually called Xatna Fexre, who is invoked in
cases of difcult childbirth.
READINGS
169
w , , w ,
. , ,
- w.
.
, , ,
, q , - w -
, , .
.
, w w -
w .
q.
, w , ? w
, w .
.
w, w w w
w w .
w? w w .
w? , , , .
, w -q , w
.
, q, , w
w w .
, q, ? w , w ,
w , , ,
w .
, , w
. w , , -;
, , w . w
w w , .
, w , ,
w, .
, w .
KURMANJI KURDISH
170
. .
, . , ?
w , w -
, , w .
.
, , -
w .
, w , .
, , qw? .
, , .
, , w .
W, w , .
w , , ,
, .
,
1
w .
, . , ; -
, ; , ,
. w -q .
.
.
, .
- ?
, - .
?
, w,
w , , , - -
, w w .
W , w , -. ,
, , , .
w .
1
The Armenian text has stunned here.
READINGS
171
w ? .
, w
1
, .
w , w . , w .
w; , :
.
4
w , w .
q .
. , w
- . w
w , w - .
- w , -
, . w
w , w w
. .
, w, , .
. ; w w .
w w .
, . .
w , ,
. , .
w .
- .
, .
! , q.
.
w w qq ,
q w .
.
1
The meaning of weym has not been ascertained. In the original the priest says to
Tatos, who begins everything he says with the word particularly (which is omitted
from the translation), Curse your particularlys!
KURMANJI KURDISH
172
? , ?
, w , w .
, .
q .
, , -
.
W , q .
q , .
w , ?
M , w , ,
w .
, .
? ? , ? ,
w ? , w ?
? W , w .
.
, . , ,
w ? w, ,
?
- . .
.
, .
w
2, 25- () . 1998-
1997-
. Q w ,
1996- xw-
.
READINGS
173
h .
,
h -
.
q
. q
h, .
. q w,
hq q-
20-, qw
.
q ,
hq w h ,
1990-1991- qw.
. q xw qw
- hq w qw ,
xw w h qw
, -
.
q . .
, h qw .
q h
.
. . q xw
w , h
q .
. h q xw h h
.
q w w h w
.
q hq w w
, 90-
h w -
.
KURMANJI KURDISH
174
w q h w
hw, w w h
, h w .
q w h
.
Reading Selections in Arabic-Script Kurmanji
CELADET ALI BEDIR-XAN (18931951)
Hawar (Sal 1, Hejmar 19: Duemb 17 Nsan 1933)
1
, ,,
Kurd Kurdistan
Bi av Biyaniyan
Fnf Fortrage ber den Islam
(Leipzig: 1912)
2
.
,,
, . . .
,
. .
.
. , , ,
s .
Kurd em in. Kurdistan welat me ye.
Biv nev, em xwe welat xwe ji
herkes, ji biyaniyan btir tir nas
dikin. Kitkitn her gund, er
bajar xwe wek hundir brika al
xwe dinasin. Di nav me de mirovn
wel hene, dikarin zer zinarn iya
serjorek serjrekn bilindcihn
welat xwe ji ber bijmrin.
1
Jeladet Ali Bedir-Khans article is reproduced here as it appeared in Hawar in
both Latin and Arabic scripts. The Latin-script version has been edited only in that
in the rst year of publication q was used for the modern k and k was used for
the modern q. Thereafter modern orthography was adapted. The title of this article
in the original is Qurd Qurdistan. For more information on Bedir-Khan, see
www.celadet.de.
2
Martin Hartmann (18511919), Fnf Vortrge ber den Islam (Leipzig: Otto
Wigand, 1912).
READINGS
175
,
.
Digel v hind hin titn welat
me hene ko em xwe bi xwe, nikarin
wan bibnin, hj btir nikarin wan ji
hev derxnin, liser vebin.
. , .
. .
. ,
.
. .
Her kes hundir mala xwe ji xelk
tir nas dike. L biyan wek dike-
vin nav malek ji xweyiy btir qen-
c kmaniyn w dibnin. Ji ber ko
ew ji bona dtin seh kirin hatine
tketine.
, . ,
. . .
, . , , . .
. ,
, . .
. .
, ,
.
L em ko ji xwe tde ne avn
me l hn bne, rind bala xwe nadin,
li dwar bann xwe nanihrin. Bi-
nihrin j, nikarin wek xelk biyan
bibnin. J re avinen din divt.
1
Ji
hla din dtina qenc kmaniyn
welat miletek ne titek hsan ye.
Ji wan re ji dtina wan re mirovinen
zana pisporin gerek in. Nemaze
pisporinen biyan, da ko her tit b
alkar meyeldar bibnin bibjin.
.
, .
Gelek mebin j hin biyan hene ko
hatine, ketine nav welat me, l te-
maa kirine, km zde hn zman
me bne di hek me de kitbin
nivisandine.
. ...
Kitbinen wel di her zman
ewrpay de hene, rs, elman, fren-
siz, ingilz, talyan h.p.
,,
. .
Min dil heye, ji wan kitban biri-
nen bikr wergernim kurdmanciy
di van stnan de belav bikim.
1
Bedir-Khan often uses the old literary third-person singular ending -t and -it for
the modern - and -e; thus divt for the modern div and bit for the modern be.
KURMANJI KURDISH
176
. .
.
, . ,
, .
, .
.
, .
. , . .
.
, .
.
. . .
.
.
Heye ko ew biyaniyn ha carinan
di eleyh me da j got nivisandi
bin. Ji xwe piraniya wan di lh me
de gotine meyldariya me kirine.
Heri j bit
1
her du texlt nivsar bi
kr me tn. Yn ko eleyhdariya me
kirineheke ne xerezkar ye
kmaniyn me an me didin. Em bi
wan kmaniyn xwe diedilnin. Bi
n din ko di lh me de hatine niv-
sandin, miln xwe n rind nas dikin
xwe bi xwe qedr xwe dizanin.
Heke mirov bi xwe qedr xwe nagi-
rit nik tukes biqedr nabit. Bel ev,
nav di me didin.
, ,. .
.
Di wergerandin de bi rz tarix
ve naim. Heri ko dikevin dest
min bi kr me tn ez wan wer-
gernim kurdmanciy hd hd
belav bikim.
. , .
.
. , ,
,
.
. , .
. . ,
Ez wan bi awak wel werger-
nim ko mana rind bte seh kirin
qise herend heye, ewend kurdand
bibit, ne ko pirsan yeko yeko wer-
gernim kurdmanciy titek wel
bnim p ko pirs kurdmanc l awa
biyan bibit.
Ji mil din, di zman me de ber-
dlka her pirs hj ne hatiye dtin
hevedudann. Ji lewra di mehcet de
ez away hin qisan li gora pirsn
me biguhrnim, ji hev veqetnim
p pa bikim. L j re ne km ne
j zde dikim. Ez bala xwe bidim
1
See note above.
READINGS
177
, ,
.
ko qesta nivsevan giyan nivsar
weke xwe hilnim weke xwe bidim
zann.
,
, :
. . .
Ez bi nivsareke kurt l hja dest
p bikim: end xz ji Marten Hart-
man.
. .
.
, . ,,
) ( , , .
, . .
. ,
. , .
Hartman zanayek elman e. Di nav
Kurdistan de geriyaye, hn zman
me bye. Kitbeke w heye, Bo-
tan, kitbeke hja kr. Herwek ji
w kitb xuya dibe Hartman li her
tit welat me hr mze kiriye. Min
ew kitb li Germanyay dt xwendi
b. L r ne bi min re ye.
. , .
.
.
.
Li gora bihstina min Hartman
Memozna Xan werdigerand elma-
niy, l emr w tr nekir. Pa ko
end rpeln w wergerandi bn
rehmet.
. , , , ,, . .
, ) .,
( .
.
Xzn jrn ji kitbeke w hatine
girtin. Nav kitb (Pnc gotar liser
islam) ye. Di Leypiig de di sala
1912de hatiye apkirin.
,
, .,
. ,
, . .
, .
.
Rpel 135Heke di qelemrew
Osmaniyan de pveketineke mane-
w xurt bte p, eva ha ji nav wan
miletn misilman d dest p bikit ko
ne tirknijad in. Ev miletn ha her-
end li tirkan raser bibin j heta niho
bindestiya wan kirine. Di nav wan
miletan de mirov dikarit Ernewid,
Ereb Kurdan bijmrit.
KURMANJI KURDISH
178
.
. , .
, ,
.
Rpel 137Wek ez di nav mile-
tn ko li anda ewrpay tne wer-
gerandin nav kurdan j hildidim,
dizanim ko p bikevim pber ber-
beriyeke dijwar.
. . .
. ,
, .
.
., .
, , .,
, ,
. ,
, , .
Digel v hind her rwiyn ko di
nav wan de geriyane bi yekdeng
wesfn wan dane gotine ko kurd di
nav qalikeke hik de an hesasiye-
teke kr zirav didin. Ji mil din bi
guvahiya gelek nivsaran tte zann
ko kurd di tj zrekiya teb, zbr-
bir di dayna hikm qerarn rast
de j ne km in.
.
, .
,.
,, ,. .
Kurd di navbera ereb h livok,
di tgehitin de bilez, t xask;
tirk tiral, di raman de tenbel ko bi
diwar hn jiyna civat dibe, tp
navn e.
. , .
.
,
. .
Kurd pismamek eceman rastn
e. L ew bi tkilbna birek mezin ji
xwna tirkan li xwna w bi bawe-
riyn tesewif, wek pismam xwe
xerab ne bye, xwe pak zind hila-
niye.
1
. .
. :
, ) . (
Xebera w ye. Ma em bi xwe nabjin:
er ji betaliy tir e. (Hawar)
READINGS
179
,
,
, , .
Heke ev milet ha, rjk, mirov
rastn peyda kir bi xurt zexmiya
xwe bi vna ko xwe li anda din-
yay a r d wergerne, dinyay
tevda ecbmay d bihle.
.
, . , ,
.
Ji xwe b ik e ko ji bona zman
xwe rengn gelek nigardar, ji
hikm zman biyaniyan pakhilan
herfn latn j d qebl bikit.
,
,
, , .
. . .
Heke berbn berbjiyn Hart-
man hj tevda ne bin j ser, ev-
end heye ko em r zman xwe
rengn bi herfn latn dinivsnin.
Celadet Ali Bedir-Xan
x Evdirehman Garis Rehmet
Hawar (Sal 1, Hejmar 11, Pncemb 10 iriya-Pa 1932)
. . , .
nnnher der re, ne ma
hen. Dil bi kul, can bi keser, av bi
girn.
,
.
***
Bang dan, x Evdirehman Gari-
s ne ma, hati b xr, rehmet
***
, , .
.
, ., .
Her x Evdirehman Garis,
ruhniya avn Kurdistan, germiya
diln kurdn Qenc, bi du berikn
bbext, dest ji me kiand . B
ehd dn milet xwe, qurbana
armanca xwe.
KURMANJI KURDISH
180
. . .
. , .
,,,
.
Her bi bbext hate kutin. Ji xwe
wekdin kutina w nn b. Bi mra-
n ne dihate kutin. Li pey w gelek
geriha bn. Ew mrn Qenc peyda
ne dibn, ne dihatin dtin ko bikevin
piya w, dor l bigirin, p biberizin
w bikujin.
, .
, , .
. . , ,, .
J re, ji kutina w re an bbext an
berikek xlk diviya b. An ne, wek
mirovek adet, di nav nivna xwe de
d bimiriyaya.
. . s . . ,
,
,
.
. s
. ,
.,
,
. . .
.
Mirina di nav cihan, ne mirina w
b. Heyfa xwed j j re dihat, p
qail ne dib ko ev mr bi her tit
xwe bi dn, bi zann, bi dest xwe
qenc, di nav cihan de wek mirovek
adet bi bay an bi tay binit di
pey re qasid xwe verkit emanet
xwe j bistnit. Evdirehman ne stelih
b.
, . ,
.
. .
J re qatilek ji nav mal, golik
mal diviya b ko b tirs lerz
bikeve bin paila w, here destn w
wel w bide ber ting xencer.
.
,
. .
Heke dar xirab dibe, kurm w j
ye. Ji xwe kurm dar ji dar mebit
dar tucar xirab nabit.
. .
.
, .
Wel j b. Dinya li x me b
b hvar. Roj b ava, hevaln w
j dr keti bn, ew bi xulamek xwe
ve di nzing gundek de li hviya
qasidek dima.
READINGS
181
.
.
.
. .
, .
Hingra ev dest bi ketin kiri
b. Dema nimj j hati b. Di ber
wan re avek diherik. x delal xwe
vemalt, tinga xwe da xulam xwe,
ket piy, ber bi av ve di.
. . .
. ,
., .
Xulam w, ji par re, ew da ber
ting. Derb l ket, x li xencera
xwe xebit l zivir, derbeke din
singa w qul kir.
. , .
. , . .
. ,
., .
Xulam, yek Seirt bi nav Necmo,
ser x xwe bi xencera w jkir
bir dijminan. Her bi xencera x
xwe, ji ber ko ya xwe di singa w re
kiri b.
. .
. .
***
Necmo hate xelat kirin. Em j p-
re, hewraniyek re b xelata me.
***
,
. .. . .
Her bang dan, x Evdirehman
ne ma, ji bona xidmeta milet xwe
za b, ji bona w j mir.
.
.
Nizanim ez awan bikarim wesf
pesn w bidim. x Evdirehman ji
wan mirovan b ko dyn dinyay
km di zikn xwe de gerandine.
.
. . ,
.
ex b, mela b, seyda b, mr
mrxas b. x b, xwedan terqet,
merdn w l wek pxemberek di-
nihrtin.
.
. . , .
. .
.
. . .
Mela seyda b. Di mezheb a-
iy de zanak zor b. Islamiyet weke
xwe nas dikir dida nas kirin. J ne
mwek km dikir, ne j wek mela-
yn din, ji bona veartina nezaniya
xwe landina xelk, l zde dikir.
KURMANJI KURDISH
182
. .
,
. .
. ,
.
Herend mirov axiret b, ew-
end j mirov dinyay, mirov n-
win pveketin b. Nav di xelk
dida ko bixwnin, her tit hn bibin.
Piraniya feqehn w bi herfn latn
j dizan bn.
. , .
,
.
. :
Cark min j pirs b, heke ji
nivsandina zman me bi herfn lat-
n ji aliy ert ve tu man heye. R-
w w delal binr, bi devkenek
zelal b li min vegerand:
.
, , .
,
! ,
. . .
Ma ire hebit? Xwed emr
nehyn xwe ji me re ne bi herf ik-
lan, l bi qisey daye zann. Ji xwe
ikln herfn qurana pn ne ji ik-
ln r bn. Ji lewra, mir min, te ko
xwendiye dinya dtiye, seh bike
ji me re hernen wel bibijre ko
milet me zka hn xwendin bibit.
Fetwa bi min re ye.
. .
.
. .
.
. # .
Min got mr mrxas b. Heri
mesela Berwar seh kirine qenc
dizanin, ew x delal i mrek zor
b. Bi deh panzdeh xulamn xwe ve
qeza Berwar rakiri b. Wek xwe
dida ber kevirek, sed zilamn qenc
nikari bn epera w rakin.
,
. ,
. .
,
.
Ber s salan gava me da b
iyayn Hevrkan, li xwe ne dan b
suwar bibe, xwe vemalt, du rextn
xwe avtin stow xwe, ting bi mil
w ve, bi pncih end saln xwe,
wek xortek bstsal da b ka
eharan.
READINGS
183
. .
. . , ,,
. ,
% , , .
Peyayn sist p xurt dibn. Xelk
p disekinn. x Evdirehman kit-
bek, kitbeke mezin bpvan b.
L sed heyf mixabin, li ber nisxe-
yeke din ne hate nivsandin.
. ,
.
. & .
. & .
, .
Liser Kurdistan te heri j bi-
xwesta nik w peyda dibn. Droka
eran, mjvemayn milet kurdan
Di nav Kurdistan de zehf geriha b.
Nemaze hal welat Botan ecb
dizan b. Dikar b bibje ser bin
her ber Botan ji i reng ne. Ser
hakim mrekn Botan rokinen
nebihst dizan bn.
***
, ..
, , .
. ,
.
***
Bel, x min, tu mirovek hol
by, l r tu y destn me ji te
bne. Nizanim heyfa min k re bt.
Ji te re an ji me re? Tu y rehmet,
em hitin di nav derd n de.
. :
' .
(
Xelk d bibjin: x Evdirehman
, kela w di ol de ma. Her
mala xwe guhast, b tirb gorn, b
r op, warkor
! ! , , ! .
. ! .
.
No, kurdino, nekurdino! yarino,
neyarino! dostino, dijminino! Evdi-
rehman bi tirb gorn xwedan war
.
.
.
. . ,
L veartina w j wek mirin
kutina w ne bi awak adet, l bi
awak din, bi awak wel b ko heta
niho nenas nekir
KURMANJI KURDISH
184
.
' )
.
Bel, x min, min ji te re
kefenek wel bijart ko hj tu kela
p ne hatiye pandin, min ji te re
tirbeke wel koland ko hn tu mir ne
ketin.
:
.
.
Min kefen te kir: sor, sip kesk
zer, ala te, min tu veart nav
rpeln Hawar li ser w kla te
daikand.
,
. ,
, , .
, .
Tirba te tirbeke wel ye ko ne kla
w bi brskn ezman diike, ne cax
dwarn w bi ba bager hildi-
wee, ne axa w bi baran lehiy
qul dibe ji hev dikeve.
, , ,
.
,
.
Tirba te kitbek e, ko nifn
milet me deste-desta bikin her
nif ji nif din re heta paiy, hinda
rja qiyamet, ji hevdu re d
bisprin.
, , . .
.
. .
. . .
' , , ,
.
Ev tirba te a abadn e. Min eva ha
ji bona te bijart koland. L te
tirbeke din j heye ko tu bi xwe b
hemd xwe b hemd min hat
ket nav. Ew j dil min, dil min
jar biderd e. L bi hevn hej-
kirina te ewend xurt e ko bikare
la min kela te heya paiya
emr min hilgire, me her du heta
hing bi xwed bike
+ .
,
. ,
,
.
x min bi pncih end saln
xwe ve wek zarokek ko di paila
dya xwe de dimirit, b ax, b naln
zarn, b teq--req texele, b
deng pjn, bi r ket y.
READINGS
185
. .
***
Bel tu diy bi te ne dihesiyan,
br ne dibirin. Ji xwe bi te bihesiya-
na, keng ew dest bbext berm
li te radib?
***
, ,
.
Bigir Kurdistan bigir, bigir
Botan bigir, bigirn Garis bigirn,
bigir Gozgeh bigir.
,
, . ! ,,,
.
Ke bkn Kurdistan, guliyn
xwe kur bikin, xwel li sern xwe
bikin, rea xwe girdin, nn
bikin, bi ax zarn bigirn. Tu j,
mro, bigir, bikeve piya hemiyan,
bigir binal.
,
, . . ,
,
.
***
x Evdirehman ji ks hemiyan
, l nemaze ji ks te . Bne bra
xwe, wek bi x xwe re rudinit
awan li te fedkir, kusan avn w
bi hej hevin tu himbz dikir
***
.
.
:
Ey axa Kurdistan, welat Botan,
era Garisan, halanan di xwe bidin,
pesn xwe bidin, fortan zirtan
bikin bjin: Evdirehman ji ax
toza min hati b p
., ,
Evdirehman ji henahiya iyayn
min belgih girti b
Evdirehman di bin konn min da
rab b
KURMANJI KURDISH
186
:
,
.
.
Tu j, Hawar, pesn xwe bide
bje: Tirba x Evrirehman di min
da ye; min ew veartiye nav rpeln
xwe, kla w daikandiye raser xwe.
,
***
Ey erd, ji min bidexise ko min ew
ehd dn milet ji te re ne hit ne
kir para te
***
. . , .
nnnher der re, ne ma
hen. Dil bikul, can bikeser, av
bigirn.
,
. .
. . .
Bang dan, x Evdirehman Garis
ne ma, hati b xr, rehmet.
Celadet Ali Bedir-Xan
Gur Tekane
, s
Perwz Cihan
) : - (
, . 8 9
. .
, > ? >
, . @ !
! . .
A ? ? C
@ .
Bihar havn payz li d hev ra
hatin derbas bn. Dan xwey i
xwe bihor. Xwe ge, ronah
germa bihorn re he sir
seqem* p ra gihetin*. Xwe i z,
bi lez bez direve! re nexwe
i girane! Nalive nabizive, giran-
y dike ptgiran grte bhn-
ikn lebizdn e.
READINGS
187
), ? , E
9, G H
8 G .
8 8 , G I 8
C s 8 J . G I
H ?
H , C .
, >
8 .
Gul ekn bihar li ber tava
havn hik bn bay payz j
kiras wan revand berfa zivistan
j ew kefen kirin. Dan zivistan di
gel bakurofa rbendan li ser bhna
chan da peya b* b mvan.
Ren kirwe ep dest dane hev
tev hri birin ser ya tepn*
bilind herejor. il ya li sir
seqem mij tem dman rton
da wenda bn.
. . , ), H
. , , . . .
. . .
, . ? H H
., H . 8 L G G
? ? . H
H , ,
L , G .
Ewir bnan helqeyek gulekn
zozanan ketye gerdena yan
sern yan li nav ewiran ra* der-
ketine derva bi esmanan va zeli-
qne. Tu dibj qey dl hene p qo
xwe sng asiman by ser bin
biqewlin u hevraz* hilkiin. Det*
olan di gel herd dolan fstann
sip le b nan li xwe kirine.
, C . .
. G . .
. . ) J H
@ H
C H .
Zozan ya li bin lihfeke ifte-
xase kever da ketine xeweke giran
kr, xew ra ne, xewna* gul
ekn kesk n belek, halhal-
kn sor al, beybn sosin men-
dik heliz, bhna sorgulan deng
bulbulan dibnin.
J , 9 ,
, 9, 9. . H
, , ., J ,
@ , ,
. .
Li qn yayn here jor, ji bil
givna bager vizna bay i deng
nay. Ne deng teyr tyan t, ne j
xuna avn rbar ok kanyan.*
KURMANJI KURDISH
188
J ,, ., C., O
, ., , ., .
H
P Q Q , . ,
, . ,. C
, .
Avn kanyan bnan mencel
stiln mast myan meyne li c da
qerisne. Zemzellkan li dev sln
newalan, dwarn zang kendalan
va bnan eyn gircgirc ba-
day, xwe jor da berdane li ser
ser daliqiyane. bnbern cuwan
dmenn ber bi av arandine.*
.
, , . > L ,
. C 9 ,
G . 8 , ,
. H G ?
, , ,
, I C ,
, . , ,
. . R G . H
.
Siruta pr xew ra ye li hej
liv we ketiye. Dunya kir mit
mat bye by hejiyan livat maye.
Bdengy ya gel dagr kirye.
Her ten end heftyan, yan j end
rojan carek, li dwar gelyek kr
psra yayek bilind dr qrna
renyan di gel zrn lrna gurn
birs, bdengya il yan mat-
bna dol gelyan dikne ewana
li xew hildipekne*.
? S . , ,
. I 8 &
H . .
.
Heme bi kestina renyan ra
zrn bi revdn guran dikeve. Gurn
zivistan hem revde digirin. L car-
caran gurn tekane j ber avan dike-
vin.
G >
. T
. . .
& . . H U
. . . C , H
. H ,
C . J
.
Dr va revdeyek gurn birs li ser
berfa pk kurenegirt li d hev ra
rz girtibn.* Te digot qey ketine
tar. Carna hindek ji wan heta nav-
teng di berf epe da ik dibn.
Carcaran li hvya hevdu diman, l
hinde caran j qet guh xwe nedidan
zrn lrna hevaln xwe yn nav
berf da ik by.
READINGS
189
H ?
? ? , . H
C . ? ?
I ?
H ., H C
.
L heme dr hev teko, teko
p da din nzk hevdu nedi-
ketin. Yek pita xwe bi y d va*
gir nedida. Li payka* w revd
da gurek gewir pithiin p sng
xwe epe diqelat yn may j
ketibn dv w.
? H .
U G .
.
. 9 V . H
., H 8 .
Ew peng revd b. Pir keja
w li ser berf ra dixiik hln
zirav li d xwe ra li ser berfa pk c
da dihla.* Yek gir bi gevde b.
Rewneq dikete pir keja w.*
avn w bnan du kasikn xn
sor* bn.
I G ,
H .
?
? ? .
G , . .
. .
H H . , @ L
.
Ew gurn ku havn da hind gotn
bizin berx kar, dvn hogi
mh beranan, bezn hesp ker
hstir htiran, gotn kew k-
rk karxezal pezkv ivran*
xaribn, kej dabn. Kej engn
wan li ser berf ra* dixiikn. Rew-
neq dikete pira wan, l diln wan ji
birsna dilerizn btaw dibn.
U , X .
) I , .
Z . . G
? C .
) C . H 8 .
. , .
, G U ?
H .
Berf bager r dirb xitiman-
dib. op ra i tit nedihate
xyan. Ker ter garan cbne
hel gov pag axilan. Xezal
pezkv kew krk d li ber
avan nediketin. i nr nemabn.
L birsbn ew li nav hev da girti-
bn. Nikarn li nav w berf bager
ep da p da herin, li d ra v
bigerin.
KURMANJI KURDISH
190
H ,, . H H
, H C . ? H
C . , . , H U
? , , . .
?
? .
Eva endik end rojin, ku i tit
li ber dev wan neketye. Zik wan
birs, dil wan b taw* avn wan
l bibn. Peng wan d bnan
ber nikar sng berf biqelata
p da biya. Hinde caran li pa-
yka revd da, vedima radiwesta
pit xwe ra dinihr, li hevalan
mze dikir.*
J ? , , H
. C , E
G
@ [ > ,
H ? H
. J G
C )C I
. & G .
avn w li avn hevaln ji
wedaket diketin.* Dann buhar
havn, landa xwe ya payz dihan
bra xwe. Dema ku di gel koma
guran dileystin ser hev ra banz
didan, zik wan tr dil wan a
beera wan ge * xwe b. Demn
ku landa wan tij got hestyn
nrn cure cure bn. Hng end
hej hevdu dikirin.
H . , ?
U . & ,
, ? H ! [
& , 8 H
, H 9
H G
L niha birsna nen r herin li
nav berf da vemane. Gelo niha j
ew hez evna p da li dil wan da
maye? Gelo dsan j seha dilovan
hevhebandin li dil wan da maye*?
Yan birs grodary diln wan re
kirine?
G U
@ . . G G .
I ? > ,
., G \
. . H , 9 L .
! G H
? ? C
!
Kundk ser berf rnit ber xwe
hewale ser esmanan da kir kr
zriya. Gurn mayn j p ra zriyan.
Te digot qey birsna gaz xwed
dikirin risk xwe j dixwestin. L
li w yay bxwed xudan da i
heb?! i li dest diket, ku zik wan
tr okn wan bi hz taw
bikira?!*
READINGS
191
> 9
? C C C G .
L & ? .
Hewa berebere sartir dib sir
sermay hz tawa wan hd hd
km dikirin. Zor giran bhemd
xwe p da dicn.
,
, . C , U E
, ?
. G
?
& . I , ? C
.
Li nizar yayek da revda guran
b du tan. Yn pr westiyay li
nav berf da li bin gely da man.
Tek j li d peng ketin li pit
girik da qulibn. Desta ku li d p-
eng ra din, ser hev di gel peng
ar heb bn. Dlegur peng du
tln wan.
J ?
G .
U .
8 , G I ,
@ H G G H
. .
J , ,,
^ . I
.
G . H . H 9 G
,
avn peng dr va li rex avek
titek qeter kirin. Bi revda xwe va li
nav berf da ber bi w re lik.
Dna xwe dan, rvyek kej, ku dla
w ya pan giran li le w y kke
dikir, li rex av disimsime. Her ar
guran dora rv girtin. Rv bi w
flbazya xwe va, neiya ji* gr
helboqa guran rizgar bibe. Gurn
birs rv li nav hev da girtin
waqewaq p xistin kirin piroze*
pirtvekirin. L cendek rv y
kke hindik i dikar tendra zik
her ar guran gur bikira* dzka
hr wan dagirta?*
KURMANJI KURDISH
192
@ ,
. H 9 .
J ? I , ? > ,
H H
. , G
U
,
. H [ ., T .
Herdu tle li ser pa rv devojen
hevdu bn. Yek xwe li y d da. Li
w dem da peng dlegur j
xwe p ra ghandin* hersk li ser
yek berev bn ew j wek rv
iqiq kirin. Prta w j wek tka
rv li ser berf xistin ew j da-
qurtandin rya xwe girtin n. L
dsan j bnan ber rz revde.
G
. C 8
? H [ O
. . )C H , G H
? .
? . ? G
? H ? >
? .
Hewa hind sar hikesay b, ku
tk li hewa diqeris. Bhna xn
dab ser peng dil w dsan j
got germ dixwest. Li nrek
digeriya, ku zik w y nvetr tij
bike. Hey di hey j li pit xwe ra
dinihr li herdu hevalan mze
dikir p da di, l dudil
nihran. Te digot qey gavek p da
die du gavan pa da dizivire*.
@ G G 9,
G H U
. H
. ? . , 9,
> C ? 9
, . U .
Q G C E .
I , . .
, . ,
. ., ,
, U .
J ? .
G . .
O .
Li dwar kendalek kr bilind
da, ku bay tij berf kirib, tl may
nikava li berf da ik b kastn j
hat li ser kendal da likum. Peng
bnan bay bez li ser da zivir d
rk p neday neht ew ji nav
berf da derkeve. Dev di patika w
da c kir kete ser bhn. Dlegur j
hate ar. Ewana tlik dane ber qlan
xna w ya sor rijandin* ser berfa
kever prta w j bnan pira bizin
hirya mhan li ser berf b berate.
Herdu guran heta hestikn tlik j
vehran. Pit pirtvekirin xarina
tlik ketin r ber bi det daketin.
READINGS
193
? C ?
O .
. Q . H
I , L . . .
.
Gur gewr pithiin d frey
got hevalan bib. Dizan awan
hevalan li erd bide dev di patika
wan da c bike. L dlagur bxeber li
d ra di. Agah li i tit neb.
G , . >
, , . > .
8 .
Mideheke kurt li ser ra derbas b.
Sir seqem ba bager mecala
wan birb. i re reat li ber
avan nediketin. Birsbn zor dab
wan.
U G
. H G . I ,
. . H
., . . ,, . ,
. I , ? G .
I ,
. I , C
. .
9
.
Gur gewr kundk li ser berf
rnitib, av kutab dlegur kr
diponij. Te digot qey xewna ker
tern ivannivist dibne. Li nav
deriyaya xewn xyalan da zr
mab, li dlegur mze dikir. Dla-
gura ji her der bxeber j,* pita
xwe daby*, hay j nib. Rast j
dlagur pita xwe bi peng va
girdab. J dilnya pitgerm b.
Ew j dihnij diponij. Li hizra
zik xwe y birs da b.
KURMANJI KURDISH
194
C , .
H C E .
8 ? . 8
G ? . . O H . .
8 .
@ Q . J J
I , . H >
, H & H Q G
C E J G
R . . @ ?
. . . .
I , U
H . H 9
G .
Kelnek ba hilketib*. Gur
gewr nedikar v derfend* ji dest
xwe bike. Dev didann w frey
got hevalan bib*. Dev didann
ku frey got hevalan bibe, ra l
nabe. Birsbn zor dab gur gewr.
Teletel ji c rab, ne ji gav* da xwe
avte ser dlegur mecal mikan
delve* j bir ql di patika w*
eng li hewk da c kir kete ser
bhn di gav da ew iqiq kir
hildirnd kete ser cendeka. Bi
dilek tr got xwar. Pit bijiqandin
xwarina dlegur xwe li ser berf
gevizand li ber bay* qelizand.
Dev xwe alast tevizyn xwe rast
kir.
T ,,
? . C G
U G . C
? H . 8
.
Pit midehek dr dirj taze
iyab zikek tr got bixo. Berf
pkol dikir poz xwe li bin ra
dikir. d peng guran bib gur
tekane. Tek ten mab.
8 )C .
, )C H ? .
Ew d berebere hm dib, ku ten
bie nr. Li ber sir seqem, li il
yan nr dest nediket. L ew
C )C
G . H C H & ,, . G
? , & 9 >
? , E G . H
H
. H
,T , . .
fre bib, di dev dorn gundan
seyn gundan nr dikir. L seyn
gundan p hesiyabn. Gava ku gur
nzk bi wan dikir, hemuyan bi hev
ra hri didan dikirin zrezr. L
gur tekane awa heba, ji nav w
kom da, ji xwe ra titek direvand.
Tirsa w ketib dil segan da se
nediwrn ser sya w biketana.
READINGS
195
[
. , ? , C
. U , H G .
9, H C
. H L .
. , . ? . H
8 H &
9 . H , ,
.
C . H
.
evek dsan gur tekane ber bi
gundek r ket. Hm br ya bivan
bib. Berf bager dest p kirib.
Givegiva bay b, l gewro h li ber
avan ra nedihat. Tendra zik w
by ard mab. Bnan her car hri
bire ser* segan. L xudan segan p
hesiyabn ketibn bsy. Deng
gulleyek zrn bi gur gewr xist
ew li erd vexist seyd gund li ser
cendek w berev bn.
KURMANJI KURDISH
196
KURDISHENGLISH VOCABULARY
Abbreviations: adj. = adjective; Ar. = Arabic; ccmp. = circumposition; const. =
construct case; demon. = demonstrative; dial. var. = dialectal variant; f = feminine;
impt. = imperative; m = masculine; mil. = military; n.p. = narrative present
(couched in the present tense; past-tense translational value); obl. = oblique; Pers. =
Persian; pl = plural; pron. = pronoun; pres. = present; subj. = subjunctive; Syr. Ar.
= Syrian Arabic; Tk. = Turkish; v.i. = verb intransitive; v.t. = verb transitive (here
transitive means that the past tense is formed on the ergative model, not that the verb
necessarily takes a direct object either in Kurdish or in English); voc. = vocative
*
a = ya; bi ~ in the opinion of: bi a min
in my opinion
abadn eternal
abor economic, nancial; f economy;
~zan economist
aciz helpless, unable to cope (ji with):
ez ji kzikan zehf aciz im I am utterly
incapable of coping with bugs
Adar f March
adet f custom; ~ ordinary
aferde m creature
afern bravo; ~ ji re good for
arandin v.t. to create
af f poster
aga aware (li of)
agadar f information, announcement;
awareness
agah = aga
agahdar = agadar
agir m (obl. gir) re; ~ dann bi to set
re to
Agir f Ar, in extreme eastern Turkey
aheng f tune, tone
ajotin ajo- v.t. to drive (vehicle); to
pass, last (of time): pir neajotib ku
not much time had passed before,
v bdangiya han heta sala 1980 ajot
this silence lasted until the year 1980;
~ ser to attack
al
1
f ag, banner
al
1
red
ala = al
alal tulip
alandin v.t. to twist
alastin als- v.t. to lick
ala thatch; ~kir thatched
alav f ame
alay f troop, regiment
alet m instrument, tool
als- alastin
alfabe f alphabet
alim m scholar
al
1
m side, part; bi her ~y ve in every
direction; dan ~yek v.t. to put aside,
to draw to one side; ji ~yek / ji ~k
on the one hand; ji ~y din on the
other hand; ji ~y ve by (passive
agent), on the part of
al
2
, ar f help; ~kar helping, helpful;
~kar f help, support; ~kar kirin v.t.
to help: min alkariya w dikir I used
to help him
al
3
supreme
alkar partisan; ~ kirin v.t. to take
s.o.s part, be partisan
alnegir neutral
Alman German; ~ya f Germany
aloz scattered, random
amade ready; ~ kirin v.t. to make
ready; xwe ~ kirin f to get oneself
196
ready
ambelaj f wrapping, packing
Amerka/Amerqa f America; ~y
American
Amda f Amd, a town in Syria near
Qmishl
an or; ~ na or not; anan eitheror
ancax so much
ann v.t. (pres. ind. tnim, neg. naynim;
subj. bnim, neg. subj. neynim) to
bring
anzaz f cleverness
Anteqye f Antakya, Antioch
anuha = niha
ap, apo m paternal uncle
aqil
1
m mind, intelligence
aqil
2
intelligent
aqbet f end
ard m fuel
ar (dial. var.) = al
2
armanc f aim, goal
arm m a sheaf of grain
armxan m gift
arnawid Albanian
arv f archive
art f army
ark m ceiling
arxayn condent
as rugged, steep; ~geh f fortication
as kirin v.t. to catch
aswar untimely
asiman, asman m heaven; ~ heavenly
asmlasiyon f assimilation
asmle assimilated
aso f horizon
asteng m difcult road, rough terrain,
obstacle
asin m (dial. var.) = hesin
aiq in love; ~ bn to be in love
with
ait f peace, truce; ease, comfort
a = ait
atif emotional
av f water; ~ hewa f climate
ava
1
built up, prosperous, developed; ~
kirin v.t. to develop; ~ker m devel-
oper, founder
ava
2
n v.i. to set (of the sun)
avah f building, edice
avay = avah
avday tempered (steel)
avj- avtin
av f balm
avtin avj- v.t. to throw, throw away,
throw out; lay (foundation); ~a ji text
de dethronement; dest ~ to touch
s.th.
awa f manner, means; bi ~yek some-
how; bi w ~y by this means; bi
hem ~y by all/any means
awaz m voice, sound, singing
awir f glance, backward look
awur (dial. var.) = awir
ax
1
sigh, ouch; ~ avtin v.t. to say ouch
ax
2
f land, earth, dirt; ~a welat home-
land; ~a Sriy the land of Syria
axa m (obl ax) agha, feudal lord, mas-
ter
axaftin axiv- v.i. to speak
axar ???
axil corral
axiftin (dial. var.) = axaftin
axiret f the other world: mirov axiret
an other-worldly person
axn v.i. to cry, to cry out
axpne f patch of ground, eld
AY = Ameriqay Yekby USA
azad free; ~ kirin v.t. to set free; ~ f
liberty
azar f anguish; ~ dan v.t. to torment,
vex
azman m sky
b- birin, bn
ba
1
m (obl b) wind
ba
2
m turn
ba
3
(prep.) with, in front of, in the pres-
ence of; li ~ with, chez
KURDISH-ENGLISH VOCABULARY
197
ba
4
m rheumatism; ~w rheumatic
babet f regard: di v babet de in this
regard
babo daddy
ba-dan v.t. to turn, twist, wring
baday turned, twisted
bager f snowstorm
bahar = bihar
bahlif f pillow
bajar m (obl bajr) city; ~ m merchant,
citied; ~van citizen, city dweller;
~van urban: jiyana bajarvaniy ur-
ban life
Baku f Baku
bakurofe f gust of wind
bakr m north
bal
1
f wing, arm
bal
2
f attention, mind, thought; ~ kian-
din to attract the attention: wneyn
min bala rojname hunermendan
kiandin my pictures attracted the
attention of newspapers and artists;
~dar attentive, discerning; ~drj pa-
tient, careful; ~reh patient, calm;
~k attractive, interesting
balaxane f balcony
baler m airplane; ~geh airport
balg m pillow
balf = bahlf
ban m roof
ban ban kirin v.t. to shout, to yell
bandev f summit
bandor f inuence
bang f call, cry; ~ dan v.t. to give out a
cry, to herald; ~ kirin v.t. to shout
banz = baz
bar m load; ~ bn to be loaded; to bear
up: avn wan bar nebb they
hadnt been able to bear the sight; ~
kirin v.t. to load up, move (house-
hold); ~k m porter
baran f rain; ~din v.t. to rain down
bare: di ~ya de (prep.) about, con-
cerning
bark slender, thin
barn/~iyan v.i. to rain down
bask m arm, wing: bask ep partiya
sosyal-demokrat the leftist wing of
the Social-Democrat Party; ~n xwe
li hev xistin to ap ones wings
ba good; ~ kirin v.t. to improve;
~kirin f improvement
baok(e) falcon
bar m south
bav m (voc. bavo) father; ~t f father-
hood, paternality
bawer believing: ez ~ im ku I believe
that ; ~ kirin v.t. to believe: gelek
kes bawer dikin kumany people be-
lieve that; ~ f belief, trust; ~mend
m believer
baw
1
m father
baw
2
ba
4
bawk f yawn
baxe m garden, yard
baz jump, leap; ~ dan v.t. to dance; to
run away in fear, to ee in haste
bazar f market; ~a re black market
beden m body
bedew beautiful, splendid
bedym ill-omened
befr f (dial. var.) = berf
behr f sea
behs f discussion; ~kirin v.t. to discuss
bejin f height, stature; ~bilind tall; ~
bala tall stature
bel straight; ~ kirin v.t. to straighten,
prick up (ears, &c.)
bela f catastrophe
bela for free, gratis
belav widespread, scattered; ~ bn v.i.
to be scattered; ~ kirin v.t. to spread,
broadcast, disseminate; ~ok f publica-
tion
belay nav bn v.i. to spread out
through
belediye f municipality
belek speckled, spotted
KURMANJI KURDISH
198
belek f water spring
belengaz poor, destitute; ~ f poverty,
destitution
bl yes
belg m leaf
belgih m suit, clothing; ~ girtin v.t. to
garb oneself
belk maybe, perhaps
ben = bend
bend f bond; li ~a for the sake of,
chained to, waiting for: div em d li
benda sibeh ranewestin we should-
nt stand around waiting for tomor-
row; ~ kirin v.t. to fetter, arrest; man
di ~a to wait for
benderuh creature
bendewar bn bi to love, be in love
with
benzn f gasoline
beq m frog
ber
1
m breast, fore; ber-dan see alpha-
betically; ~ bi hev hatin v.i. to coop-
erate; ~ (ve) (adv.) before; ~ ku
(conj.) before; ji ~ kirin v.t. to mem-
orize; ji ~ jmartin v.t. to reel off from
memory; ji ~ ku because (conj.); ji ~
ve (ccmp.) before; ji ~ zann v.t.
to memorize; li ~ (prep.) before, on
account of; li ~ (+ inf.) on the verge
of: ew hviya ku li ber gebn b
ilmis that hope, which was on the
verge of blossoming, withered;
wek(e) ~ as before
ber
2
m yield, fruit; ~ wergirtin ji to de-
rive a yield from
beramber equal, equivalent; ~ f equal-
ity; ~ kirin v.t. to compare to: w
ew beramber Anton exov dikir he
used to compare him to Anton Che-
khov
beran m ram
ber-ann (ber-n) v.t. to imagine
berate f carcass
berban m ceiling
berber f comparison
berbj f prediction
berbiav conspicuous
berbihevhatin f cooperation
berbn f imaginary image, vision
bercnk ???
berav visible, clear, before the eyes; ~
anin v.t. to pay attention
ber-dan v.t. to release, let go; to put on
(clothes); to close, stop, give up: dev
~ ji to close the mouth to, stop, give
up; ~ ser to direct toward; tiving ~ to
re a rie at: xulam w ew da ber
ting his servant red the rie at
him; xwe ~ ser to turn oneself to-
ward, direct oneself to
berdest servant
berdewam continual(ly), constant(ly); ~
kirin v.t. to continue
berdl f equivalent; ji ~a instead of
berdlk = berdl; bi ~ equivalent in
value
berebere more and more, ever more;
gradually, little by little
bereket m blessing; bi ~ luckily
berev = berhev
berf f snow
berferih spacious; ~ kirin v.t. to open,
initiate
bergeh f view, vista
berhem m product, literary work; ~bar
productive
berhev gathered, collected; ~ kirin v.t.
to prepare, gather; xwe ~ kirin v.t. to
pull oneself together
berhevok f collection
berik f bullet
beriqn v.i. to glisten
berizn bi v.i. to ght with, do battle
with
ber f pocket
berde perplexed, lost
berk f pocket
ber-ketin v.i. to feel sad
KURDISH-ENGLISH VOCABULARY
199
bermil f load
bername f program
bero f pot, pan
berovaj to the contrary
berp kirin v.t. to suggest, to propose
berpirsiyar responsible; m manager; ~
f responsibility, management
berq f lightning
bersv f answer, reply; ~ dan bi to reply
to, answer; ~a dan to satisfy the
needs of; ~andin v.t. to respond,
reply
berten f trousers
bervaj f opposite side; ji ~y contrari-
wise, conversely
berv prep. toward
berwar m slope
berx lamb
berxwedan f resistance
bes much, many a; enough
best f plain
best m joy, glee, relish
be m part; ~dar participant; ~dar bn
v.i. to take part, participate
beavend f rhyme
beer f esh
betal f unemployment, uselessness,
idleness
bexe = baxe
Bexda f Baghdad
bext m luck; ~iyar fortunate, happy;
~iyar f good fortune, happiness; b~
unfortunate
beybn f camomile
bez
1
f speed: bi lez ~ quickly, with all
speed; bay ~ the racing wind; ~n
bez- v.i. to run
bez
2
m kind, sort
beza fast-running, galloping
bezir lost
b
1
ba
b-
2
(prex) without; see compounds al-
phabetically
baqil stupid
bbawer disbelieving, unsure; ~ f dis-
belief
bbest uncontrollable
bbext unlucky, unfortunate; ~ f un-
luckiness, misfortune
bare helpless, poor; ~t f helplessness
bine useless
biqas inordinately
bdar treeless, barren
bdeng silent; ~ f silence, obscurity
bdil halfhearted, unwilling
bfed lack of embarrassment
bgav impossible, helpless
bgot skinny
bguman doubtless(ly)
bhamd reluctantly, unwillingly
bhawe unparalleled, extraordinary
bhay unconscious, unaware; dinyay ~
the subconscious world
bhejiyan livat without movement or
motion
bhejmar innumerable
bhempa unparalleled, peerless
bhv without hope, in despair; ~ kirin
v.t. to make s.o. despair
bhz f weakness, debility
bhiiyar without feeling, numb
bhn
1
f breath; ~a min teng b I was
bored; ~a xwe teng kirin to bore one-
self, let oneself get bored; ~a
ikandin v.t. to suffocate; ~teng f
boredom
bhn
2
f smell, odor; ~ berdan to leave
an odor behind; ~ dan to give off an
odor; ketin ser ~ to pick up a scent;
~ikn dry-smelling
bhteng = bhnteng
b prep. without; ~ ku (conj., + subj.)
without: ro j b ku mirov tu zehme-
tiyan bikine, mirov bi hsan ji wan
t digih even today one easily under-
stands them without going to any
trouble
bmkan f impossibility
KURMANJI KURDISH
200
bj- gotin
bje f word: ~ bi ~ word by word; ~r
speaker
bjing f sieve
bkar unemployed; ~ f unemployment
bkes lonely, alone, unprotected
b li prep. without
bmane fearful, dreadful
bmecal f lack of opportunity
bminet relentless(ly)
bnamus dishonorable
bnav nameless, unnamed
bnavbir incessant
bnihtin v.i. to freeze
bnan spotless
bpar deprived
bpejn f tranquility
bpvan immeasurable
br. See xr.
br f longing; ~ kirin v.t. to long for,
miss
brik = brk
brk f pocket; wek hundir brika
al xwe nasn to know something
like the back of ones hand
Brd f Beirut
bsedem without reason, unprovoked
b serbin endless
berm shameless; ~ f shamelessness
bik doubtless
btar storm
btaw impatient, restless
btir more
btn powerless, weak
bvil, bvl f nose, nostril
bxan homeless
b xay limitless
bxeber unaware (ji of); ji her der ~
totally oblivious
bxew sleepless, suffering from insom-
nia; ~ f sleeplessness, lack of sleep
bxudan = bxwed
bxweda godless, damned
bxwed godless, ownerless, orphaned,
poor, lonely
by = b
bzar f nuisance, headache
bzaro childless
bi- subjunctive prex
bi re (ccmp.; bi + w/w > p) by,
with, upon: bi tirn re by train; bi min
re with me; bi bihstina deng re upon
hearing the sound
bi ve (ccmp.; bi + w/w > p)
through, up to: ji w roj p ve from
that day to this
bi- subjunctive verbal prex
biaqil intelligent, smart; ~ f intelligence
bik little; ~an f childhood, youth
bidardakirin dar
biha bn v.i. to be valuable
bihar f spring, springtime; ~ pertaining
to spring
bihin = bhn; bi ~ with odor, with fra-
grance; ~dar fragrant
bihimet magnicent
bihit f paradise; ~n paradisiacal, heav-
enly
bihstin bihs-/bihz- v.t. to hear, listen
bihn = bhn
1
bihorn v.i. to pass
bihostin v.t. ???
bihuk insect
bihurandn bihurn- v.t. to spend
(time): ew zaroktiya xwe li Kurdis-
tana Bakr bihurandiye he spent his
childhood in North Kurdistan
bihurtin bihur- v.i. to pass, be spent
bihut f span. See also bihit.
bihr- = bihur-
bijarte choice, select
bijartin bijr- v.t. to choose
bijiqandin v.t. to tear to shreds
bijjk m physician
bijn lively
bijv f sustenance
bikarann kar
bikr useful
KURDISH-ENGLISH VOCABULARY
201
bla (+ subj.) let: i dibe bila bibe what-
ever happens, let it happen
bilbil nightingale
bilez quick, hasty
bilind high; ~ kirin v.t. to raise, to
elevate; ~cih m height, high place
biliyan v.i. to arise (sound)
bil other than, aside from; ~ ji ditto
bilr f shepherds pipe, ute
bin m bottom; di ~ under; ~dest under-
ling, oppressed; ~geh m foundation,
basis; ~geh avetin to lay the
foundation of ; ~gehn basic; ~xet f
south of the Turkish border, i.e. Syria
and Iraq
binr luminous
bipdexistin f advancement, improve-
ment
biqedr worthwhile, valuable
bir m part
bira
1
m (obl. pl biran) brother
bira
2
= bila
bira
3
really
birc f tower
bir hungry; ~n f hunger; ~t f hunger
birvebir m leader
birh m eyebrow
birin b- v.t. to carry, take; ~ jr to
bring/take down/away; ~ jor to bring/
take up
birisqn v.i. to sparkle, shimmer
birn
1
f wound; ~ kirin v.t. to wound;
~dar m wounded
birn
2
= birrn
birrn v.t. to cut, to cross: w snor birr
he crossed the border
birs hungry
birsn f hunger
birsk f lightning; ~e f telegram
biryar f decision; ~ dan v.t. to decide
biserketin f success
bikul m goat and sheep droppings
biv m buzz
biv nev willy-nilly, like it or not
bivir m ax
biwa (alternative past conditional of
bn) = bya
bixrhatin dan v.t. to welcome
bixwe by oneself, personally
biyan m foreign(er), stranger, alien;
~stan f any foreign place, foreign
parts; ~t f strangeness, alienation:
jiyana biyantiy life of alienation
bizin f goat
bizir m seed
bizivn v.i. to budge
bhin = bhn
bn = bhn
bn- dtin, ann
bna (dial. var.) = mna
bnah f sight
bnan prep. like
bnber m sight
br
1
f memory; bi ~ ann v.t. to remem-
ber: ba bne bra xwe kuremember
well that; ~a birin to take into
consideration; ~ hatin v.i. to remem-
ber: t bra min I remember; ji ~(a)
kirin v.t. to forget; ~ann f memory,
reminiscence
br
2
f well
bran f memory
bst
1
twenty; ~sal twenty-year-old
bst
2
f moment, a short period of time:
bstek nebor it didnt take long be-
fore
bstin bs- v.t. to hear
beng f weeping willow
bz- = bihz bihstin
bzbz matted
bo (prep.) for; (conj.) so that, in order
that
bo f tail
boik f tail
bombe f bomb; ~yn destan hand
grenades
bona prep. for: ~ v yek for this reason
borandin v.t. to spend (time), make
KURMANJI KURDISH
202
(time) pass
bor f pipe
born v.i. to last, pass (time): end meh
naborin not many months passed
(n.p.); v.t. to excuse: min bibore ex-
cuse me
bostan m garden
bo wide, widespread, abundant
boxe f bundle
brat roasted
brsk = birsk
buhar = bihar
buhirn v.t. to take away, clear off
buhurandin buhurn- v.t. to spend
(time); ~n v.i. to pass, pass away
buhurtin buhur- v.i. to pass, pass
away, go out
buhur last, past: sala ~ last year
bulbul nightingale
bk f bride, daughter-in-law; ~an f
wedding
bn b- v.i. to be, become
bs f ambush
byer f incident, event
bz ice
BZ = ber zayn B.C.
ca (used with imperatives): ~ were come
on!; ca bikire ku just think what it
would be like if
cam f glass
camr courageous, gallant, gentlemanly
cass m spy
car f time; ~ ~an often, many times;
~din again, once again; ~inan from
time to time; ~k = carek once; ~na
sometimes
cax protective fencing
cazbedar interesting
cebhe f front (mil.)
ceger f liver (poetic); ~ rn darling,
beloved
cejin f celebration, festival
celeb m sort, kind: du celeb kes hene:
yn ba yn neba there are two
kinds of people, good and evil
celx m/f slit, crack
cem m group; side; a large basket; li ~
beside, with: li cem wan beside them,
with them
cendek m body, corpse
ceng f battle
cerg f liver
ceribandin v.t. to try, test
cewr m pup; ~ik m puppy
ceza f ne, penalty; ~ wergirtin v.t. to
receive a penalty, to be ned
cid serious
cigar(e) f cigarette
cih m place; pl bed; ~ bi ~ from place to
place; ~ girtin v.t. to take place; ~
kirin v.t. to put, place; ~ li xwe xwe
kirin v.t. to make oneself comfort-
able; ~ girtin v.t. to take the place
of; ~ local; ~ ~ various, sundry;
~gir occupant; bi ~ ann to bring
about, bring to fruition; bi ~ bn li to
settle in, take up residence in; di nav
~an de in bed
cihan f the world
cil m clothing; ~ berg (pl) clothes
cin djinn, demon; ~anlxist possessed
by demons
cinewir monster
cirecir f talk, chit-chat
civandin civn- v.t. to move, set in
motion
civak society; community; ~ social,
societal; ~nas sociologist; ~nas f
sociology
civat f society, group
civn v.i. to move; ~n f movement
ciwan young, beautiful; ~t f youth
cixar(e) (dial. var.) = cigar
cixiz kirin v.t. to mark, to leave marks
in
c = cih
chan f world
KURDISH-ENGLISH VOCABULARY
203
chlkirin f surveillance
cran neighbor
cograf geographical
col m pack (of wolves, &c.)
core core various
co enthusiasm, excited
cot
1
m pair
cot
2
m plow; ~kr f agriculture
cube m robe
cumhriyet f republic
cunta f junta
cure cure (dial. var.) = core core
curet kirin v.t. to dare
cda separate; ~ kirin v.t. to separate
cm bn v.i. to be obscured
- n
ak good
akt m jacket
alak active; ~ f activity
and f culture; ~ cultural
andin n- v.t. to plant
ap f printing; ~ kirin v.t. to print,
publish; ~eman f printed matter, the
press; ne~kir unpublished; ~xane f
printshop
ar four
arove f framework
are f remedy; b~ helpless, poor; ~ns
f remedy; bi ~nsa ve in the in-
terests of; ~ser f solution; ~ser kirin
v.t. to solve, resolve
armerg cross-legged
aref, arev f sheet, womans cov-
ering; ~ kiandin v.t. to put a sheet
(on a bed); ~ li xwe kirin v.t. to put
on a veil, cover oneself
av m eye; ~ girtin v.t. to close the eyes;
~ern f expectation; ~n xistin
v.t. to attract the attention of; bi ~ek
neba nrn to have a low opinion of;
~ f eye ailment; ~kan f source,
wellspring; ~in blue-eyed
avnihr bn v.i. to expect, to look
expectantly
awa(n) how?: awan bibe bila bibe be
that as it may; ~ heba somehow or
other; ~ ku as; awah f quality
ax f time: w ax at that time
ay f tea; ~dan f teapot; ~xane f tea-
house
e =
ef = kef
ek f weapon; ~dar armed
eleng cute, attractive, good-looking
em m river
en f armpit
end (following word construed as pl.)
how many?; several: di end cihan de
in several places; end hevaln min
several of my friends; ~ik end (+
sing.) several: endik end roj e
its been several days since; ~ -
odd: bi pncih end saln xwe ve in
his fty-odd years; ~ for a while
eng f claw; ~ li de cih kirin v.t. to
sink the claw into
engel m hook
eng kirin v.t. to throw, hurl
ente m suitcase
ep left; wrong: ew min ep fahm dike
he misunderstands me
eper f shield, barricade
epik xistin li v.t. to applaud for
er what?
er ku (conj.) as soon as
er m peddler
erkez Circassian
erm m skin, leather; ~n leathern
erx f wheel
etel m fork, forked
ewsandin v.t. to exploit
ewt crooked, awry, wrong
right, okay; ~-bn v.i. to be born; to
be right: nabe tu wisa bik its not
right for you to act thus; dibe ku ez
biim? is it okay for me to go?; ~-
kirin v.t. to give birth to, to make, x,
KURMANJI KURDISH
204
repair, keep: w dikine bin zin-
dan they keep him in the dungeon,
min di ser xwe e plana ku dikir
I was making a plan in my head to
lik the young of any animal, puppy,
kitten, cub, etc.
l f subject, topic; ~ kirin v.t. to talk
about
re f grazing, pasturage
rn v.i. to graze
tir better
i
1
what?; ~ bigire practically speaking,
pretty much
i
2
no; ~ tit nothing
iek = ek
iftexas m cotton batiste
ik exhausted; ~ bn v.i. to become ex-
hausted, to sink down (into snow)
ikandin v.t. to drip; to plant (tree); to
push s.th. in as far as it will go
ikn v.t. to plant; to crackle; to dry up
(mothers milk): r ber w ik her
breast milk dried up
iko, iku because
il
1
forty
il
2
greedy
il
3
only in il iya hills and moun-
tains
ile f the coldest period of winter; ~ya
pan January; ~ya pn December
ilmisandin v.t. to make wither
ilmsn v.i. to wither
ilviln = ilwiln
ilwiln v.i. to gleam
ima why?
imk because
iqas how much
iqiq kirin v.t. to rip to shreds
ir, ira why?
ira f lamp, stove
irandin irn- v.t. to tear, tear up
irav f muck
ire why
iriya pa/pan f November
iriya p/pn f October
irisn = irsn
irsn v.i. to sparkle, shine, glow
irsk f spark
iv trick, game; ~ dan xwe v.t. to zigzag
ivanok f a formula used in storytelling
ivik, ivk bird, sparrow
iwal m sack
iya m mountain; ~y mountaineer, hill-
billy
ek f ower
l bright
men m grassy meadow
p f calf (of the leg)
rn v.i. to creak
rok f story; ~van storyteller
ya = iya
zzik f buzz
o m stick
og = ok
2
ok
1
m stream
ok
2
f knee
ol f desert, wilderness
ong = ok
2
ik f bird
k f bird
n - (subj. stem -/her-) v.i. to go
r a type of sheep
yn v.i. to go
da
1
a dialectal variant of de
1
da
2
a preverb that forms compounds,
generally indicating down
da-ann v.t. to set down, establish: Mam
Red satil dan li dora xwe mze
kir Uncle Rashid set the bucket down
and looked around himself; ~ li xwe
(+ subj.) to lower oneself, deign,
bring oneself to do s.th.: gelek ji wan
j li xwe danaynin bi v ziman xwe
rn bipeyivin many of them cant
even bring themselves to speak this
nice, sweet language
da-avtin v.t. to put together, throw
KURDISH-ENGLISH VOCABULARY
205
together
da-ikandin v.t. to set up, plant (tree,
ag, &c.)
dad f justice; ~geh f court; ~gr m judge
da-dan v.t. to place, put in, install; to
light (re)
da-gerandin v.t. to turn, send back
dagirker m occupier
da-girtin v.t. to occupy, take over, to
take down; guhn xwe ~ v.t. to prick
up ones ears
dagirt well-built
dagr kirin v.t. to occupy
dahl f grove
dahn m season, period of time
da-hrandin v.t. to research, investigate
dare f ofce
da-ketin v.i. to fall down, come down,
swoop down, subside; to be lowered
(gaze); ~ bi to take up, involve one-
self with
da ku (+ subj.) in order that
da-kutan v.t. to shake
da-liqandin v.t. to string up, hang
da-liqiyan v.i. to hang, dangle
da-mezran v.i. to be set up, established;
~din da-mezrn- v.t. to set up, estab-
lish
dan
1
= dahn
dan
2
d- v.t. to give
da-nan da-n- v.t. to lay, put down
da-nitin da-ni- v.i. to sit down, alight
dann = da-ann
danstendin f transaction, exchange;
relation
da-qurtandin qurtn- v.t. to swallow
dar f tree, stick, gallows; bi ~ ve kirin
v.t. to hang; bi ~ da-kirin v.t. to
hang; ~istan f forest
dar m wood
darbe f blow; ~ xwarin v.t. to suffer a
blow
darik m stick
darn wooden
davtin = da-avtin
dawe f legal case
dawet f festive occasion
daw f end; ~ ann v.t. to put an end to;
~ hatin v.i. to end, come to an end;
~n (adj) last, nal
dax f brand; sorrow
da-xistin v.t. to take down: polsan
tabeleya me daxist the police took
down our sign
daxwaz f request; ~ kirin v.t. to request,
beseech; ~ f desire
dayik m mother; ji ~ bn v.i. to be
born; ~t f motherhood, maternity
dayin = dan
dayn = dan
de
1
postposition forms the second part
of a number of circumpositions, gen-
erally indicating stationary position in
or at; see the prepositional element
de
2
(precedes an imperative): de were
come on!
defter f register, roll, notebook
deh ten
dehl f valley; orchard
dehol f drum
dek f trick
delal dear, beloved
delve f opportunity, occasion
dem
1
f time, season; ~a ku (conj.)
when; ~dirj long-term; ~kurt short-
term; ~ dewran f olden times
dem
2
steeped; ~ girtin to steep (of tea)
demane f pistol
deng m voice, sound, noise; ~bj m
singer
dengiz sea
depdepe wooden
deq
1
f part, region, place: di v deq de
in this place
deq
2
m tattoo; ~ bi ~ exactly alike
deqe = deqqe
deqqe f minute
der
1
f place; ~ek() somewhere; ev ~
KURMANJI KURDISH
206
here; li v ~ here; li ku ~ where?
der
2
outside; ~eke foreign: welatn
dereke foreign countries
der
3
f door
der-ann v.t. to take out
derb f blow
derbas passing, passsage; ~ bn v.i. to
pass, to pass by (ji); ~ kirin v.t. to
spend (time); ~ hundur bn to enter
derbaz = derbas
derbeder bn v.i. to be driven from
pillar to post
der-bn di to burst out on
derd m pain, trouble: her yek derdek
wan heb everyone had some trouble
derece f degree: di i derecey de to
what degree?
dereng late, long time; ~ man v.i. to lag
behind, be late
derewn lying, false
derxistin = derxistin
derfend f opportunity
derheq: di ~() de about, concerning
deriya = derya
deriz cracked
der
1
m door; ~y xwe girtin li ber to
close ones door to; li ~ dan v.t. to
knock at a door; ~ girtin v.t. to shut a
door; ~ li ser xwe girtin to shut one-
self up
der
2
(prep) outside of
der-ketin v.i. to go in/out, to turn out to
be; ~ li dij v.i. to oppose; ji gra
~ to fail to catch
derman m (obl dermn) remedy, treat-
ment, medicine; ~geh pharmacy; ~
kirin v.t. to treat
derp m underpants; longjohns
ders f lesson; ~ dan v.t. to give lessons
der dor environs; ~a (prep.) around
derve outside; ~kar external: wezr
dervekar minister of foreign affairs;
~y (prep.) outside of: dervey welt
outside of the country; (adj.) foreign;
ji ~ from outside
der-xistin v.t. to bring out (publication),
to issue (an order), to cast out; ji hev
~ to to tell apart, to discern
der-xwendin -xwn- v.t. to take to task
derya f sea; ~ya Sip the Mediterranean
Sea
derz f crack, split; see also jin
derz
dest
1
m hand; ~ bi ~ continuously; ~
bn ji to lose, to be left without:
destn me ji te bne we have been left
without you; ~ dan hevdu v.t. to join
hands; ~ kan ji v.t. to let go of; ~
kirin bi (+ inf.) v.t. to start; ~ xwe
kiandin ji to give up, abandon; bi ~
xistin to attain, obtain; di ~n for
to do: di destn min de bi ten
razan mab the only thing I could do
was go to sleep; ji ~ kirin v.t. to lose;
ji bin dest by, by means of ;
xwe avtin ~ lingn kesek to
throw oneself at someones feet, to
beg; xwe dan ~ to let oneself be cap-
tured
dest
2
f group, set
destan f story
destbirak m blood brother
deste f group, set
destenan loaf of bread
destik m oar
destmal f handkerchief
destpk f beginning
destteng poor
destr f order, command; ~a ziman
grammar
destvala empty-handed
destve-nan v.t. to catch
det f plain
dev m mouth; entrance; ~ berdan ji to
leave, to give up, to stop: te dev ji
kana cixar berdaye? have you
stopped smoking cigarettes?; dev ji
min berde, ez bxew im leave me
KURDISH-ENGLISH VOCABULARY
207
aloneIm sleepy; ~ di da c
kirin to bite down on; (li) ~ () dora
prep. all around
devendet f brush, brambles
dever face down
dev f bush
devken f smile
devk oral: edebiyata devk oral litera-
ture
devojen hev bn li ser to squabble
with each other over
devok f accent
dewam kirin v.t. to continue
dewar m domestic animal, cattle
dewir = dewr; f circle; ~ dan v.t. to
circle
dewlemend rich, wealthy
dewlet f state: ~a Frensay the state of
France
dewr f age, time, epoch; role; ~ leyistin
to play a role; ~an f age, time
dews f place, spot, trace
dexisn v.i. to be jealous (ji of)
deyn m debt; ~ dan to pay a debt; ~dar
indebted; ~ indebted to
d
1
f (const diya) mother
d
2
future auxiliary + subj. for future
tense
d
3
3rd-person sing. present indicative
of hatin
dl
1
f tail
dl
2
f female animal; ~egur f female
wolf; ~ik f female wolf or dog, bitch
drn ancient, of long standing
dv
1
m demon
dv
2
= dev
dw = dv
1
di de ccmp. in: di saln 70 de in the
70s; di destn min de in my hands
di re ccmp. by, via, upon: bi bihs-
tina deng re upon hearing the noise;
av di tingn wan re dihate xwar
water ran down their ries
di ve ccmp. through
d- habitual and progressive verbal
prex
dia = dua
di bareya de ccmp. about, concern-
ing
dibistan f school: dibistana destpk ele-
mentary school
Dicle f the Tigris River
didan m tooth
didu two; ~yan second
din nostril
digel with; ~ ku although
dihan = dian (see ann)
dij, li (prep.) against
dijmin m enemy; ~at f enmity
dijn kirin v.t. to curse
dijwar difcult; ~ f difculty
dikan f shop
dike nake no matter what s/he did
dil m heart; hope: min dil heye (+ subj.)
I hope to; ~ girtin bi to be offended
by: bi yna min ya hotl dil xwe
girtin they were offended by my
going to a hotel; ~ ewitn bi to feel
sorry for: dil midr bi v xort
eleng evndar xwendin diewite
the principal feels sorry for this at-
tractive young man so avid to study;
~ f heartache; ~germ warm, hearty,
kind; ~ge happy; ~nexwe sorry,
upset, ill at ease; ~pak pure of heart;
~qayim condent; ~qayim f con-
dence; ~soz sympathetic; ~a happy,
glad; ~ewat heart-rending; ~ikest f
disappointment; ~ikest kirin v.t. to
disappoint, to dishearten; ~teng f
sadness, loneliness; ~xwaz fond of;
b ~ against the wishes of; ne bi ~
min b it did not appeal to me
dilr intrepid
dilnya assured, condent
dilop m drop
dilovan kind, affectionate, dear; ~ f
affection; death (euphemism): ber
KURMANJI KURDISH
208
dilovaniya nivskar dilovan bi salek
a year before the dear writer passed
away
diltezn ???
din other
di nav de ccmp. in the midst of: di
nav w erd de in the midst of that
land
din = dinyay (see dinya)
dinya f (obl. dinyay, din) the world,
the weather: dinya pirr sar b the
weather was very cold; bi ~y hatin
v.i. to be born; ~dt worldly, sophis-
ticated
diran (dial. var.) = didan
dirb track, path
dirj long, lengthy; ~ ajotin to last a
long time; ~ kirin to lengthen; ~ f
length; ~ kirin to hand to ;
dest ~ kirin to stretch the hand out
to
diriyan v.i. to be ripped
divab, diviyab (impersonal + pres.
subj.) had to: diviyab ku titek bikin
they had to do something; (imperson-
al + past cond.) ought to have , was
supposed to have , would have to
: diviyab Sovyet ji ran derketa
the Soviet ought to (was supposed to)
have withdrawn from Iran, divab ku
ew kzik bihata kutin that bug would
have to be killed
div (impersonal + pres. subj.) ought to
dixan f smoke
diyar clear; ~ f clarity
diyar f gift
Diyarbekir f Diyarbekir
diz m thief
diz secret, concealed; bi ~ secretly,
stealthily; ~t f secret
d other; y ~ the other one
dl m prisoner; ~ girtin v.t. to take pris-
oner; ~ f imprisonment
dlan f dance, dancing
dmen f view, sight, aspect
dn
1
m religion; ~it f religiosity; ~,
~dar religious; ~perwer religious
dn
2
crazy, mad; ~ bn li ser to go crazy
over; ~ kirin to drive s.o. crazy; ~ik
slightly crazy, screw loose; ~it f
madness
dn
3
f gaze, attention
drok f story, history; ~ historical
dsa(n) again, (+ neg) stillnot
dtin bn- v.t. to see
dwan f reception room; collected works
of a poet; ~e f (obl ~) small recep-
tion room
dwar f (obl dwr) wall
dz knee
dzik f pan
do = d
dol valley
dom kirin v.t. to continue
doman v.i. to continue
domandin domn- v.t. to continue
dor
1
f environs; li ~a (prep.) around;
~hl f environs, parts, region; ~a
girtin v.t. to surround
dor
2
m turn; ~al f circumference
dorandor m circumference; li ~ (prep.)
all around
dost friend; ~ane friendly; ~ayet f
friendship
do- dotin
doab m/f grape molasses ???
doeg f mattress
doik = doeg
dot f daughter; ~mam f cousin
dotin do- v.t. to milk
doz f cause, reason; aim, ideal; revenge;
~a kirin to aim for; ~ger vengeful,
litigant
du two
dua f prayer; ~ kirin, ~ xwendin v.t. to
pray
ducar kirin v.t. to repeat
dudil hesitant, of two minds; ~ f hesita-
KURDISH-ENGLISH VOCABULARY
209
tion
duduyan (dial. var.) = diduyan
duh() yesterday
dunya = dinya
dur hypocritical; ~t f hypocrisy
duemb f Monday
duv = d
duwemn second: er dinyay y
duwemn World War II
duyem(n) second
d
1
behind; ~dirj of long standing; ~re
then, afterwards; li ~ hev re one after
the other; li ~ xwe behind oneself; bi
~ ketin v.i. to pursue
d
2
m smoke
dkel f smoke
dman f smoke
dpik f scorpion
dr far; ~ xistin v.t. to throw away, ex-
ile; bi ~ ketin to go/get away; ~ nzk
sooner or later; ~ah f remoteness,
distance; ~bn farsighted
dre d
1
drebn f binoculars
dv m tail, end
dvre = dre
ebeden (+ neg.) never, not at all
ecem Persian
ecb strange; ~may dumbfounded, stu-
pied
edebiyat f literature; ~van literateur
edeb literary
edilandin v.t. to ameliorate, make bet-
ter
edb m litrateur
efend m westernized gentleman; ~t f
gentlemanliness
efraz up
ef f amnesty; ~ya git general am-
nesty
egal f headband
eger if
ekb f team
ekol f school
ekonomk economic
elbik f wooden bucket
elektrk f ashlight
elem pain
eleqedar kirin v.t. to concern
eleyh: di eleyh da ccmp. against;
~dar m supporter; ~dar kirin v.t. to
support
elman German; ~ German (language)
em (obl. me) we
emanet m deposit, anything held on
loan or for safekeeping
emir
1
f order, command
emir
2
m age
emperyalsm f imperialism
enanet traditional
endam m member
enerj f energy
en f forehead; front (mil.)
ensttu f institute
eql m mind, reason
erd f earth; li erd dan to throw to the
ground
erdim f region
erdhj f earthquake
ereb Arab; ~ Arabic
erebe f cart, carriage, any wheeled
vehicle
Erebistan f Arabia
er yea, yes
erk f responsibility
ermen Armenian
ermim silk
Ernewid Albanian
erz f hope; ~a ikandin v.t. to dash
s.o.s hopes
erzan cheap
erzihal f description, report, petition
Erzerom f Erzurum
esas m foundation, basis; ~ basic, es-
sential, original
eser f work, monument: esereke edeb a
literary work
KURMANJI KURDISH
210
esil m origin; bi ~ xwe originally
esilzade aristocratic
esker m soldier; ~ f the military; (adj)
military
esman = azman
esmer olive complected
er f tribe; ~t tribal
ekere clear, obvious
ek tek tangled (hair)
ev (obl. masc. sing. v, obl. fem. sing.
v, obl. pl. van) he, she, it, they, this,
these
evn f love, affection; ~dar desirous, in
love: ew evndar xwendin b he
was desirous of studying
evqas so much
ew (obl. masc. sing. w, obl. fem. sing.
w, obl. pl. wan, pl. const. ewn) he,
she, it, they, that, those
ewd m revenge
ewel, ewel rst
ewn pl. const. of ew; ~ din the others
ewir = ewr
ewle security, reliance, assurance; ~ bn
to be secure
ewr m cloud
ewraq (pl) papers
Ewrpa f Europe; ~y European
Ewrp European
ewt f bark; ~e ~ constant or repeated
barking; ~n v.i. to bark
eyn the same: di eyn sal de in the
same year
ey O (vocative)
Eyndwer Ayn Dwr, a small place in
Syria south of Cizre
Eyb Job; ~ Job-like
eywan f salon, sitting room
ez (obl. min) I
ezben sir (mode of polite address)
ezman m sky, heaven
ezz dear
Ezrayl Azrael, the angel of death
1
= y
2
future auxiliary + subj. for future
tense
d now; still, yet
gir agir
h: gewro h beravara nedihat
Whitey didnt notice it
n = yn
r = hri
f pain, ache; ~andin n- v.t. to hurt,
cause pain, trouble; ~iyan - v.i. to
hurt, suffer pain: ser av te nee
may your head and eye not suffer
pain, thank you
var f evening
xur m stable
zing m rewood
fahm (dial. var.) = fehim
fal f augury, omen, fate; ~ vekirin to
predict: ev fala ko herkes ji min re
vedikir, wusan derneket the predic-
tion everyone was making for me did
not turn out like that
fam (dial. var.) = fehim
faqa under (prep.); ketin ~ to fall be-
neath
faris pl Persians; ~ f Persian (language)
fast fascist
fedakar, fedekar self-sacricing, de-
voted; ~ f self-sacrice
fed f embarrassment; ~ kirin to be em-
barrassed
fed-kirin v.t. to look, watch
fehim kirin v.t. to understand
felat f freedom, liberation
felsefe f philosophy;
felsef philosophical
fen f trick; bi ~ ftan by hook or by
crook
fener f lamp
feodal feudal
feqeh m theology student
feq Muslim cleric; ~t f the clerical pro-
KURDISH-ENGLISH VOCABULARY
211
fession
feqr poor; ~t f poverty
fer one, single item (of a pair)
ferheng f culture: wezareta ferheng
ministry of culture; dictionary
ferman f order, command; ~a der-
xistin v.t. to issue an order for
ferm formal
fermo please (said when offering s.th.)
ferq f difference: i ferqa me crann
me dimne? what difference is left be-
tween us and our neighbors?; ~iyet f
distinction
ferz kirin v.t. to assume
fetwa legal opinion
fex f trap; xistin fex to put in a trap
feyde f benet, prot; bi ~ benecial
fde f (const. fda) benet: ji bo fda
xwe for ones one benet, in ones
own interests
fhm = fehim
flbaz f cunning
fre bn v.i. to learn; frey bn to
learn s.th., to become accustomed to
s.th.
fr bn v.i. to learn: ew di demeke
kurt de fr tirk b he learned Turk-
ish in a short time
ht kirin v.t. to assess, to price
kar(e) f worry
kir f idea, thought; ~n v.i. to think,
contemplate
litn ji v.i. to get rid of
losof m philosopher
nd f candle
r- rn
raq m dishes
rar kirin to escape, to ee
ravn f lunch, midday meal
rax (pl) dishes, pots and pans; ~ ustin
v.t. to wash the dishes
reh open, wide, spacious; ~ kirin v.t.
to open; dil ~ kirin to gladden the
heart
riyan v.i. to y away
rn r- v.i. to jump, y: Msa ji kfan
dire Musa is jumping for joy
rte m angel
rk a rapid motion
rne f bakery
rotin fro- v.t. to sell
rq = ferq
rtone f storm, gale
til dan v.t. to twist and turn
fstan m dress
fort m boast
fransiz m/f French (person)
frens f French (language)
frensiz French (language)
fro- rotin
fursend f opportunity
frn v.i. to bubble, gurgle, boil
galegal f conversation
galon m gallon
gam ox
garan f herd of cattle
garis m millet; ~ misr corn
garsn f village square
gav
1
f time; moment, instant; ~a (ku)
when (sub. conj.); ~ saet at all
times; di ~ da in an instant; li ~ de
at that moment
gav
2
m step, pace; ~ kirin v.t. to step,
cross; ~ avetin to take steps: edebi-
yata kurd di van saln daw de
gavine ba avetiye Kurdish literature
has taken some good steps in these
recent years
gavan cowherd; ~t f herding
gazin = gazind
gazind m rebuke, complaint; ~ kirin v.t.
to rebuke, reproach; ~ok rebuking,
complaining
gaz
1
m warrior
gaz
2
f call, shout; ~ kirin v.t. to call,
speak to
geh when; geh geh sometimes
KURMANJI KURDISH
212
sometimes
-geh sufx of place
gehandin (dial. var.) = gihandin
gehtin (dial. var.) = gihtin
gel much, many, most; ~ejmar plural;
~ek() very, a lot, many: ~ek ji wan
many of them; ~r popular
gelemper general, public; bi ~ mostly,
generally
gel m mountain pass, canyon
gelo whether; interrogative particle, I
wonder if
gemar f lth
gem f ship
genim m wheat
ger if; ~i even if, although
gerandin gern- v.t. to turn, rotate; to
take for a walk; to produce
gerden f neck
gerden f necklace
gerdn universal
gerek necessary, should, must, ought to;
~ bn to be necessary
geremol f complexity, confusion
gerihan (dial. var.) = geriyan
geriyan v.i. to go around, roam around;
~ li (pey) to look for
germ warm, hot: ~a havn the heat of
summer; ~a, ~ay f warmth; ~ f
warmth
Germanya f Germany
ger dirty
ge red, blossoming, aming, happy; ~
bn to blossom, ame up (re), be
happy; ~ f happiness, ourishment
gevde f mange; bi ~ mangy
gevez crimson
gevizandin v.t. to make writhe; xwe ~ to
roll oneself around
gevizn v.i. to writhe
gewde m body; ~ xwe dan hev to curl
up; ~ xwe girtin to hug oneself
gewr light grey, whitish; ~o whitey
gewre large, big
gj dizzy, spinning; ~ bn v.i. to be
dizzy; ~ kirin v.t. to make dizzy,
make lightheaded: germa havn tu
gj kiriby the heat of summer had
made you dizzy
gr crooked, uneven
grik ant
grt lethargic
ghj- gihtin
giha = giya
gihan gih- v.i. to reach; ~din -gihn-
v.t. to deliver; xwe gihandine ser to
get oneself to
gihatin gehj- v.i. to reach, arrive; to
mature
gihtin gihj-/gj-/gihj-/ghj- v.i. to
reach, arrive
gihj- gihtin
gijgijn v.i. to be knit (brow)
gincir ???
gir m hill
gir m rancorous, grudging; ~-girtin v.t.
to have a grudge
gir- girtin
giramgr respectful
giram f respect
giran heavy, deep (voice); serious,
grave, plodding; ~ f gravity, weighti-
ness; ~biha precious, expensive; ~
rotin v.t. to sell at a high price,
overcharge
girav f island
girc girc frozen solid
gir f knot, tumor; ~-dan v.t. to tie, to
connect: nav bajr li cem min bi
nav nan rn, ekir helaw hatib
girdan for me the word city was
connected to the words bakery
bread, sugar, and halvah; pita
xwe ~ dan bi to turn ones back on,
to be unmindful of
girk Greek
girik f conundrum; hillock
giriyan v.i. to weep
KURDISH-ENGLISH VOCABULARY
213
gir m weeping, crying
girn v.i. to weep; f weeping
girng important; ~ f importance
girs great; bi ~ greatly
girtin gir- v.t. to catch, seize
girtgeh f prison
girtxane f prison, place of detention
git general, public; totally
givatin giv- v.t. to press, squeeze
givegiv f gentle blowing of the wind
givn v.i. to roar (wind)
giya f grass, greenery
giyan m soul
gj- = gihj-
gr f grasp; xistin ~ helboq v.t. to en-
snare
grodar f struggle
gr helboq f trap, entrapment
gya = giya
gol f lake: ~a Wan Lake Van
golik m calf
gopal m stick; ~ das sickle
gor
1
f method, manner, way; li ~(a)
according to, in the opinion of
gor
2
f grave; ~istan f cemetery
gor f sacrice; ez bi ~ please
gorn f tomb
got m meat
gotar f article
gotin bj- v.t. to say: tu bj nebj no
matter what you say; f word: bi ~eke
din in other words; ji X re Y ~ to call
X Y: gelo mirov kane ji berhemn ku
bi zimann din tne nivsandin re
bibje berhemn kurd? I wonder if
can one call works that are written in
other languages Kurdish works?;
~xwe well-spoken
gotbj f talk, conversation
gov f barn
govend f Kurdish line dance; ~ girtin
v.t. to dance a line dance
goya youd think
gr- = gir- (girtin)
guik m/f ??? ear
guh m ear; ~ dan v.t. to listen; bi ~
girtin v.t. to grab by the ear; ~dar m
listener; ~dar kirin v.t. to listen; ber
guhan ketin v.i. to be heard
guhan m udder
guhar m/f pearl ??? earring???
guharn v.i. to change
guhartin guhr- v.t. to change
guhastin = guhaztin
guhaztin guhz- v.t. to transport, carry,
move; mala xwe ~ to move ones
home
guhdar m listener; ~ kirin v.t. to listen
guherandin guhern- v.t. to change
guhertin (dial. var.) = guhartin
guj erce (storm)
gujn v.i. to howl
gul f ower
gulan f May
gule f bullet; ~baran kirin v.t. to re,
open re on
gulik f ower
gul m braid, tress
gulle = gule
gulte f clump
gund m village; ~ m/f villager; ~t f
rusticity
guneh m sin, fault; ~kar f crime, of-
fense, fault; avtina ~n xwe expia-
tion for ones sins
gungil thick, matted
gunin ??? a thick protective mat
against thorns, etc.
gupe gup kirin v.t. to pound (heart)
gur
1
m wolf
gur
2
strong, powerful; ~ kirin to ll
gurdar f attention; ~ kirin to pay rapt
attention
gurg = gur
1
gur bald, scabby
gurn f clamor, noise
gurmn gurm- v.i. to make a loud noise
gurz m hank of hair
KURMANJI KURDISH
214
guvah f testimony
guvatin (dial. var.) = givatin
guveguv (dial. var.) = givegiv
ha = han
hakim m ruler, governor
hal m condition, state; ji ~ ketin to be
exhausted, worn out
halan f yell, shout
halhalk (dial. var.) = alal
han (in constr. w/ word it modies) this
very, that very: w roja han on that
very day; ev tirsa han bi serphatiya
te girday b this very fear was con-
nected to your experience
hatin y-/wer- (v.i., pres. ind. tm, neg.
naym, pres. subj. bm/werim) to
come; (+ inf.) passive
hat f future
havtin (dial. var.) = avtin
havn f summer
havtin (dial. var.) = avtin
hawrdor f surroundings, environment;
~n w those around him
hawurdor (dial. var.) = hawrdor
hay f feeling, awareness (ji of), atten-
tion: ~a min j tune b I had no
awareness of it; ~dar aware
hazir ready, present; ~ f preparation; ~
kirin to make preparations
heb
1
m grain, bit; pill: ~ek aqil a grain
of sense; ~ek() a little, a bit, slightly
heb
2
f a single thing, item, individual,
one
hebandin v.t. to love
hebe nebe one way or another
hebk = hebek (see heb)
hebn v.i. to exist: di ziman me de pir
gotinn kurd hene ku me nebihstine
there are many Kurdish words in our
language we havent heard; (with
subject + possessive) to have; heb
tuneb once upon a time
hechecik martin, swallow
hecm f attack, assault
he whatever, whoever
hedam sense ???
hedef f goal
heft seven; ~e f week: bi ~yek within a
week; ~ey weekly; ~ seventy
heger if
hej movement; li ~ liv we ketin v.i.
to toss and turn
hej = hez
hejandin v.t. to shake: w ser xwe he-
jand he shook his head; min dest w
hejand I shook his hand
hejar poor: ~n kurdan the poor Kurds
hejiyan v.i. to move, shake
hejk love, affection
hejn = hejiyan
hejmar f number, issue (of a journal)
hejmartin hejmr- v.t. to count, enu-
merate: dihatin hijmartin le ser her
deh tiliyn destan they could be
counted on all ten ngers of the hands
hejmr- hejmartin
hek m right; di ~ prep. concerning,
about
heke if
hel m protected place
helaw f halvah
helbest f poetry, verse: ~a serbest free
verse; ~kar m poet; ~van m poet
helbet of course
hel-bijartin v.t. to select, choose
hel-dirandin v.t. to tear apart
Heleb f Aleppo
heliyan v.i. to melt, disappear
heliz an herb
helk bhn breath
hel-pekandin li xew v.t. to rouse from
sleep
helqe f ring
hemhem bothand
hema thus
heman that very
hember equal; ~ f equality; li ~
KURDISH-ENGLISH VOCABULARY
215
towards, vis--vis, across from
hembz = hemz
hemd m will, volition; b ~ reluctantly,
involuntarily; hatin ser ~ xwe to
come to ones senses
hemdem contemporary
heme always
hemz, hembz f bosom, embrace; ~
kirin v.t. to embrace
hem = hem
hemman scarcely, barely
hem all, every; ~ya(n) all of them
hengam time: di ~ek de at one and the
same time, at once
heps f prison, imprisonment; ~xane f
prison
her every; ~ ~ always and ever; ~ku
-tir the more the more: deng ji
ezmn herku di btir dib the sound
from the sky kept getting louder; ~
ten at least: her ten end heftiyan
carek at least once every few weeks
her- n
herb f war department
herd valley ???
hereherey worldly strife, turmoil
herejor steep
her = er
herm f district, region
herf f letter of the alphabet
herikn v.i. to move, to ow
herimandin v.t. to ruin, make a mess of:
w jiyan li wan herimandiye it has
ruined their lives
her
1
very, exceedingly, most (superla-
tive prex)
her
2
f mud
hertim always; ~ usual
herweha thus, so also
herwiha (dial. var.) = herweha
hes f feeling, emotion; ~asiyet f sensi-
tivity
hesibandin v.t. to count, take into con-
sideration: ew xwe weke kurd nahesi-
bnin they dont count themselves as
Kurds
hesin m iron; ~gr m blacksmith; ~
made of iron; ~ker m blacksmith
hesiyan/hesn v.i. to feel; ~ bi to per-
ceive, be aware of
hesp m horse
hesret f pining, longing, regret; li ~a
longing for
hest f feeling
heste f lighter
hestik m bone
hest m bone
he = n
hen green; ~ah f greenness
het eight; ~ eighty
heta even; (prep.) up to, until; ~ (ku)
(conj. + neg. subj.) until: heta ney
guhartin j d wiha bidome until it is
changed it will remain like that
hetan = heta
hev each other, together, co-, same; ba
~ hatin to get together, cooperate; bi
~du re together; bi ~ re with each
other, together; ji ~ ketin to fall apart;
li ~ together; li ser ~ altogether; ~
dan v.t. to collect, put together
heval m/f friend; ~bend m proponent;
~t f friendship
hevedudann v.t. to put together, to
compound
hevd each other
hevgirt assembled
hevr m dough
hevkar m/f co-worker; ~ f cooperation
hevok f sentence; ~saz syntax
hevpeyvn f conversation
hevraz (dial. var.) = efraz
hevrim m silk
hevwelat m/f compatriot
hew no more, not any more: hew dixwim
I cant eat any more
hewa f air, weather; ~ guhastin v.t. to
have a change of climate
KURMANJI KURDISH
216
hewale m air
hewandin -hewn- v.t. to give shelter to,
protect
hewcedar needy, in need; ~ f need,
necessity
hewe (dial. var.) = we
hewes f passion
hewg f throat
hewil f attempt; ~-dan v.t. to attempt
hewk = hewg
hewqas that much, so much
hewran m a type of cloak; ~yek re a
black cloak, a sign of mourning
hew f courtyard
hey continuously, (+ verb) to keep on
heya = heta for, up to, until: heya
demeke dirj for a long time; ~ ku
(conj.) while, as long as
heybet m fearfulness; ~girt fearful
heyecan m excitement
heyf f pity; ~a its too bad about ;
~a hatin bi to feel sorry for: heyfa
min bi te t I feel sorry for you
heyhat alas!
heyn v.i. to live
heyran amazing!, incredible!
heyt eight
heyt eighty
heyv f moon, month; ~a arde ev the
full moon
heyran i? what do you mean ?
heywan f animal
hez kirin ji v.t. to like, enjoy: min j hez
kir I liked it
hezar thousand
h still, yet
h furious, quick-tempered
hd hd little by little
hdka slowly, softly
hj still, (with comparative) even
hja valuable, worthy; ne ~ worthless
hk f egg
hl
1
f side, direction
hl
2
vigor, strength, power; bi ~ vigor-
ously, aloud
hl
3
trace, track
hl- hitin
hlan v.t. to leave
hln f birds nest; ~ kirin v.t. to nest,
to settle in
hnik cool; ~ay f coolness
hre kirin v.t. to look
hri f attack; ~ kirin/ann/birdin v.t. to
make an attack: cendirme hri ser
mal dikin the gendarmes are attack-
ing the house
hriker attacking
hrs f anger; ~ kirin v.t. to anger; ~
ketin v.i. to get angry
hsan easy; ~ kirin v.t. to facilitate,
make easy; ~ easy
hsir m tear
hsr captive, prisoner
hstir
1
f mule
hstir
2
= hsir
hn green (of plants), bluish (of ani-
mals); ~ay f greenery, verdure; ~ f
greenery
htir f camel
ht f thigh
hvar = var
hv f hope; ~dar hopeful; b~ hope-
less; li ~ya bn to wait for, be in
expectation of ; (li) ~ya man to
lie in wait for
hwan f porch
hwir at rest, calm
hz f strength, power
hicm f attack
hijmartin hijmr- (dial. var.) = hej-
martin
hikim m sovereignty, power; verdict,
judgment; hatine ser ~ to come to
power; ~ dayn to make a judgment
hilan kept, preserved
hil-ann (hil-n-) v.t. to take away; to
keep, preserve
hil-avtin v.t. to go, stick (li ra
KURDISH-ENGLISH VOCABULARY
217
through something)
hil-bijartin v.t. to choose
hil-dan v.t. to lift, raise
hil-dirandin (dial. var.) = hel-dirandin
hil-girtin v.t. to bear, endure; to shoul-
der (a responsibility, burden)
hil-ketin v.i. to come about by chance
hil-kan v.i. to climb up, out
hil-kutan v.t. to knock, rattle
hilmis poke; ~ dan bi to poke
hil-pekandin (dial. var.) = hel-
pekandin
hil-qedimn v.i. to stand up
hil-andin li ser v.t. to bring down on
hil-weandin v.t. to break up, split
apart: pit hilweandina sstema Sov-
yet after the break-up of the Soviet
system
hil-wen v.i. to break up, split apart
himhim bothand
himber (dial. var.) = hember
himbz kirin v.t. to embrace
himz armful; ~ kirin = himbz kirin
hin some, a few, several: hin rpel a
few pages, several pages; hin ji wan a
few of them; ~n wan some of them;
~ekan ~ekan some others
hinarok cheek
hind
1
= hin; hinde cara hindek every
once in a while
hind
2
f measure, extent: ji ber hind j to
a certain extent; ~ik slight, few, little
bit; ~ikah f minority
hinda prep. until
hindav f direction; ~a da toward
hindir = hundur
hiner = huner
hing then, at that time; therefore, for
that reason
hingiv m honey
hing then, at that time
hingr f twilight
hir f wool
hiriyan v.i. to fall down, spill over or
out
hi m awareness, sense; ~ be be quiet!;
bi ~ intelligent, smart
hiin = hn
hik dry, solid, frozen; ~ bn v.i. to
freeze; ~ah f solidity, rigidity; ~asay
f dry, cold air
hitin hl- v.t. to let go, leave, allow;
Xwed te bihle may God preserve
you!
hiyar awake, sober; ~ bn v.i. to
awaken; ~ kirin v.t. to wake
hizandin (dial. var.) = hejandin
hizib f political party
hizir f thought, idea; li hizra da bn
to be thinking about
hm
1
m foundation, basis; ~avj m
founder
hm
2
= hn
2
hn
1
still, yet: ew ~ nehatiye he hasnt
come yet; ~ btir even more
hn
2
: ~ bn v.i. to learn; ~ kirin v.t. to
teach: w ez hn pir titan kirim she
taught me many things; ~ bn to
learn how to (+ inf.)\
hna = hn
1
hnga = hing
hs f feeling, emotion; ~ kirin v.t. to feel
htin = hitin
hv (dial. var.) = heyv
hv (dial. var.) = hv
hz m/f skin sack
hogi m mountain ram
hogir accustomed, intimate friend; m
environment
hol f environment, surroundings; xwe
gihandin ~ to come forth, come
about, arrive
hol thus, in this manner; in view
holik f hut
hon (dial. var.) = hun
honik cool; ~ kirin v.t. to cool down;
dil xwe ~ kirin bi to console oneself
with
KURMANJI KURDISH
218
hov wild; ~t f wildness
hovan over there
hoy m condition, circumstance: di hoyn
teng de in narrow straits, in a tight
spot
hozant f poetry
h.p. = heta pa etc., et al.
hukum m order; ~dar f rule; ~dar
kirin v.t. to rule
hukmet f government
humanst m humanist; ~ humanistic
hun (obl. we) you (pl.)
hundir (dial. var.) = hundur
hundur m inside; ~ prep. inside of; di
~ de within: di ~ deh salan de
within ten years
huner, hiner f art, skill; ~mend m artist
hur free, at liberty
hurmetgir respectful
hustu m neck
huzr f presence
hn = hun
hr
1
small, little; ~ ~ in little bits, in
small pieces; ~ ~() bn v.i. to be
smashed to bits; ~ kirin v.t. to crum-
ble; ~ mr small items, little things
hr
2
m paunch
hrik m small piece, bit, sliver; ~ ~
slight(ly)
hwd (her wek din) etc.
(because the distinction between initial i
and is not consistently maintained,
the two letters are alphabetized to-
gether)
dam f execution, death sentence
idare kirin v.t. to direct, manage
deoloj f ideology
ifade f testimony
ias f bankruptcy; ne ~ v.i. to go
broke
lan kirin v.t. to announce
ilham f inspiration
ilm scientic
lon f September
imkan m possibility
mparator f empire
imtihan f examination
imtiyaz f concession: imtiyaza neft oil
concession
nca then, in that case
ngilstan f England
ngilz m/f English; ~ f English lan-
guage
inkar kirin v.t. to deny
insan human being, one; pl people
ina m composition
iptida elementary
rad f objection
ran f Iran
Iraq f Iraq
ro, roj today
r (dial. var.) = ro
sal this year
sfehan wrought silver
skendern f skenderun, Alexandretta
Islamiyet f the religion and traditional
learning of Islam
ispat kirin v.t. to prove, establish
israf f expenditure: israfeke enerjiy an
expenditure of energy
israr kirin v.t. to insist
istifade kirin ji v.t. to make use of
stgah f station
syan f rebellion
m work, affair, job: i min bi
tirkan re heye? What do I have to do
with the Turks?
ellah God willing, I hope
ev tonight
ik dry
ikence f torture; ~ kirin bi v.t. to tor-
ture, torment
ikestin (dial. var.) = ikestin
tiraz f objection
iyar m skin, pelt
jahr (dial. var.) = jehr
KURDISH-ENGLISH VOCABULARY
219
jan f pain, ache; ~ dan v.t. to pain
jar poor; ~ f poverty
jehr f poison
jendirme f gendarmerie
jengor rusty
j = ji + w/w
jhat worthy
j-kirin v.t. to excise, cut out, cut off
jr down
jrbar heavy laden; ~ f being heavy
laden
ji prep. from, to, for, with
ji re ccmp. with
ji ve ccmp. from
ji ber ve ccmp. before
jibrkirin br
jihevdeket fragmented, fallen apart:
civateke ~ a fragmented society
jimar f number
jin f woman, wife; ~ik f woman
jinvezayin f rebirth, renaissance
ji wedaket scattered about
jiyan
1
f life
jiyan
2
j- v.i. to live
jiyin = jiyan
2
j enclitic also, even, emphasizes pre-
ceding word
j- jiyan
2
, jn
jn j- v.i. to live
jndar alive, living; dinya ~ the world
of the living
jr talented, skillful; ~ f diligence, talent
jmartin jmr- v.t. to count, to enumer-
ate
jor above, up
k- kirin
ka (attention-getting particle): ka mze
ke come, look!; ka li ku ye? now
where is it?
ka f straw, hay
kabs f nightmare
kaye (dial. var.) = qaye
kal aged; m old man, grandfather; ~e-
mr m elderly gentleman
kalte m good quality
kalkabs m nightmare demon
kalo m old man
kambax ruined, devastated; devastating;
~ kirin v.t. to ruin, devastate
kan = kan
2
kan
1
f spring, source
kan
2
where is/are?
kann (dial. var.) = karn
kanun pl winter months
kapan a narrow, steep mountain road
kapik f bran
kar
1
m job, work; ~bidest m authority;
~ker m/f worker; ~bar m work, bus-
iness, everything entailed by s.th.; ~
kirin to work, to penetrate; bi~ ann
v.t. to use
kar
2
kid (goat, deer, &c.)
karik kid goat
karn (v.i., neg. pres. nkarim, past
(d)karibm, neg. past. nkaribm,
subj. (bi)karibim) to be able (+ subj.
to)
karneval f carneval
karto stale
karxezal baby deer, fawn
karzan expert
kasik m globe
kastn f howl
ka m slope, hill; ~ bn to fall back-
wards
kat kirin v.t. to divulge
kaxet = kaxez
kaxez f paper
kaxiz = kaxez
kazkaz f wail
keban f lady: kebaniya mal the lady of
the house
ke f girl; ~ik f little girl
ked f stick; ~a kesek xwarin to get
beaten by s.o.
kef
1
f foam: ~a sawn soapsuds; ~ dan
v.t. to foam
KURMANJI KURDISH
220
kef
2
f palm (of the hand)
kefen m burial shroud; ~ kirin v.t. to
shroud
kef f keya, Arab headdress
kefteleft f activity, work, enterprise
kej f fur; ~ da-bn v.i. to get long fur
kek m elder brother
kel
1
boiling; ~ ger crying and weep-
ing
kel
2
m bull
kelandin keln- v.t. to boil
kela m corpse, body
kelber wild
kel f an outcropping of rock
kelem
1
oak
kelem
2
m thorn; obstacle, difculty,
trick
kelem
3
m cabbage; ~ Bruksel Brussel
sprout
keleme f handcuff; ~ kirin v.t. to hand-
cuff
keln f opportunity, chance
kemn f ambush; ~ girtin to lie in am-
bush
ken m laughter; ~iyan v.i. to laugh
ken- kenn
kendal f side, slope, bank
keng, keng when?
kenn v.i. to laugh
ker
1
donkey; ne ker ketiye, ne hz
diriyaye, ne doab rijiyaye (prov.)
no donkey has fallen, no skein has
been ripped, and no molasses has
been spilled, i.e. nothing at all has
happened
ker
2
deaf
ker
3
quiet, silent
keramet f miracle
kerb f sorrow, grief; bi ~a n v.i. to
empathize with
kerem generosity, benet; ji ~a xwe
please, if you would be so kind
ker f herd; piece
kerm f snout
kerp m sun-baked mud brick
kerwan m caravan
keser f sorrow, grief; ~vedan f sorrow-
ing
kesk green
kef kirin v.t. to discover
ket f boat
ketin kev- v.i. to fall; ~ li ber to ob-
ject to, oppose; bi ser ~ to come up,
to surface
kev- ketin
kevan = keban
kev m spoon
kever spotlessly white
kevin ancient
kevir m stone, rock
kevnar ancient
kevnebajar f ancient seat
kevneperest conservative
kevnesovyet f the ex-Soviet Union
kew partridge
kewan = keban
kewtn v.i. to bark
keys f opportunity, advantage
kezeb f liver; womb; ~ ewitan to feel
sorry, be distressed
kez f braid of hair
kezk f strand of hair
kez kirin v.t. to bite
k k
kf f pleasure, joy: li ~a w nedihat she
wasnt enjoying it; ~xwe happy;
~xwe f happiness, pleasure, rejoic-
ing; ~ sefa pleasure
kl m grave
klek f side, edge
km few, little bit; ~ kirin v.t. to lessen;
~ mab ku (+ subj.) almost: km
mab ku dila te ji kfa ji snga te
derkeve your heart almost leapt out of
your breast from joy; ~an f de-
ciency, inadequacy; ~as f paucity; ~
zde more or less; b~as aw-
less(ly); bi ~an f at least
KURDISH-ENGLISH VOCABULARY
221
kr
1
f knife
kr
2
f benet, prot, effect; bi ~
hatin to be of benet to : bi kr i
t? whats the use of it?; bi~ useful
krk rabbit
ks = keys
kan v.t. to pull, draw; cixar ~ to
smoke cigarettes
kz f bug, insect; ~ik f bug
kibrt match; ~ro matchseller
kif clear, apparent
kil
1
f collyrium; ~ kirin to paint the eyes
with collyrium
kil
2
kirin v.t. to wave; dest ~ ji re to
wave the hand at
kim m corner
kin short; ~ f shortness; bi ~ shortly,
slightly
kinc pl clothes
kincik m rag
kir kirin
kiras m shirt
kirt ugly, shameful; ~ f ugliness, de-
lement, shame
kirwe m blizzard
kirin k- v.t. to do; ~ ku (+ pres. subj.) to
make (as if to do s.th.), almost to do
s.th.: w kir ku titek bibje, l ne got
he almost said something, but he
didnt; ji xwe ~ to take off (clothes),
disrobe: min kincn xwe ji xwe kir I
took off my clothes; te dikir nedi-
kir do what you might; min kir
nekir no matter what I did
kirn kir- v.t. to buy
kirmat in stony silence
kiandin kin- v.t. to pull, draw; dest ~
ji to withdraw from
kikiandin v.t. to drag
kitb f book; ~xane f library
kitkit f detail
kiv = kif
k (obl. k) who?
kjan which?
kn f revenge, feud: kna xwe bi hev re
hene they are having a feud; ~ girtin
v.t. to take revenge
knga ever; when
ks m sack, bag; ji ~ xwe out of ones
own pocket
kso f tortoise
klasikasyon f classication
klankov f Klashnikov rie
ko = ku
2
ko kirin v.t. to decamp, move; ~
kirin to move to
kok
1
f stitch
kok
2
f root, stub
kolan f street
kolan kol- v.t. to dig, dig out, research;
~din koln- v.t. to dig
kole
1
trick, deceit; ~ kirin v.t. to
deceive; ~dar tricky, deceitful
kole
2
captive, slave
kolonyalst colonialist
kom f pile, group; ~ bn to gather, as-
semble; ~a san pack of dogs
komar f republic: Komara Mehabad
the Republic of Mahabad
komel f society, organization: Komela
Karkern Kurd Kurdish Workers
Society; ~ayet social
komik f small group
kon m tent
kongre f congress
kor, kr blind; ~ ~ kirn to be lost in
thought
kor kend m depression
koik f pavilion
kovar f journal
kov wild, ferocious
kox f coop: koxa mirkan chicken coop
koxik f hut, shack
ku
1
where?; ji ~ where from?, li ~
where, where at?
ku
2
that (subordinating conj.); unless
ku f large rock
kuder where?
KURMANJI KURDISH
222
kufuk m snot; kufk poz snot; kufk
guh earwax; ~girt snotty
kuj m corner
kuj- kutin
kul f wound, pain, suffering; adj. in-
fected, inamed, suffering
kulav m felt mat
kulek f smoke hole
kulfet f job, duty: xud kulfet employed,
holding down a job; maid, female ser-
vant; wife
kulik m nger; ~ek dan ser to put a
nger on, point to
kul f ake of snow
kullk f wild ower
kull cotton
kulm f st; ~ik f st
kulmoz m beehive
kultur f culture
kum m cap; kea ~sor Little Red
Riding Hood
kun f hole; kun kun kirin v.t. to poke
holes in
kundk rnitin v.i. to hunker down
kunkun pitted, pockmarked
kur m boy, son
kur kirin v.t. to cut (the hair)
kurd m/f Kurd; ~andin v.t. to Kurdi-
cize; ~istan f Kurdistan; ~ayet f
Kurdishness; ~hiz Kurdophile; ~iyet
f Kurdishness; ~ Kurdish
kurdmanc Kurmanji Kurdish
kurm m worm; ~ik m little worm; ~
wormy, mangy, maggoty
kurs f chair, seat: kursiya eref the
seat of honor
kur f frozen snow; ~enegirt not frozen
solid
kurt short, brief; ~ay f shortness: bi
kurtay briey; ~erok f short story;
~edem f moment
kuruf f mound of snow
kusan how
kuskusandin v.t. to squint
kutin kuj- v.t. to kill
kut xistin li v.t. to take a puff on (a
cigarette)
kut peck, (dogs) bark; ~ kirin v.t. to
clack, clatter, rattle
kutan v.t. to strike; avn xwe j ~ to
blink the eyes
kutatirn least
kuxn v.i. to cough
kuxuyan v.i. to cough
k call to a dog
ke f (obl k) lane
kik m dog
kd lame
kl f ???
kllk = kullk
kr
1
(dial. var.) = kor
kr
2
deep; ~ nrn to look closely; ~ah
f depth; ~an f depth
kke small, tiny
kv (dial. var.) = kov
kwr blind
kws, kws (dial. var.) = kso
labrent f labyrinth
lablabik m marsh: kwsiy lablabik
marsh turtle
lak secular
lal mute, speechless
lampe f lamp, light
land f belly
landik f cradle
la m body, corpse
lat f boulder
latn Latin
lava kirin v.t. to plead; ~y f pleading
lavan = lava
law m/f youth, child; ~ik m infant
lawur m wild animal
layiq worthy
lazim necessary
lebitn v.i. to move about
leheng m champion, hero
leh f ood, torrent
KURDISH-ENGLISH VOCABULARY
223
lekim m/f tentacle ???
lenger f tray
lep m paw
leplep twinkling ???
lerizn = lerzn
lerizner trembling
lerizok trembling
lerz m trembling
lerzandin lerzn- v.t. to shake
lerzn v.i. to tremble, shake
le m body; ~bizdn ???
leker m soldier
lev aimless ???; ~ ketin v.i. to chatter
(of the teeth)
lewa thin at bread
lewhe f sign
lewma for this reason, therefore
lewra, ji lewra because
leyistin leyiz-, lz- v.t. to play, play (a
part); to play around (bi with): w bi
nivsn min dileyist he used to play
around with my writings
leyiztin (dial. var.) = leyistin
leylan f mirage
Leypiig f Leipzig
lez m haste; ~ kirin v.t. to make haste;
bi ~ in haste, hastily; bi ~ bez in all
haste, as fast as possible
lezandin lezn- v.t. to hasten, to accel-
erate
lezet f pleasure
l
1
but; ~bel on the other hand
l
2
= li + w/w
l bn bi to be aficted with
l-dan l-d- v.t. to strike, play (instru-
ment); cut off: bila mr ser min l-
bidit let the prince cut my head off
l-gern v.t. collect
lh: di lh de ccmp. for, in support
of
lkoln f research; ~er m researcher
lv f lip, seashore
lvikest with a broken lid
l-xistin v.t. to beat, to play (musical
instrument), to ring (telephone)
li prep. in, at, to; also forms the rst ele-
ment of a number of compound prep-
ositions; see the second element
lib m copy (of a book), ake (of snow),
drop (tear); unit, single item
liberxwe free, unhindered
Libnan f Lebanon
lihf f quilt
lihstin (dial. var.) = lstin
likumn v.i. to trip
ling m foot, leg; li ser ~an standing, on
foot
lipamay backward; ~n f backwardness
liq f branch
liqandin v.t. to hang; xwe ~ to hang
(int.)
liser vebn v.t. to diagnose
liv f motion, movement; ~ l dan, ~ l
xistin v.t. to put in motion
livandin livn- v.t. to move, put in mo-
tion: destikn ketiy z dilivandin he
was moving the oars of the boat
quickly
liviyan = livn
1
livn
1
v.i. to move, be in motion, stir
livn
2
m bed, bedding
livok unstable
lixwekirin f manner of dress
llandin v.t. to ululate
ls f high school; ~ xwendin to attend
high school
lstik f game, play, sport
lstin lz- v.i. to play
lz- lstin
lojman f lodging
loma for that reason, therefore
luht naked, bare
luks deluxe
lle f pipe, barrel (of a rie)
lrn v.i. to bay
lsn v.i. to perch
ma interrogative particle: with afrma-
KURMANJI KURDISH
224
tive questions a negative answer is
expected: ma rast e? thats not right,
is it?; with negative questions an af-
rmative answer is expected: ma ne
rast e? isnt that right?; with other
interrogatives ma gives the sense of
ever: ma tu y i bik bi kr? What
ever are you going to do with a knife?
ma kirin v.t. to kiss
Maden f Maden, also known as Paxir-
maden, city northwest of Diyarbekir
maf m share, portion; right; ~nas appre-
ciative
makne f machine, car
mal
1
f house, home: mala min mala te
my house is your house; ~bat f fam-
ily; ~mezin belonging to a great fami-
ly; ~xw paterfamilias
mal
2
m goods, possessions, wealth: ~
ticaret commercial goods
mal- malitin, mitin
malava (vocative particle) hey!, see
here!
malitin mal- v.t. to rub, rub out
maliye f tax ofce
malmat (pl) information
mam m paternal uncle
mamostat/et f pedagogy; ~at/et
kirin v.t. to teach: w mamostetiya
ziman ereb dikir he used to teach
the Arabic language
mamostay kirin v.t. to teach: w
mamostayiya rewenbr ya gelek
rewenbrn kurd kir he taught many
Kurdish intellectuals how to be intel-
lectuals
mamoste m teacher;
man mn- v.i. to remain, stay, dwell;
ne~ to cease to exist, to be no more:
nema xweya kir he never appeared
again; hindik ~ (+ subj.) to be about
to, to be on the verge of: hindik dima
fener bitemire the lamp was on the
verge of going out
mand exhausted; ~bn f exhaustion
mane (const mana) f meaning; ~w
moral, spiritual
mange f cow
man constraint, obstacle
mantiq m logic
maql reasonable; ~ dtin to consider
reasonable: w pniyaza min maql
dt he considered my proposal reason-
able
mar m (obl mr) snake
mar kirin v.t. to marry (li to)
mar f march, anthem
mase f (obl mas) table
mast m yogurt
maellah goodness! (said to ward off
the evil eye when something is ad-
mired or praised)
mat silent
matmayn f astonishment
may(n) other
mazlm tyrannized; ~iyet f tyranniza-
tion
mazot f kerosene
me em
me- alternative negative subjunctive
and imperative prex = ne-
mebest f intent
mebin (archaic negative 3rd pl subjunc-
tive of bn) they may not be: gelek
mebin j even though they may not be
many
mecal f opportunity: ta niha mecal tune
b until now there has been no oppor-
tunity; ~ birrn v.t. to take an oppor-
tunity away
mecbr obliged; ~ kirin v.t. to oblige,
force
meclis parliament
medeniyet f civilization
medin civil
medrese f religious school
mefhm f concept
meh f month
KURDISH-ENGLISH VOCABULARY
225
Mehabad f Mahabad
mehkeme f court
mehkm condemned; ~ kirin v.t. to
condemn
mehll dissolved; ~ bn to be dissolved
mehr f marriage contract; ~ birn to
conclude a marriage contract
mehrm ji deprived of
meh kirin v.t. to wipe out
mej m marrow
mejl occupied; ~ bn li ser v.i. to be
occupied, busy with
mekan stance, position
mekteb f school
mela m (obl. mel) mulla
mele (dial. var.) = mela
melevan m swimmer; ~ f swimming
melkemot the angel of death
memr government ofcial
mencel a copper pot
mendik an herb
meqale f article
merasm f ceremony
merbend f bond, fetter
mereqdar f interest, inquisitiveness,
curiosity
mereq kirin v.t. to wonder
merg f death
merhele f stage: di merhela ewel de in
the rst stage
meriv m person, one (impersonal): gava
meriv li cihek dimne when one stays
in a place
merd m disciple, devotee
merkez f center; ~ central: hukmeta
merkez central government
mesaj f message
mesel f example; ~en for example
mesele f matter
mestir larger, bigger
mesliyet f responsibility
me f walking: mea xwe domand he
continued walking; ~andin v.t. to put
into practice; ~iyan/-n v.i. to walk
metleb ???
mewld f a poem celebrating the birth
of the Prophet Muhammad, tradition-
ally recited on festive occasions
mexsed f intent, intention
meydan f eld; ann ~ v.t. to bring to
the fore
meyeldar, meyildar = meyldar
meyn v.i. to remain
meyl f inclination; ~dar predisposed (ji
re to); ~dar f bias, predisposition
mezel
1
m grave, tomb
mezel
2
f room
mezheb m sect
mezin big, large, great; ~ bn v.i. to
grow up; ~ kirin v.t. to raise, bring
up; ~ah f greatness; bi ~bna as
vast as
m f female
mj long ago; ji ~ ve from long ago
mj f brain, mind
mjn v.i. to suck, suckle
mjvemay remnant, relic
mr
1
m man, husband; ~an f manliness;
~ik m fellow, guy; ~xas m gentleman
mr
2
mar
mrg f meadow
mrxas brave
m f bee; ~a hingiv honeybee
mtro f metro, subway
mvan m/f guest; ~dar f visit; ~per-
wer f hospitality; ~xane f reception
room
mze kirin li v.t. to look at, see
mi shut, closed; ~ kirin v.t. to shut,
cover
mideh m period of time
midr m director, principal
mih ???
mihrican f celebration, festival
mij m mist
mijn (dial. var.) = mjn
mijl bi ve occupied, involved with;
~ f occupation, activity
KURMANJI KURDISH
226
mikan = mekan
mil m neck, shoulder; support, aid; side,
direction; bi ~ yek girtin v.t. to
come to s.o.s aid, to lessen s.o.s bur-
den; ji ~ din on the other hand
milet m nation; ~perwer nationalistic
mil national
min ez
mindal m child
minet f obligation; b ~ generous
minnet = minet
miqam m musical mode
miraz ??? wish
mircan coral, coral bead
mirin mir-/mr- (dimire, dimre) v.i. to
die
miriyan = mirin
mir dead
mird m devotee
mirk f chicken
mirov m man; f woman; m/f person;
~at f humanity, humaneness, chival-
ry
mirward m/f ??? pearl
misilman Moslem
Misir f Egypt; misr Egyptian
mit ji full of, lled to the brim with
mitin mal- v.t. to sweep
mit man v.i. not to make a sound
mit mat utterly silent
mixabin unfortunately
mizgn m good news; ~ f present given
to a person bearing good news
m f sheep
mh = m
mn- man
mna (prep.) like; ~ ku (conj.) as, while
mnak equal, similar; m example: weke
mnak for example; ~ f similarity
mr m prince; f princess; ~ek princeling
mohr f seal, stamp; ~ xistin v.t. to seal,
put a stamp on
mor = mohr
more cracked (as a mud wall)
moz(e) ying insect
mr- mirin.
mudet m period
mudr m school principal
muesese f institution
muhlet f grace period, respite
munaqee f debate; ~ kirin v.t. to de-
bate
munasebet f occasion; bi ~a on the oc-
casion of
muxtar m village chief, elder
muzk f music
m m hair, strand of hair; iota: ne m-
wek not an iota
mr f ant
na- (negative prex for present indic-
ative verbs) not
naln v.i. to wail, cry out
name f letter
nams f honor; womenfolk
nan m bread; ~pj f bakery
nar m pomegranate
narn delicate
nas acquainted, known, familiar; ~ kirin
v.t. to know, be acquainted with, rec-
ognize; ~andin v.t. to introduce,
make known; dan naskirin v.t. to in-
troduce
nasiyar familiar
nasnav m identity
nav
1
f middle; di ~a de in the midst
of; li ~ hev de girtin to surround; ~n
middle (adj.), central: Rojhilata Navn
the Middle East
nav
2
m name; ~ kirin v.t. to name;
~andin v.t. to name; ~dar famous, re-
nowned; ~no notorious; ~not f noto-
riety
navbera prep. between, among
naverok f contents
navik f waist
navnetewey international
navnan f address
KURDISH-ENGLISH VOCABULARY
227
navteng f girth
naxr no
naxir f herd
naxwe this being so
naylon f plastic: trikn ~ plastic bags
naynik = neynik
nazik ne, delicate
ne not; ~ ~ neither nor; ~ l not
but; ne- (negative prex for sub-
junctive, imperative, and past-tense
verbs) not
nebeled uninformed, unknowing
near helpless; ~ man to have no alter-
native; ~ f helplessness; ji ~ with no
alternative
nedar f poverty
ned ve, ji suddenly
nefel f clover
nefes dan v.t. to huff and puff; to be out
of breath
nefret f hatred; ~ kirin ji v.t. to hate,
abhor
nefs f self; ~a xwe karn to control one-
self; ~pik humble; ~pik, ~pi-
kah f humility
neft f oil
neh nine
neheq f injustice
nehy prohibition
nejihevdurebyn f indivisibility and
inseparability
nema notagain
nemaze especially
nemir undying, immortal: dibe xwediy
navek nemir he possesses an immor-
tal name
nemirovane unmanly, cowardly
nenas unacquainted, unfamiliar, un-
known; ~ unacquainted with
nepixandin nepixn- v.t. to blow up, in-
ate
nepixn v.i. to swell
neqandin v.t. to select, choose
neraz discontent; ~bn f discontent-
ment
nerind evil
nerm soft, gentle, ne; ~ah f softness,
gentleness; ~ik softly, gently
nesir f prose
nen unhappy
netewe f nation; ~yn Yekby the
United Nations; ~y national; ~yt f
nationalism
nev m/f grandchild, offspring
Nevroz f Persian New Years day
newal f valley
nex miracle; ~n miraculous
nexe f map
nexwe otherwise
nexwe sick, ill; unpleasant; ~ f sick-
ness, disease; ~xane f hospital
nexuyay invisible
neyar m enemy, opponent, foe
neyn f destitution
neynik f mirror
neynok f ngernail, toenail
neynk = neynok
nezan f ignorance
nirvan m hunter
nr f game, prey; n ~ v.i. to go
after game
nrvan m hunter
nrevan m scout
nrn v.i. to look; f view, speculation
nan f target, mark; ~ kirin v.t. to take
aim at, to focus on
nv (dial. var.) = nv
nv (dial. var.) = nv
nzk near; ~ah f proximity; ~ near to,
nearly
nzkat kirin bi v.t. to approach
nirn f malediction, curse
nif m generation
nifs f identity card
nig m foot; ~n xwe zdey xwe avtin
to overstep ones bounds
nigardar beautiful
niha now; ber ~ before now, ago
KURMANJI KURDISH
228
nihe = niha
nihran expectant, apprehensive
nihrn li v.i. to look at, to notice; to
look upon, regard (wek as)
nihrtin (dial. var.) = nihrn
niho (dial. var.) = niha
nijad m race; ~perest racist
nijde f brigandage
nik f side, direction; toward, to; prep.
next to, with, to, for
nikil m beak
nikilandin nikiln- v.t. to peck
nimj f prayer; ~ kirin v.t. to pray
nimne f example: ji bo nimne as an
example, for example; ~nde f exam-
ple
niqutandin v.t. to drip
niqutn v.i. to drip
nisbet bi relative to
nisxe = nusxe
nian = nan
nik: ji ~ (~a) ve suddenly
nitin n-/ni- v.i. to sit
nitilandin v.t. to draw, to mark
nivistin -niv- v.i. to sleep
niviz ???
nivn
1
m (usually pl) bed; ~ nexweiy
sick bed; destek ~ a set of sheets and
bedding material
nivn
2
-niv- v.i. to lie down, sleep
nivsandin v.t. to write
nivsar f writing, text
nivsevan m writer
nivsn v.t. to write
nivskar m/f writer; ~ kirin to write,
engage in writing
nivsk written
niv = nif
nivz half
niwal f small valley
niyet f intention
nixabtin = nuxumandin
nixamtin = nuxumandin
nixumandin = nuxumandin
nizar m mountain side (where the sun
never shines)
nizim low
njad = nijad
nn none, nothing
nsan f April
nan f sign, mark, military decoration;
~ dan v.t. to show; ~ kirin v.t. to indi-
cate
nv half; ~ saet half an hour; ~c half
done; ~ ev midnight; ~roj f noon;
~sedsal f midpoint of a century
nvek f half
nveruh half-dead
nvikest cracked
nv f middle, midpoint, half
nzing (dial. var.) = nzk
nod ninety
nojdar f panacea
nok f chickpea; ~a taht pebble
nola (prep.) like: nola hev like each
other
noqim bn v.i. ???
not = nod
nozdeh nineteen
nu new; ji ~ ve all over again
nuby new-born
nudem modern
nuh = nu
nuha (dial. var.) = niha
nuhat new, newly come about: niv
nu the new generation
nuht f newness, novelty
nujen newly invented, new-fangled,
modern
nuka (dial. var.) = nuha
nusxe f copy
nuvejn f renaissance
nuxumandin v.t. to cover, veil
nuxumn v.i. to be covered, veiled
nuyt f novelty
nuzewic newly-wed
n = nu
nh = nu
KURDISH-ENGLISH VOCABULARY
229
njen = nujen
nner representative
NY = Neteweyn Yekby the United
Nations
oda, ode f (obl od) room
okyans f ocean
ol f religion; ~dar religious; ~ religious;
~perwer religious
ord f army: Ordiya Sor the Red Army
ordu = ord
orre or f roar
orte f middle
Osman Ottoman
otorte f authority
pag stable
pak pure, clean; ~hilann ji v.t. to get
rid of
pakt package
pal
1
f mountainside
pal
2
dan v.t. to push
palas ???
pale m worker
pan wide, broad
panat f expanse, breadth
pansiman kirin v.t. to bandage
papor f stove
paqij pure, clean; ~ kirin v.t. to clean;
~ f cleanliness
paqi (dial. var.) = paqij
par
1
f part, share
par
2
last year
par
3
f back; ji ~ re from behind
pare, pere m piece: du s pern
kaxizn two or three pieces of paper;
~ bn v.i. to be fragmented; ~ kirin
v.t. to fragment
parastin parz- v.t. to protect, guard
Pars f Paris
pars Persian language
part f political party: partiyn kurd yn
siyas Kurdish political parties
parve kirin v.t. to distribute
paseport f passport
pa m the back; li ~ ser prep. behind;
~ xwe avetin bi v.t. to throw oneself
into s.th.; ~eroj f past, the past; ~ng
later; ~ver backward; ~vert f
backwardness
pail f bosom
pa f end; heta paiy until the end
patik f back of the head
paye f high rank, place of honor; ~t f
honor
payz f autumn
pejirandin v.t. to accept
pekiyan = pekn
pekn pek- v.i. to splash, splatter, rise
up suddenly
pekok: strka pekok shooting star
pel m leaf, page
pelikan stairs, stairway
pelk leaf
pembo m cotton
pena f refuge, asylum; ~ber m/f refugee;
~ber f refugee status
pencere f window
peng ???
pengizandin pengizn- v.t. to make
jump, spurt
pengizn v.i. to spray, spurt
penr m (obl. penr) cheese
per
1
m side
per
2
m feather
per
3
f piece
peran heavy: cezay peran heavy penal-
ty
pere = pare
pern rivet; bi hev ~ kirin to rivet
together, to patch together
perde f (const. perda) curtain
perd f ceiling beam
pere m money
pergal m compass; bi ~ derketin to be
encompassed
perg (+ construct) hatin v.i. to come
across, nd; n ~ to go to nd
KURMANJI KURDISH
230
perpitn v.i. to utter: dil min diperpite
I get sick at my stomach
perwaz f ight
perwerd f education
pesin m praise; ~andin v.t. to praise, to
approve of; wesf pesn dan to
praise and extol
pesn m trace
petrol f petrolium
pevgirdan f connection
pexan f prose; ~nivskar m prose-
writer
pey: li ~ (prep.) behind, after; di ~ de
(prep.) after
peya m man
peya bn v.i. to get out, off, down (from
vehicle)
peyda bn v.i. to be found: min zanb
w saet ava germ peyda nabe I knew
there was no warm water to be found
at that time; ~ kirin v.t. to nd
peyitandin v.t. to prove
peyivn v.i. to talk, speak: ez zde p re
nepeyivm I didnt speak to him long
pey hev one after the other
peyman f pact, agreement; ~ girdan
ligel to conclude a pact with
peyv f conversation, talk, words: me
peyv dagerand ser huner edebiyat
we turned the conversation to art and
literature; ~ik f expression
peywend f relation: peywendiyn nav-
netewey international relations
pez f sheep
pezkv (dial. var.) = pezkv
pezkv mountain sheep
p
1
= bi + w/w
p
2
m foot
pandin pn- v.t. to wrap, roll
pn p- v.t. to roll, wrap;
pjin f feeling
pjn pj- v.i. to be cooked; v.t. to light
(cigarette)
pk together; ~-ann v.t. to get together,
collect, arrange; ~-hatin v.i. to come
about, come to be; ~-hatin ji v.i. to
consist of
p-ketin v.i. to catch (re)
pkol kirin v.t. to stick together (snow)
pkva together
p-xistin v.t. to light (re), to switch on
pl f wave; ~ bn v.i. to spread out
plpl wavy, undulating
pnc ve; ~ih, ~ fty
pra along with him (see p)
prg perg
psr f collar; windpipe; forefront; area
just below the summit of a mountain
p forward: mirov bi p de bie one
will go forward; ~-ketin to advance;
bi ~ derketin to come out to the fore;
~eroj f the future; ~de xistin to pro-
mote; ~ket advanced
payk f forefront
pber m guide, leader; ketin ~ to be
faced with; ~ in the lead, leadership,
(prep.) in front of; ~ derketin to
lead, go out ahead of
pdexistin f promotion, advancement
peng m leader, vanguard
pepa, li prep. out in front of
peroj f future
pevan m leader
pgotin f foreword
piya prep. before, in front of
p adj. rst: cara p the rst time, di
du-s saln p de during the rst
two or three years; f advance: ~ya
girtin v.t. to prevent
pk avant-garde, forerunner
pn rst
pke f present, gift, tribute; ~ kirin v.t.
to offer (as a gift), to present
pmerge m guerrilla
pniyaz f proposal, suggestion
pveketin f advancement, progress
pt f ame
ptgiran lazy, indolent
KURDISH-ENGLISH VOCABULARY
231
pwend bi f connection to
pwst necessary; ~ f necessity, require-
ment
pxember m prophet
p-xistin -x- v.t. to light, turn on (light)
pxwas barefooted
pi small, little; ~ek a little bit, for a
moment; a little thing
pife pif f huff and puff
pif kirin v.t. to blow, puff
pin kirin v.t. to hiss
pij scattered
pijandin v.t. to cook
pijn v.i. to be cooked
pijiqandin v.t. to make (blood) gush
pijiqn v.i. to explode, to blow up
piling m tiger
pilot m/f spark ???
pilpil ???
piqpiqok f bubble
pir
1
very, many, much; ~an f most,
majority: piraniya wan most of them;
pirraniya caran most of the time
pir
2
f bridge
pir f body hair
piroze kirin v.t. to tear to shreds
pirs f question; ~ek ji kirin v.t. to ask
a question of s.o.; ~gir skeptic;
~girk f question: pirsgirka kurd
the Kurdish question
pirsan v.t. to ask (a question)
pirtepirt f sputtering ???
pirtik f sheet (glass, paper)
pirtk f paper, sheet of paper
pirtve kirin v.t. to tear to pieces
pisk f cat
pismam m cousin
pispor, pispr m expert; ~ f expertise
piaftin v.t. to assimilate
piirn to ruminate (?)
pit f back, hill; ~a prep. behind, on the
other side of; ~a xwe dan v.t. to turn
ones back; ~ prep. after; ~ ku conj.
after; ~germ supported, protected;
~gir m supporter; ~gir f support; ~re
then, later, afterward; ~xwar
hunched-over
piyale f glass, goblet
piyes f play
pizot m torch: avn w wek du pizotn
gir bn his eyes were like two ery
torches
pjame m pyjamas
pn f kick; ~-avtin v.t. to kick
pne ???
ppoq f glass
pr old; m/f old man, old woman; ~ik f
grandmother
prat f old age
prhepok m monster ???
proz sacred, holy; ~ kirin v.t. to cele-
brate; to congratulate: ew w roja han
mna karnevalek proz dikin they
celebrate that day like a carneval;
~bah f congratulations; ~wer holy
ps bad, dirty; ~ik nasty, awful; ~it f
obscenity
psr (dial. var.) = psr
pvan f measurement, criterion; ~din
pvn- v.t. to measure
PKK = Partiya Karkern Kurdistan
Kurdish Workers Party
plan f plan; ~ker m planner; ~ -
kirin to make a plan
pola m steel
poltka f politics; policy
ponijn v.i. to be engrossed in thought
por m hair (on the head); ~re black-
haired; ~zer blonde
poman regretful; ~ bn li to regret
s.th./doing s.th.
poxsde sad
poz m nose, snout
prensp m principle
proje f project
protesto kirin v.t. to protest, go on
strike, boycott
PTT = Post Telefon Telexraf Post, Tel-
KURMANJI KURDISH
232
ephone, and Telegraph
p useless, unuseable
pk f snowstorm, blizzard
prt f hair, fur, pelt; ~ per feathery
coat
ptperest idolator; ~ f idolatry
PZ = pit zayn anno domini (AD)
qaax m smuggler
qad f eld, place; ~a er eld of battle
qaf f head
qahf m cave, cavern
qail bn to accept (bi)
qal f statement; ~ kirin v.t. to state; ~
ceng f ght
qalikday frostbitten ???
qalik m shell, husk
qalind thick, fat
qam f stature, height; measurement for
the height of the sun in the sky
qam m whip
qami reed
qanser f cancer
qann f law
qarn v.i. to cry bitterly
qasid m messenger, envoy
qas ku as much as
qatil m murderer
qayi, qay f strap, thong, belt; rivalry,
competition; bi re ketin ~ to
compete against: te digot qey ew bi
min re ketib qay youd think he
was in competition with me
qaymeqam m provincial governor
qaz m goose
qazax f butane
qe no, none, at all: ez qe naxwnim I
dont read at all
qebl kirin v.t. to accept; wek hatin
qeblkirin to be accepted as
qedandin v.t. to nish, to complete
qedeh f cup, goblet
qeder
1
m amount; ~ for the length
of
qeder
2
f fate, destiny
qedexe f prohibition; (adj) prohibited; ~
kirin to prohibit, to ban
qedir m worth; qedr zann to ap-
preciate; qedr xwe girtin to esteem
oneself; ~gir appreciative, estimable
qediyan v.i. to end, be nished
qelandin v.t. to tire
qeln v.i. to get tired
Qefqasya f the Caucasus
qefsing f breastbone
qehbik f harlot
qehbt = qehpet
qehern (dial. var.) = qehirn
qehir f wrath, rage;
qehirn v.i. to get angry (ji at)
qehpe f prostitute; ~t f prostitution
qehwe f coffee
qela split open, wounded
qelatin -qel- v.t. to split, split open;
qelatina cerah surgical incision
qelaw fat
qelem f pen
qelemrew m realm
qelew (dial. var.) = qelaw
qel- qelatin
qeliandin qelin- v.t. to split, cleave
qelin v.i. to be split
qelizandin v.t. to make disappear; xwe
~ to slip away
qelt f crack
qels weak: kultura devk ya Kurd xurt e
l kultura nivsk qels e Kurdish oral
culture is strong, but the written cul-
ture is weak; ~ f weakness
qel = qelt
qelqel cracked
qenc good, pretty, nice; ~ beauty, chari-
table act, good deed
qerar decision
qerax f edge, shore
qerim wrinkled
qerebalix f crowd, confusion; ~ kirin
v.t. to act up, to ail around
KURDISH-ENGLISH VOCABULARY
233
qereqol m police station
qerisn v.i. to freeze solid
qermi f wrinkle; ~ wrinkled
qerpee kirin v.t. to hold tightly in
ones embrace
qesir f palace
qest f intention, purpose; ~a kirin
v.t. to head toward
qea f ice
qet (+ neg.) never, not at all
qetan v.i. to be nished; be cut
qetandin qetn- v.t. to nish; break, cut:
kurdn li dervey welt ev zincra
kirt qetandine Kurds outside the
country have broken this shameful
chain; ji hev ~ to part from one
another
qeter m scales, balance; ~ kirin v.t. to
spy (something in the distance)
qetiyan = qetan
qewimn v.i. to happen
qewirandin v.t. to drive away
qewn strong
qewl f promise; ji ~n xwe vekiiyan to
reneg on ones promises, go back on
ones word
qey hey; why?; te digot qey youd
think, it was as though
qeyd f bond, fetter
qeyde f rule
qeytank kirin v.t. ???
qeza
1
f district
qeza
2
f accident; fate; ~ bela misfor-
tune, calamity
qezenc f prot, earnings, advantage: bi
qezenca to the advantage of ; ~
kirin v.t. to earn, gain, win
qrn v.i. to scream
qijak raven
qijik f crow
qilr(n) lthy
qir kirin v.t. to eliminate, exterminate
qiral m king
qirax (dial. var.) = qerax
qireqir creak, splintering sound
qirdik m clown
qirik
1
f crow
qirik
2
f throat; ~tal f bitter aftertaste
qir f stem, branch; ~ik f twig
qise f conversation, talk
qismet m fate
qiyamet f resurrection; roja ~ dooms-
day
qizwan terebinth, a small tree
qjeqj f loud cry, scream
qjiyan v.i. to scream
ql m fang, canine tooth; ber ~an dan to
sink the fangs into
qm f contentment, satisfaction; ~a xwe
ann bi to consent to
qmet f worth, value
qr f cry, shout; ~ kirin v.t. to shout;
~ewr f cry, shout; ~n v.i. to cry out,
screech
qrn v.i. to scream, screech
qz f daughter
qo m horn (of an animal)
qonax f inn; a one-days distance on a
journey
qontrol f check
qufuln v.i. to feel very cold
qul f hole, opening: qula rviyan fox
hole; ~ kirin to pierce
qulibn v.i. to fall down, collapse,
scramble down
quling crane
qulo m league (measure of distance)
quloz bn v.i. to rise up
qulqul full of holes
qulubn = qulibn
qumandan m commandant
qunc f corner; xistine ~ek as to corner
quncik f little bit
quntar f foot of a mountain
quran f the Koran
qurane f hinge
qurban f sacrice, victim; qurbana
armanca xwe a martyr to ones cause
KURMANJI KURDISH
234
qurm m tree stump: mna qurm dara
mir like a dead tree stump
qut cut, cut off; ~ bn v.i. to get cut off
qut f box
quwet power; bi ~ powerful
q f cliff, height, summit
qn f back; ~a iy mountain skirt; li
ser ~ xistin to topple
qntar = quntar
qutk f small box
ra = re
ra-bn v.i. to rise, arise, get up; to
abandon, give up (li s.th.)
ra-girtin v.t. to pick up; xwe ~ to recov-
er
rahet f ease, comfort
ra-hitin v.t. to put down
ra-ketin v.i. to sleep
ra-kirin v.t. to take away, pick up; to
wake up (trs.); to cancel, abolish; ji
nav ~ to eliminate
raman f stance
ra-man -mn- v.i. to stand, stay, remain
standing; to be perplexed
ra-medandin v.t. to lay down
ra-msan -ms- v.t. to kiss
ran m thigh
ra-pelikn v.i. to crawl, creep
ra-pvan v.t. to pick up; gav ~ to tread
rapor f report
raser superior
rast right, correct; ~ hatin li to come
across; ~ kirin v.t. to correct; bi ~
really; ~e prep. straight toward;
~erast really and truly; ~er correct;
~nivsn f orthography
rav f hunting
ra-westan v.i. to stand up, stop, stand
still; li ser ~ to dwell on, stand up
against
ra-westandin v.t. to make stop
ra-westiyan = ra-westan
rawir wild animal
ra-xistin v.t. to spread
ray f opinion
ra-zan -z- v.i. to lie down, sleep
razdar mysterious
raz contented (li with)
re postposition forms the second part of
a number of circumpositions, general-
ly indicating accompaniment; see the
prepositional element
ref m row; ock (of birds)
reh f way, road; artery, vein; root; ~
penc roots
rehet easy, comfortable, quiet; ~ f
comfort, ease
rehm f mercy; ~ kirin li to have mercy
on; ~et the late
rehmet f Gods mercy; n ~ to pass
away
res m head, chief; ~ cumhr presi-
dent of the republic
rencber f hardship, trouble
reng m color; bi ~ colored, multi-
colored; bi i ~ how?; ~e~ of all
colors; ~dr f description, quality, ad-
jective; ~n varied, colorful
ren f avalanche
req
1
m turtle
req
2
stiff; ~ rt stiff as a board
reqem f number
reqisn v.i. to dance
resim m picture
resm ofcial
re black; ~ girdan v.t. to go into
mourning; ~ kirin v.t. to blacken
re reat f anything black or blackish
in color
reat f blackness, darkness
rev f ight, retreat
revan rev- v.i. to run away
revandin v.t. to let escape, to take away
revde m herd, pack; ~ girtin v.t. to form
a pack
revn = revan
rewneq brightness, brilliance
KURDISH-ENGLISH VOCABULARY
235
rewrewik f mirage
rew f style, manner
rewenbr intellectual
rex m side, edge, shore; (prep.) next to,
beside
rexne f criticism; ~ girtin li v.t. to criti-
cise; ~gir m critic
rext m cartridge belt
reyan v.i. to bark
rez m vineyard, orchard
r f (const. riya) road, way: bi w riy
in that way; bi riya via; ~ girtin v.t.
to block the road, stop, prevent: k r
li ber wan girtiye? whos stopped
them?; (bi) ~ ketin to set off, start
out; ~ kirin to dispatch, send; bi ~
kirin to see off
rbendan f February
rber m leader; ~ f leadership; ~ kirin
to lead
rbwar m wayfarer
re f trace, track; ~ hildan v.t. to pick
up a trail
rj kirin v.t. to wash
rk-xistin v.t. to arrange, put in order
rkxistin f coalition
rl f forest, wood
rncber kirin v.t. to struggle, suffer
hardship
rven f gait, walk
rvebir = birvebir
rv m fox
rvng m traveler
rwit f journey
rw m/f traveler; ~t f journey, trip
rz f line; ~ bn v.i. to line up; ~kirin
v.t. to line up, arrange
rz-girtin ji v.t. to respect, have respect
for
rzik f law, rule
rziman f system, arrangement, gram-
mar
ricaf f shaking, trembling
ricifn v.i. to tremble
rih f beard
rihet (dial. var.) = rehet
rihm (dial. var.) = rehm
rijandin rijn- v.t. to pour out
rijiyan v.i. to ow, to spill
rij f scorched part at the bottom of a pot
rik stubbornness, relentlessness, ner-
vousness
rikrikn v.i. to chatter (of the teeth)
rind good, beautiful; well: ew bi ziman
ngilz rind dizanib he knew Eng-
lish well
risk = rizq
riv (dial. var.) = rv
rivn f ame
riy r
rizan v.i. to rot
rizandin v.t. to let rot
rizgar saved, rescued; ~ bn v.i. to
escape, be rescued; ~ kirin v.t. to
save, rescue; ~kir saved, liberated
riz rotten
rizn di de v.t. to be thrown into
rizq m sustenance
r f beard
rtm m rhythm
ro f sun: di bin ro(ye)ka havn de under
a hot summer sun
roava m west, dusk; ~y western
rohilat m dawn, east
rohn bright
roj f day; ew ~ ev ~ e from that day to
this: ew roj ev roj e malbata min li v
bajar rdin my family has lived in
this city from that day to this; ~ane
daily; ~ava west; ~hilat f east: Roj-
hilata Navn the Middle East; ~name
f newspaper; ~nameger f journalism
rokrol f role
rom m the Ottoman Empire; Ottoman,
Turk
roman f novel; ~nivs novelist
ronah f light, brightness; bi ~y der-
ketin to come to light
KURMANJI KURDISH
236
ronakbr intellectual
ronay = ronah
rondik f tear
ronesans f renaissance
ruh m spirit, soul; ~iyet f morale, spirit
ruhn f brightness; ruhniya avan light
of the eyes, favorite
rutbe m rank
ruv (dial. var.) = rv
r m (const riy, rw) face
rbar m river
rhrn convivial, amusing, light-
hearted
rj (dial. var.) = roj; ~k = rojek one
day, some day
rken f smile, smiling
rmet f honor, respect
rn m oil
rnitevan m inhabitant
r-nitin -n- v.i. to sit, dwell (the
present tense is used only for habitual
action; the pres. perf. tense rnitiye
means s/he is sitting, and the past.
perf. tense rnitib means s/he was
sitting); odeya rnitin sitting
room
rpel f page, sheet
rs Russian; ~ Russian (language)
rt naked, bare
rxan v.i. to collapse
rxandin v.t. to destroy
sa f (const. siya) shadow; ser siya
ketin v.i. to get anywhere near
saet f hour
sal f year; ~mezin aged
salon f reception room
san se
sar cold
satil f bucket
saw terror, fear
sawar f bulghur wheat, cracked wheat
sax healthy, well, whole
saxik honest
say bn v.i. to clear up (weather)
saz kirin v.t. to establish
se m (obl. pl san) dog
sebeb m reason
sebir f patience; ~ neman to be impa-
tient: d sebra min nemaye now Ive
lost my patience
sed hundred; ~sal f century; ~sal f cen-
tennary; ji ~ per cent; bo ~ per cent
seda m/f sound ???
sedem f reason, cause
seff f classroom
seg m dog
seh f intuition, feeling; ~ kirin v.t. to
understand intuitively
sehol f ice
Seirt f Siirt; ~ native of Siirt
sekinan/-n v.i. to settle down, to be
quiet, to dwell; to tarry; to light
(gaze) (li ser upon): ez dixwazim li
ser pirsek bisekinim I want to dwell
on a question
selik f basket
semax f endurance; ~ kirin v.t. to bear,
to endure
Sen m the River Seine
seqem f dry cold
seqer f Saqar, a poison that drips from a
tree in hell
ser m head; (prep.) to, toward, on, over;
bi ~ ketin v.i. to get ahead, succeed;
n ser v.i. to attack; ~ xwe bi re
andin v.t. to trouble oneself with,
bother with: ser xwe bi kultura kurd
re nanin they dont bother with
Kurdish culture; ~ bin m the ins
and outs, everything: ser bin v
gund ez bikanibim ji v premr
hn bibim I could learn all there is to
know about this village from this old
man; b ~ bin endless
seranser: li ~ (prep.) all over: li seran-
ser dinyay all over the world
serbajar m capital
KURDISH-ENGLISH VOCABULARY
237
serberday stray, wandering
serbest free; ~ f freedom
serbilind bi proud of; ~ah/~ f pride
serbixwe free; ~bn f liberation
serdar m leader; ~ f leadership, com-
mand
serdest m overlord; ~ f mastery, rule; ~
kirin v.t. to rule: yn ku ro serdestiya
kurdan dikin those who rule over the
Kurds today
sereke main
serencam f end, outcome
ser f headache
serraz f distinction
sergerdan perplexed
sergevez pride
sergiran important
sergn m dung
sergovend f dance line; bi ser ~ gir-
tin to lead a dance line
serhed f frontier, border
ser m head; ear (of grain); ~ birdin to
complete; ~ hil-dan to rebel; ~ xistin
li to visit; to apply to; n ser to
come to fruition
serhildan f uprising
serjorek serjrek ups and downs
serkar f direction, leadership
serketin f success
serma f cold, coldness
sermawj Libra
sermyan m capital
sernivs f fate
sernuxumand veiled
serok m leader; ~at f leadership; ~cum-
hr m president; ~er m chieftain;
~wezr m prime minister
serphat f adventure
serqot bare-headed
serraf m jeweler
sersal f new years day
serser careless
ser-utin v.t. to take a bath
sertj towering
serve bn v.i. to be attached
serwer m leader
serwext informed, knowledgeable
sew f level: rojnameyn me yn roja
royn negihtine sewiya wan our
newspapers of today have not reached
their level
sewsen lily
seyda m savant
seyr f view; adj strange
seyran f outing; ~ -kirin v.t. to ar-
range an outing; ~geh f park, prome-
nade, place for an outing
s
1
three
s
2
f (constr. siya) shadow; di bin siya
de under the aegis of
sp f tripod
sw m orphan
swlek m sole (of a shoe)
sibat f February
sibeh f morn, dawn: sibeh heta var
from morning till night; ~ tomorrow;
v ~ this morning
sibetir f the next morning; ~a w ev
the morning after that night
sib = sibeh
sih
1
angry, irritated; ~it f irritation
sih
2
= s
2
sij f puss, lth; ~n v.i. to ooze
sik sar very sad (heart) ???
silav f greeting
silawat (pl) benedictions; ~an kandin
v.t. to give benedictions
simbl m mustache
simsimn v.i. to leave tracks, to make a
trail
sincir aming, burning
sindoq f box, trunk
sing f breast
sinif f class, grade
sipartin sipr- = spartin
sip = sp
sipndar f poplar
sipta f whiteness
KURMANJI KURDISH
238
sir f cold wind; ~ seqem, ~ serma f
biting cold weather
sirf only, purely
sirgn f exile; ~ bn to be exiled
sirut f nature
sis three
sist weak; ~ kirin v.t. to weaken, make
weak
sitar f protection
sitrk = strk
sitir m thorn
sitran = stran
siwar mounted, on horseback
siya sa
siyaset f politics; ~van m politician
siyas political
sivik light, not heavy
s
1
thirty
s
2
f shadow; ~ dan to cast a shadow
sleh (pl) arms, armament: slehn sivik
light arms
sng f breast
snor m border, boundary
sstem m system
stil f (dial. var.) = satil
Swas f Sivas
swaxnekir unpenetrated
sobe f heating stove; ~ vxistin to light
a stove
sof Su, respectful term of address for
an old man; ~t f Susm, mysticism
sohbet f conversation, talk
sol f shoe; ~ker m shoemaker
sond f oath; ~ xwarin to swear an oath
sor red; threshed (wheat); ~ah f redness
sorav red grape; ~(n) dark red
sorgul rose
sosin f iris
sosret unusualness; bi ~ unusual
soz dan v.t. to promise
sparin spr- v.t. to entrust
spartin = sparin
spas thank you; ~ kirin v.t. to thank;
~dar f gratitude
speh good-looking, pretty, attractive
spda, spde f dawn
spr- sparin
sp white; ~t f whiteness
standin (dial. var.) = stendin
stasyon f railway station
stelih ordinary, common
stemkar f oppression
Stenbol f Istanbul
stendin stn- v.t. to take, get; bi pa de
~ to take back
steyr = str
str f star; ~k f star; ~nas m astronomer;
~nas f astronomy
stiran stir- v.t. to sing
stn- stendin
sto = st
stran f song; ~bj singer
st m neck; ~xwar obedient, cowed
stn f column
str thick, stout
sufrik m tablecloth
sur f breeze
suret f speed
surgn = sirgn
suwar on horseback; ~ bn to mount
s m crime, fault
sd m prot; ~ wergirtin ji v.t. to prot
from
sl m waterfall
Sriya f (obl Sriyay, Sriy) Syria
sxte m theological student
Swd f Sweden
a happy, glad; ~ bn bi v.i. to be happy
with, rejoice over s.th.; ~ kirin v.t. to
gladden: w pirtk dil min a kirib
that book had gladdened my heart;
~h f gladness, happiness
a Shaite (school of Islamic jurispru-
dence)
agirt m pupil, apprentice
ah m king
ahd m witness
KURDISH-ENGLISH VOCABULARY
239
ahk shining, brilliant
ar m poet
al m traditional baggy Kurdish trousers
all m magpie
andin n- v.t. to send
an kirin, ~ dan v.t. to show
ano f stage
ans m chance
areza competent; ~y f competence, ex-
pertise
a wrong; ~ bn v.i. to be wrong: ez ne
a bim I wouldnt be wrong; ~ kirin
v.t. to mistake; reya xwe ~ kirin v.t.
to lose ones way; ~ f mistake, fault
afhmkirin f misunderstanding
aik f turban; ~ sp white-turbaned
ax m branch
e = eh
eh m comb; ~ kirin v.t. to comb
ehd m martyr
ehsiwar m expert horseman
ekal f old shoe
ekir m sugar
emitandin v.t. to make slide
emitn v.i. to slip, to slide
eng tuft of hair
ep f blow, slap in the face
epe f snowdrift
epn v.i. to sink down (into snow)
eqeeq noisy sound, chatter
equdeq hard knocks
er m war: er chan y yekemn
World War I; ~ kirin, ~ dan (dayn)
v.t. to ght war
eref f honor
ert f the Sharia, Islamic law
erm f shame; ~dar modest; ~dar f
modesty; ~ kirin ji v.t. to be ashamed
of: min ji xwe erm kir I was ashamed
of myself
erpeze destitute; ~ bn v.i. to be desti-
tute; ~ kirin v.t. to put s.o. in a bad
situation, to best
ert f condition, qualication
ervan m warrior
e six
et sixty
ev f night; ~re f dark night
ewat f re
ewitandin v.t. to burn
ewitn v.i. to burn
exs person; ~ personal; ~iyet f person-
ality
ewq f light; ~a elektrk ashlight
- iyan
landin ln- v.t. to exploit
l turbid, murky
l (dial. var.) = l
n m inhabitant, (pl) people
rn sweet
x m sheikh
idet violence, strength
ifr m driver
ir f poetry
idandin idn- v.t. to strike (a match)
ik f doubt; b ~ doubtless(ly)
ikandin ikn- v.t. to break
ikeft f cave
ikr m rock, mountain crag
ikestin ik- v.i. to break, be defeated
ikir thanks: ikir ji Xweda re thank
God
ikil form, symbol
il damp, wet; ~ kirin v.t. to wet, damp-
en
ilftaz buck naked
ip on foot
iqitn v.i. to slip
irket f company
irove f interpretation; ~ kirin v.t. to
interpret
istin o- v.t. to wash
ivan m (obl. ivn) shepherd
ivant f shepherding; ~ kirin v.t. to
shepherd, to be a sheep herder
ivn ivan
ivir m mountain goat
ixul m work; ~n v.i. to work, occupy
KURMANJI KURDISH
240
oneself
iyan - v.i. to be able
iyar awake; ~ bn v.i. to wake up; ~
kirin v.t. to wake s.o. up
n
1
blue, green
n
2
= wn
n- andin
ndar = wndar
r m milk
ret f advice; ~ kirin li v.t. to advise
rn sweet, pretty, nice
t aware, sober
v f sunset; ~a var nightfall
kandin kn- = ikandin
kev f cupboard
o- istin
op f footprint, trace; ~ ji ser xwe
winda kirin to throw a pursuer off
track; ~gern scout, tracker; ~ hitin
v.t. to leave a trace
or
1
salty, brackish (water); ~ay f salti-
ness
or
2
talk, words; ~ kirin v.t. to talk, chat
orbe f soup
ore f rebellion, uprising; ~ger m rebel,
revolutionary: oregerek bolevk a
Bolshevik revolutionary
orezar f desert, wasteland
un = n
utin (dial. var.) = istin
uxul m work, occupation; ~ kirin v.t.
to work; ~andin v.t. to put to work;
~n v.i. to work
spouse
jin derz bn v.i. to stand on end
(the hair)
likn v.i. to move stealthily
m gloomy, inauspicious
n f place; track, wake: div ew tkeve
na bav xwe he must follow in his
fathers footsteps; ~a girtin v.t. to
follow in the wake of, take the place
of; ~da after: ji w sal nda after
this year; nuha ~da henceforth; di ~a
ku (conj.) instead of
quick, nimble, sleek; mirina ~ sud-
den death
a pieces of glass
e f glass
tin (dial. var.) = istin
wn f mourning; ~dar in mourning
ta
1
prep. & conj. until: ta niha up till
now
ta
2
m fever
tab m illumination; ~ ann v.t. to illumi-
nate
tabet f nature
tacir m merchant; ~ f commerce
taht f rock; noka ~ pebble
tal bitter, sharp
talde f shelter
talyan Italian
tam f taste
tamar = temar
tanq f tank (mil.)
taqet endurance
taqb f surveillance: di bin taqba
polsan de under police surveillance;
~ kirin to keep under surveillance
tar f a path through snow
Taran f Tehran
tar dark; ~t f darkness
tarx f history
tas f bowl
tat m breakfast
tat m rise, hill
tav
1
f light, sunlight
tav
2
f rainshower
tavik f sunlight
tavil quickly, soon; immediately
taybet special; bi ~ especially
tayek kiandin ji v.t. to shake
tayn kirin v.t. to determine, assign,
appoint
taz naked; ~ kirin v.t. to strip naked
te tu
teb natural
KURDISH-ENGLISH VOCABULARY
241
Tebrz f Tabriz
tecrube f experience
tedrcen gradually
tefandin -tefn- v.t. to put out (light,
candle)
tefe f face, countenance
tefn v.i. to go out (light, candle)
tefsr Koranic commentary
tehlke f danger
tehqr f deprecation
tehsldar m tax collector
teht m mountain range
tej (dial. var.) = tij
tek single, alone, by oneself; ~ ten
alone, all by oneself
tekane lone
teko alone, singly
tela commotion
telefon f telephone
teletel on tiptoes
televizyon f television
telte f sheet (of ice), crust
tem m fog
temam perfect, complete
temar f artery, vein
temaa kirin v.t. to watch, to look at
temae = temaa
temaevan spectator, watcher
tembel lazy; ~ f laziness
temen m life, lifespan, age
temene respect; bi ~ respectfully
temirn v.i. to die ???
temiz kirin v.t. to clean
temslkar m representative
tena = tenha
tendr f oven, pit; ~a zik the pit of the
belly
ten alone, only, except for; bi ~ only:
em ferz bikin ku tu bi ten bikarib
Kurdistanek bik lets assume that
you could only create one Kurdistan;
ne bi ~ l j not only but also;
~t f misery, loneliness
teng narrow, tight; ~as f difculty,
straits
tenha alone; bi ~ xwe by him/her/itself,
alone
tenta next to
teor f theory
tep f tap
tepan mallet
tepandin v.t. to pat, to tap
tepe m summit, mountain top
teperep kirin v.t. to rap
teq f a sharp sound; ~--req loud sound
teqandin teqn- v.t. to burst, explode, to
re, shoot (gun)
teqn v.i. to burst, explode
ter fresh, verdant; ~ f freshness
terch kirin v.t. to prefer
tercuman m translator
teres pimp
terik chapped
terf kirin v.t. to describe (ji re for,
to)
terqet m dervish order
terk f leaving; ~ dan/kirin v.t. to leave,
abandon: gava terka mala xwe da
when s/he left home
term m corpse
terorzm f terrorism
terpiln v.i. to roll
terr f tail
ter livestock
tesewif Susm; ~ Sustic
tesr f inuence
teslm kirin v.t. to turn in, to turn over,
to submit
tekl f organization, formation
tet f trough
tewq encouragement; ~ kirin v.t. to
encourage
texele f trouble, turmoil
tetik, tetk f trigger
tev all, entire, altogether; together with;
~a all, entirely, totally; ~ah/~ay f
entirety: di tevayiya Ewrpa all over
Europe; ~da, ~ de altogether, entire-
KURMANJI KURDISH
242
ly; bi ~ay entirely, in toto; xwe
~gir-dan v.t. to get oneself together
tevdr f plan
tevger f industry, activity, movement:
Tevgera Rizgariya Kurdistan Kurd-
ish Liberation Movement
teviz numb
tevizn f numbness; ~ok f numb feeling
tev (prep.) along with; ~hev altogether;
~ ku (conj.) although
tevlihev confused, mixed up; ~ f confu-
sion
tevl f awareness
tewqif kirin v.t. to arrest
texik f shelf
texlt sort, kind: her du texlt nivsar
both sorts of writers
texmn f guess, thought; ~ kirin v.t. to
guess, estimate
text m throne
texte m board
teyan a large basin used in bathhouses
teyr, tr m bird; ~ ty birds and fowl
teze new(ly), fresh(ly); ~ kirin to re-
fresh
t
1
= di + w/w
t
2
= tu +
t
3
coming, next: meha ~ the coming
month
t-gihtin v.i. to understand, realize
tk n v.i. to break up, split apart
tkel prep. along with
t-ketin v.i. to go to, wind up (some-
where): ew dixwaze tkeve cepheyan
he wants to go to the fronts; ~ na to
take the place of: keng azad
serbest tkevin na sitemkar
zordariy? when will freedom and in-
dependence take the place of injustice
and oppression?
tkil connected; ~bn f connectedness;
~ f connection
t-kirin v.t. to put on
tkoer m activist, combatant
tkon dan v.t. to strive, make an effort
tkz (dial. var.) = tekz
tr
1
full, satised; ~ bn v.i. to be sat-
ised (hunger), to be slaked (thirst); ~
kirin v.t. to satisfy, make full, to be
sufcient: emr w tr nekir he didnt
live long enough
tr
2
= teyr
tvel various, different
t-xistin v.t. to include; xwe ~ to put
oneself
tif f spit
tik f bellows, hearth
ting f rie
tije brimful
tij full; ~ kirin v.t. to ll
til f nger
tilik, tilk = til
tim
1
always; her~ always
tim
2
f desire
timobl f automobile
tin (dial. var.) = ten
tiral lazy
tirb f grave, tomb
tirn f train; ~a di bin erd de sub-
way; ji ~ by train
tirimpl f automobile
tirk Turk; ~ Turkish (language); ~nijad
racially Turkish
Tirkiye f (obl Tirkiyey, Tirkiy) Tur-
key
tirs f fear; ~an va out of fear
tirsandin v.t. to scare; to fear
tirsner frightful, frightening
tirsiyan/tirsn ji v.i. to be afraid of, fear
tir bitter; ry xwe ~ kirin to scowl
tit m thing: titek din something else
titn f tobacco
tiving f (dial. var.) = tung
tiw = tu w
tixtor m doctor
t thirsty
tfal ???
tj (dial. var.) = tj; ~ hr nrn li to
KURDISH-ENGLISH VOCABULARY
243
look closely and carefully at, to
scrutinize
tn
1
f thirst
tn
2
btn
tn- ann
tp f letter of the alphabet; m type, sort
tr thick, dense, dark
traj f print run; km ~ of a small print
run, printed in small numbers
trj f sunlight, ray: trjn hviy rays
of hope
t piece, group
tol f revenge; ~ wergirtin v.t. to extract
revenge
top f cannon, cannonball
topik f pile
torbe sack
torin m person of name, person of re-
nown; descendant, offspring
toz f dust; ~ telaz dust
trimbl f automobile
tu
1
(obl. te) you (sing.)
tu
2
no, not any, none, nothing; ~ caran
never; ~ kes nobody; ~ tit nothing
tucar never
tuf f spit; ~ kirin v.t. to spit
tung f rie, gun; ~ ber-dan to re a
rie at
tukes (+ neg.) nobody
tj sharp
tk f hair, fur
tle m pup, cub
tlik m cub
tr m bag; ~ik m sack
trt = turt
ttin f tobacco
ummet f religious community
umr m life
unda (dial. var.) = wenda
unverste f university
uris Russian
usa (dial. var.) = wisa
ustu = st
zez f rumble
va = ve
vala empty; ~ kirin v.t. to empty; ~h f
void; vik~ totally empty
vazo f vase
ve (postposition) forms the second part
of a number of circumpositions, gen-
erally indicating motion away from;
see the prepositional element
ve-bn v.i. to open
ve-ceniqn (dial. var.) = ve-ciniqn
ve-ciniqandin v.t. to make tremble with
fear, to make shudder, to startle
ve-ciniqn v.i. to be seized by fright, to
be startled
ve-dan v.t. to give off; deng ~ to echo
veger f return
ve-gerandin -gern- v.t. to turn, to turn
back
ve-geriyan/gern v.i. to return; ~ ser to
turn to
ve-gevizn v.i. to ounder, wallow
ve-hrandin v.t. to grind up, crunch
vehnay spread out
ve-jandin -jn- v.t. to revivify
ve-jenn v.i. to rustle
ve-jinn (dial. var.) = ve-jenn
ve-kirin v.t. to open
ve-kiandin ji v.t. to pull out of, pull
back from, withdraw from
ve-kin v.i. to withdraw
ve-maltin v.t. to roll up the sleeves
ve-man v.i. to bog down
ve-miran (ve-mirn) v.i. to go out (re,
&c.); ~din v.t. to put out, extinguish,
quell, quench: min lampa xwe ve-
mirand I put out my light
ve-poandin v.t. to cover
ve-qetandin v.t. to distinguish, separate
ve-qetiyan v.i. to get separated: ji ber
perebna welt riyn zaravayn kur-
manc soran ji hevdu vediqetin
KURMANJI KURDISH
244
after the division of the country the
paths of the Kurmanji and Sorani dia-
lects part from each other; ~ bi to be
distinguished by
ve-qetn = ve-qetiyan
ver-kirin to send off, dispatch
ve-artin -r- v.t. to hide, bury
ve-texirn v.i. to taper off
ve-xistin v.t. to throw down
ve-xwarin v.t. to drink
ve-zelan v.i. to lie down and roll
around; xwe ve-zelandin to throw
oneself down and roll around
ve-ziliandin = ve-zelandin
v ev
vca therefore
vcar then, so
v-geriyan = ve-geriyan
vk re together
vn f wish, desire
v-xistin v.t. to light
vikvala vala.
vir here
vizn v.i. to buzz, to hum
vizvizk tangled, knotted
v ev
vrus f virus
vzevz f blowing, rustling (of wind)
waqewaq squeal of an animal
war
1
m = bar
war
2
m regard, respect; di ~ de con-
cerning; di v ~ de in this regard, in
this respect
war
3
m camp, camping ground; ~geh m
camp site
warkor n to disappear without a trace
we hun
wefakar faithful
wefat f death
weha thus, such
wek (prep.) like; ~e (prep.) like; ~e ku
(conj.) as: weke ku min got as I said;
~ din anything else
wekhev alike, equal; ~ f equality: li ser
esasn wekhev on a basis of equality
wekl advocate, lawyer; ~dar f advo-
cacy
welat m (obl. welt) country, homeland;
~hez lover of the homeland, patriot;
~parz defender of the homeland, pa-
triot(ic); ~perwer patriot
wele = welle
weleh = wel
wel thus, like that
welle by God
wenda lost; ~ bn v.i. to be lost; ~ kirin
v.t. to lose
wer bn di v.i. to fall into
wer- hatin
werger m translator; ~van m translator
wer-gerandin v.t. to transform, translate
wer-girtin v.t. to take up (see ber wer-
girtin, sd wergirtin, tol wergirtin)
werimandin v.t. to cause to swell
werimn v.i. to swell
wer-kirin li v.t. to wrap around
wesiyetname f will, testament
wers m rope
wesf m attribute, quality; ~ dan to de-
scribe
westan west- v.i. to stand, stop; to be
exhausted
westiyan = westan
westiyay exhausted
weandin wen- v.t. to publish
weanxane f publishing house
wext f time: di eyn wext de at the same
time; di wexteke kurt de within a
short time; ~ ku (conj.) when
wezin f poetic meter
wezfe f duty
wezaret f ministry: Wezareta Ferheng
the Ministry of Culture
wezr m minister; ~t f ministry
w
1
ew
w
2
future auxiliary + subj. for future
tense
KURDISH-ENGLISH VOCABULARY
245
wje f speech, literature
wne m picture, painting; ~ger m artist,
painter
wran destroyed, ruined; ~ kirin v.t. to
destroy, ruin
wrn v.i. (+ subj.) to dare
winda (dial. var.) = wenda
wir there
wirn (dial. var.) = wrn
wisa(n) thus, such, so
w ew
wjdan m conscience
wucd f existence; hatin ~ to come
into existence
wusan (dial. var.) = wisa
x- xistin
xak f earth, ground
xal f mole
xalxal in spots, spotted
xanim f lady, mistress
xan m house
xapandin xapn- v.t. to deceive, to fool,
to play a trick on: mna ku hatibe
xapandin as though a trick had been
played on him
xapn v.i. to be deceived, to be fooled
xapok deceptive
xapxapok deceitful
xar
1
crooked, bent
xar
2
(dial. var.) = xwar
xarin (dial. var.) = xwarin
xastin (dial. var.) = xwestin
xask cunning, shrewd
xatir m mind, heart; ~gir considerate,
obliging; ~ girtin to be considerate
of, respect: bik mezinan xatir w
digirtin young and old were consid-
erate of him; ~xwestin f affection; bi
xatir re w ji min re got he said to
me with affection; dan ~ to be
considerate of
xav raw, immature
xayin traitor
xaz m ghazi, holy warrior
xazk ???
xebat f work, struggle
xeber f words, speech: xebera w ye
thats what he says
xeberdan f talk, speech
xebitan li ser v.i. to work on, strive for
xebitn = xebitan
xedar pitiless, cruel
xefk f trap
xelas kirin (v.t. to nish
xelas f liberation; er xelasiy war of
liberation
xelat f prize, reward; ~ kirin v.t. to re-
ward
xelk m (construed as sing. for case but
pl. by sense) people
xem f grief, sadness; ~ xwarin ji v.t. to
sympathize with; ~gn sorrowful;
~gn f sorrow: ez bi xemgn dibjim
ku I say with sorrow that
xemilandin v.t. to adorn
xencer f dagger
xerab ruined; ~-bn to be ruined; ~e
ruined; ~ f harm, ruination
xerez f rancor, grudge; ~kar f holding a
grudge
xerf senile
xerc kirin v.t. to spend
xerb stranger, foreigner, exiled, away
from ones homeland; ~ f estrange-
ment, foreignness, the state of being
away from ones homeland; welat
~y foreign country
xerte f map
xertel f eagle
xesandin xesn- v.t. to twist, wring
xesar f damage, loss; ~ dtin v.t. to suf-
fer loss, be damaged; ~nedt undam-
aged
xet f line
xew m sleep; ketin ~ to fall asleep; ji ~
ra-kirin to rouse from sleep
xewle lonely, desolate
KURMANJI KURDISH
246
xewl f desolation, isolation
xewn f dream; ~ dtin v.t. to dream,
have a dream; ~erojik daydream
xeyal f imagination, fantasy, dream
xeyidn ji v.i. to get angry at
xeyn other; ji ~ (prep.) other than, aside
from: ji xeyn van titan other than
these things
xeyo (Syr. Ar. khayyo, voc. only) fel-
low, guy, friend
xezal gazelle
xezeb f rage, wrath
xezne f treasury
xezr m father-in-law; f mother-in-law
xr f goodness; ~xwe f chitchat;
bi~hatin dan v.t. to welcome: jinek
bixrhatin da min a woman wel-
comed me; bi ~a re thanks to; bi ~
br very good; ji ~a re because
of, on account of; ~hatin kirin li v.t.
to welcome; hatin ~ to be a wel-
come guest
xz f line; ~ik ditto
xidmet f service
xilas kirin to be saved
xilmam = xilma
xilma half asleep, sleepy
xirab bad, evil
xisar f loss
xistin x- v.t. to cast, throw, put in, make
fall; ji hev de ~ to break up; ~ li to
beat
xissiyet = xussiyet
xiikn v.i. to drag along, scrape across
xir m/f ornament ???
xixi f rustling, scratching sound
xitab m address; ~ kirin v.t. to address;
~ kesek kirin to address, speak to
s.o.
xitimandin v.t. to close, seal: r hatine
xitimandin the roads have been closed
xiyal f dream, imagination
xizmet f service; ~ kirin v.t. to serve
xnji (dial. var.) = xeyn ji
xret f zeal, bravery, courage; ~ kirin
v.t. to try hard
xze-xze grating sound
xo f (dial. var.) = xwe; ~a xwe his own
self
xoce m master, teacher
xof f fear; ~ tirs f fear and trembling
xort young, young man/woman; ~an f
youth
xodiv beloved
xu (dial. var.) = xwe
xuda m (obl. xud) God; ~ hez good-
bye
xudan m owner; b~ godless, God-
forsaken, poor, pitiable
xuh f sister
xulam m slave; manservant
xunav f sprinkle, light rain
xur f itch
xure xur f snoring
xurn on an empty stomach
xurn = xurn
xurme f date
xurt strong, powerful; ~ gur strong,
puissant
xur natural
xussiyet f characteristic, distinguishing
feature
xun v.i. to rustle, to gurgle
xuk f sister
xuya clear, obvious; ~ bn v.i. to be ob-
vious, appear, show up; ~ kirin v.t. to
seem, appear: hotel gelek xwe luks
xuya dikir the hotel looked very nice
and deluxe
xuyan v.i. to seem, to appear
xuyan familiar; ~ kirin v.t. to famili-
arize
xn f blood; ~a ceger livers blood,
metaphor for tears of agony and suf-
fering
xs f snowdrift ???
xyan = xuyan
xwar down; ser da ~ bn to lean
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247
over s.th.; ~ bn v.i. to descend; ~
kirin v.t. to lower, take down; hatin
~ to come down
xwarin f food
xwarin xw- v.t. to eat
xwaroviko coiled up
xwaz- xwestin
xwe oneself, -self (refers to the subject
of the clause in which it occurs); ~
girtin li ber to defend oneself
against; ji ~ in and of itself; bi~ him-
self, herself, itself; li ~ kirin to put
on, wear (clothes)
xwebikdtin f inferiority: kompleksa
xwebikdtin inferiority complex
xwedan m chief, head, leader
xwed m God
xwed m possessor, owner: xwediy
paseporteke Swd bm I possessed a
Swedish passport
xwehesn f self-awareness
xwefadekirin f self-expression
xwel f dust, ash; ~ li ser xwe kirin to
pour dust on ones head, to mourn;
~dan f ashtray
xwen f dream, vision
xwenas self-respecting
xwenav = xunav
xwendin xwn-/xwn- v.t. to read, study
xwende/a learned, literate; ~geh f
school, university; ~kar student;
~van m reader, scholar
xwer independent; pure(ly), exclu-
sive(ly): ev kovar ne xwer bi kurd
ne these journals are not exclusively
in Kurdish
xweser unbridled
xwestin xwaz- v.t. to want, to ask for
xwe nice, pleasant, good; ~bn f suc-
cess; ~hal pleased, happy; ~haliya
xwe gotin to express ones pleasure;
~ik nice, pretty; ~ f pleasure
xwey = xwe
xweya = xuya
xwey = xwed; ~ kirin v.t. to raise
(animals)
xwez would that, I wish (+ past con-
ditional); ~t f desire, wish
xw f salt; sweat
xwdan v.t. to sweat
xwik f sister
xw m habit, disposition
xwn f blood; ~egot esh and blood;
~dar bloody; ~germ fervent; ~germ
f fervor; ~rn likeable
xwsgirt damp
xwz f spit, saliva
xwk (dial. var.) = xwik
ya fem. sing. construct extender; bi ~ te
in your opinion
yad (voc. only) mother
yan or; ~ ~ either or
yan that is, i.e.
yar m friend
ya reb O Lord!
yek one; ~ bn v.i. to be united; ~by
united; ~deng f unanimity; ~dest of
one piece; ~ejmar singular; ~emn
rst; ~t f unity; ~tiya Neteweyan
the League of Nations; ~netewet f
uninationalism, monoethnicity; ~ser
direct; ~ta peerless, without equal
yekser right away, immediately
y masc. sing. construct extender
yn pl. construct extender
YNK = Yektya Ntmanperwern
Kurdistan Patriotic Union of Kur-
distan (PUK)
yunan Greek
zabit m (obl zbit) m ofcer
zaf (dial. var.) = zehf
zalim m tyrant, unjust
zang sheer (cliff) ???
zann v.t. to know (neg. present nza-
nim, past (d)zanibm, subj. bzani-
bim); ~ bi to know about: xelk bi
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248
siyaset nizanin the people dont
know anything about politics
zana = zane
zane learned, wise; ~bn f wisdom;
zanyar f knowledge
zar m language; ~ava m dialect; ~rn
well-spoken, articulate
zaro small, young, m/f youngster; ~k
child; ~kat, ~kt, ~t f youth,
childhood
zarn v.i. to wail, lament
zar z (pl) kids
zava m bridegroom
zayin f birth
zehf many, lots of, very, very much
zehmet f trouble; ~ kiandin v.t. to have
difculty, go to trouble, be bothered;
~ f ditto; ~k worker, laborer
zef weak, skinny
zelal clear, limpid; ~ kirin v.t. to make
clear, clarify
zelam = zilam
zeliqandin v.t. to stick
zeliqn v.i. to stick
zell m despondent
zeman m time, era
zemzellk f icicle ???
zend f forearm
zengal m/f legging ???
zengil m bell; ~ telefon telephone
call; li ~ dr xistin to ring the door-
bell
zengn rich; ~ f wealth
zer yellow; ~at f yellowness; ~by
yellowed; ~ zinar nooks and cran-
nies
zerar f detriment, loss
Zerdet Zoroaster
zev f land, eld
zewac f marriage
zewicn bi re v.i. to get married to
zewq m delight
zexim strong, sound; zexm f strength
zbit zabit
zc hide ???
zde much, a lot; ~ bn v.i. to increase;
~ kirin v.t. to increase
zr m gold; ~n golden
zrben ???
zrek f cleverness, intelligence
zihniyet f mentality
zik m belly; ~ek tr xwarin v.t. to eat
to ones ll; ~mak native, inborn
zilam m man, guy, fellow
ziliandin ve-ziliandin
zilik straw
zilim f injustice, tyranny
ziman m (obl zimn) language, tongue;
bi ~ ann v.t. to give voice to, ex-
press; ~van linguist; ~van f linguis-
tics
zinar m (obl. zinr) rock
zing ???
zingar f rust; ~girt rusty, rusted; ~ gir-
tin v.t. to rust, get rusty
zincr f chain, bond
zindan f prison
zind alive, energetic, lively
ziving f cave
zivistan f winter
zirav slender, slight
zivir twisted, knotted
zivirandin zivirn- v.t. to turn around,
turn back; avn xwe ~ ji de to
turn ones eyes away from , avert
ones gaze from
zivirn zivir- v.i. to turn, go/come back,
turn around, wander
ziwa dry
zixim (dial. var.) = zexim
zn z- v.i. to live, come to life
zre cumin
zrek clever
ztby ???
zv m silver
zvalzval ???
zving = ziving
zvironek sandy, dusty
KURDISH-ENGLISH VOCABULARY
249
zman = ziman
zolilk blossom, bloom
zor f force; ~ dan v.t. to force, compel;
~ kirin v.t. to use force; bi (dest) ~
by force; ~bet f oppressiveness; ~dar
forceful, oppressive; ~dar f oppres-
sion; ~dest f force, pressure; ~kirin f
violence
zozan m summer pasture, meadow
zuha (dial. var.) = ziwa
zuk f prominent, obvious
zulf m/f tress, lock (of hair) ???
zulum = zilim
zurne f clarion; ~van m clarion player
z quick, fast, soon, early; ~ an dereng
sooner or later; ~ be ~ very quickly; ~
de (+ pres. perf.) for a long time: z
de ye me hev du neditiye we havent
seen each other for a long time;
~brbir f quick thinking; ~ka, ~~ka
hurriedly, hastily, quickly; ~kan f
haste: zkaniya te i ye? whats your
hurry?; ~ ve for a long time, since
long; ji ~ de from early on
zrezr f howling
zrn v.i. to howl
zr man v.i. to be lost
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