Piling wrote:I make a new post out of the long thread, but concerning what you have written about your own dialect. You said "dimlî". Dimlî is an else name for zazayî isn't it ? ? I did not know that there are Zaza in Hakkari... Are there tribes ?
Which long thread? The thread where we discuss proper Kurdish words and Kurdish standarization?
About your question - This is how it works:
Dimilî - is a federation of tribes - like Shikakî is... But Dimilî only has two tribes in it's system:
Îsa Begî and Dîrî... The latter is a branch of the former... Dîrî are in their roots actually Îsa Begî... And vice Versa - they have broken from eachother...
Anyway there is a theory;
When the Kurds of Hewreman were migrating North-West - and ended up in the region between Wan and Sîwas - some tribes made sendentary settlement along the way too - like the Îsa Begî and the Dîrî... In Colemêrg...
This would explain our closer relation linguistically - as there is more in common between Kurmancî from Colemêrg and Sineyî Soranî - than there is with Sulêmanî/South Soranî...
And Kurmancs in North Kurdistan DO have some trouble understanding Eastern Kurmancs - because of our use of many pure Eastern Kurdish words - from East Kurdistan... And as we know the Northern Kurds haven't realy got too much a grip on Kurdish anyway... (Ps- not their fault)
Anyway - so what I call the Dimilî dialect of Kurmancî is realy just a sub Kurmancî dialect - whereas Kirmanckî/Zazakî is a different branch of Kurdish altogether - belonging to the Goranî branch of Kurdish - known as South Kurdish - and Central Kurdish being Soranî - while North Kurdish is Kurmancî, respectively...
But the origin of the Dîrî is very controversial - 14 generations ago they were Greek - according to oral traditional tribal history - and they are said to be descendants of the Dorian Tribe - hence the name... Dîrî=Dorî...
