Jatki language
Indo-Aryan language name / From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Jatki, Jadgali, and other related terms have sometimes been used to refer to one or another of the Indo-Aryan languages spoken in Balochistan and neighbouring parts of Sindh and South Punjab.[citation needed]
- Jatki was used in 19th-century British sources for what would later be called Saraiki, as well as for Khetrani.[1][need quotation to verify] Jaṭkī is also attested in local use in Balochistan as a name for these two languages as well as for Sindhi.[2] Jataki was used by 19th-century British writer Richard Francis Burton for a variety of the Saraiki language.[3][need quotation to verify]
- Jakati is a possibly spurious name used in the Ethnologue encyclopedia for either a Romani (Gypsies) variety of Ukraine, or for the Inku language of Afghanistan.[4]
- Jaḍgālī (IPA: [dʒaɖɡaːliː]) is the common name for the Jadgali language spoken in Iranian Balochistan and western parts of Pakistani Balochistan.[5][need quotation to verify] Related to the above are Jagdālī (جگدالی),[6] and Jaghdali,[7] in use among the Balochi speakers of Dera Ghazi Khan District of southwestern Punjab for the Saraiki variety spoken there. The Arabic terms az-Zighālī and az-Zijālī refer to speakers of the Jadgali language in the diaspora in Oman and the United Arab Emirates.[8][need quotation to verify]
- Jatki is a dialect group of Western Punjabi spoken primarily in the Sargodha, Faisalabad and Sahiwal Divisions of Punjab, Pakistan.[9][better source needed] It is intermediate between Standard Punjabi and Saraiki, although is more alike other Lahnda dialects. It consists of the Shahpuri, Jhangvi and Dhani dialects. the glottolog codes for these dialects are:
Jatki/Jātki: are two small distinct dialects of Sindhi language, one is spoken by Sindhi Jats of southern Sindh. Other one is spoken by some northern Sindhi Jats which is also spoken in Balochistan province.[14]