Kurdish-Kurmanji (or Northern Kurdish) belongs to the Iranian branch of the Indo-European language family. This study is dedicated to a deeper understanding of a specific grammatical feature typical of Kurmanji: the ergative structure. Based on the example of this core structure, and with empirical evidence from the Kurmanji dialect of Muş in Turkey, I will discuss the issues of variation and change in Kurmanji, more precisely the ongoing shift from ergative to nominative-accusative structures. The causes for such a fundamental shift, however, are not easy to define. The close historical vicinity to Turkish and Armenian might be a trigger for the shift; another trigger is language-internal (diachronic) change. In sum, the investigated variation sheds light on a fascinating grammatical change in a language that is also sociopolitically in a situation of constant change, movement, and upheaval.
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Lexical Variation and Semantic Change in Kurdish
The chapter examines variation in Kurdish among lexical forms for specific concepts in different regions. The findings can be summarized as follows: there are different degrees to which lexical variation may function as an indicator of linguistic division or transition; while about half of the items in our data are shared between all or most Iranian languages, there are also items that are unique to Kurdish varieties; and extra-linguistic factors that contribute most to lexical variation include geography, political division, population movement, cultural borrowing, and modernization. Finally, semasiological and onomasiological innovations are underlined. The chapter concludes with an account of the implications for further research.