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    Middle Persian or Pahlavi is the Iranian language spoken during Sassanian times. It descended from Old Persian.

    Middle Persian was usually written in the Pahlavi script. The language was also written down in the Manichaean script by Persian-speaking Manichaeans.


        Middle Persian
            Middle-Persian Literature and Grammar
            Transition to Modern Persian
            See also

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    Middle-Persian Literature and Grammar
    In the classification of the Iranian languages, the Middle Period includes those languages which were common in Iran from the third century B.C. (the fall of the Achaemenids) up to the seventh century A.D. (the fall of the Sasanians). One of these languages is Pahlavi or the Zoroastrian Middle Persian or which is a continuation of the Old Persian.

    The most important and distinct development in the structure of Iranian languages in the Middle Period (in the Mid-Wes Iran, Iranian languages), is its transformation from the synthetic form of the Old Period (Old Persian and Avestan) to an analytic form i.e. the nouns, pronouns, and the adjectives lost their conjugative suffixes and changed to invariable words used in all grammatical cases; the gender and the dual number, also, disappeared. Prepositions were used to indicate the different roles of words, and the tenses changed from a synthetic form to composite ones.

    One can imagine that this development had to do with the fact that Old Persian, as it appears in the inscriptions of Bistun and Persepolis, could have not possibly been the language of conversation, and, it could not have been simplified so much as is evident in the Zoroastrian Middle Persian or Pahlavi, during only 500 years. Thus, one can conclude that Old Persian had been the language of literary writing, which was very different from the spoken language, and although written Persian or Pahlavi was its continuation, it was not a direct one and was greatly influenced by the spoken form of the language.

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    Transition to Modern Persian
    The modern-day descendant of Middle Persian is Modern Persian. The changes between late Middle and early Modern Persian were very gradual, and in the 10th-11th centuries, Middle Persian texts were still intelligible to speakers of early Modern Persian. However, there are definite differences that had taken place already by the 10th century:

      Sound changes, such as
        the dropping of unstressed initial vowels
        the epenthesis of vowels in initial consonant clusters
        the loss of -g when word final
        change of initial w- to either b- or (gw- → g-)
      Changes in the verbal system, notably the loss of distinctive subjunctive and optative forms, and the increasing use of verbal prefixes to express verbal moods
      Changes in the vocabulary, especially the substitution of a large number of Arabic loanwords for words of native origin
      The substitution of Arabic script for Pahlavi script.

    Pahlavi Middle Persian is the language of quite a large body of Zoroastrian literature which details the traditions and prescriptions of the Zoroastrian religion which was the state religion of Sassanid Iran (224 to ca. 650) before Iran was invaded by the Arab armies that spread Islam.

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    This article is licensed under the GNU Free Documentation License [copyleft]. It uses material from the Wikipedia article "Middle Persian". link