Academic literature on the topic 'Kurdish Riddles'

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Journal articles on the topic "Kurdish Riddles"

1

Veisi Hasar, Rahman, and Ebrahim Badakhshan. "Metaphorical Integrations in Kurdish Riddles." Folklore: Electronic Journal of Folklore 73 (December 2018): 161–88. http://dx.doi.org/10.7592/fejf2018.73.kurdish.

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2

Hame Bichkol Mohammed, Ahang Shafique. "Mohammed Mustafa Kurdi's literary and cultural status in Kurdish literature." JOURNAL OF LANGUAGE STUDIES 8, no. 2 (2024): 75–112. http://dx.doi.org/10.25130/lang.8.2.5.

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Our research is to present the literary and cultural status of Mohammed Mustafa Kurdi as an educated, intellectual, educational and religious teacher. The author often used essays in Arabic literature because he had a religious and Arabic culture, and was influenced by Persian literature, so he translated essays from Persian He drew on folk literature, poetry by poets and even stories. In addition to essays, he has translated several poems from Arabic and Persian or has translated his ideas and subjects into poems and essays from a Kurdish perspective. The author has published them in the magazines (Roji Nwy, Hiwa, Blesa, Zhen, Sulaimany). In addition to several riddles, he has published poetry in most magazines and newspapers. They have become the focus of attention of scholars, which are a sign of the level of intelligence and linguistic ability, terminology and dictionary (Mohammed Mustafa Kurdi).
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3

Ciftci, Sabri, and Tevfik Murat Yildirim. "Ethnic violence and substantive representation of minorities in parliament." International Political Science Review, February 19, 2020, 019251211989152. http://dx.doi.org/10.1177/0192512119891528.

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This study seeks to explain why, to what extent, and in what ways ethnic party representatives remain active on the parliamentary floor when the political representation of minority groups takes place alongside ethnic conflict. To test hypotheses related to these questions, we utilize an original dataset of 14,000 parliamentary questions and speeches and background characteristics of 372 representatives in Turkey. The dataset spans many episodes of the Kurdish conflict over six legislative terms (1991–2015). Our empirical analyses show that the parliamentary behavior of ethnic party representatives is directly linked to the intensity of violence between the state and the insurgent group. We specifically demonstrate that ethnic party representatives, compared to other representatives in conflict-ridden provinces, are more active on the floor and focus more heavily on civil rights and identity issues. These findings contribute to our understanding of various linkages between identity and the substantive representation of minorities during violent conflict.
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Books on the topic "Kurdish Riddles"

1

Özcan, Mesut. Dersim (Zaza) atasözleri. Kaynak Yayınları, 1992.

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2

Cemal, R̄êbwar. Komełêk metełî nawçey Pişder. Înstîtyutî Kelepurî Kurd, 2006.

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3

Xendekî, Rênas. Mamikên Botanê. Wardoz, 2017.

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4

Abbas, Alkan, and Zinar Zeynelabidîn, eds. Çanda warê talankirî. Pencînar, 1997.

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5

Alkan, Abbas. Çı̂rok û jı̂yan. Komal Basım-Yayım-Dağıtım, 2004.

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6

Xalid, Sadînî M., and Zinar Zeynelabidîn, eds. Mamikên Kurdî. Pencînar, 1999.

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7

Deniz, Hüseyin. Gotnê pêşyê Kurda: Kürt atasözleri : pirsên pêşyê Kurda. Kaynak Yayınları, 1991.

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8

Ibrāhīm, Afkhamī, ed. Ewe çiye?: Hetełoke w metełokey Kurdî. Intishārāt-i Muḥammadī, 1989.

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9

Timar, Fettah. Mesele û metelokên Kurdî: (biwêj û gotinên pêşiyan, tiştonek, dua û nifîr). Weşanên Ar, 2018.

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10

Celîliyan, ʻEbasî. Zer̄îne w sîmîne: Komełêk têkistî folklorîy nawçey Kirmaşan. Înstîtyûtî Kelepûrî Kurd, 2009.

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Book chapters on the topic "Kurdish Riddles"

1

Özok-Gündoğan, Nilay. "After Abdullah Beg: The Politics of Dividing the Kurdish Nobles’ Lands." In The Kurdish Nobility in the Ottoman Empire. Edinburgh University Press, 2022. http://dx.doi.org/10.3366/edinburgh/9781399508612.003.0007.

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Chapter 6 examines land ownership, focusing on the government's order to confiscate the lands of the begs and the ensuing conflict-ridden process of land sales from the 1850s to the 1870s. The exile and subsequent death of Abdullah Beg set the stage for the Ottoman state's radical efforts to transform landholding patterns in the district. In 1850, the central treasury confiscated Abdullah Beg's lands and offered them for sale to inhabitants with new title deeds. This policy was extended to all the Palu begs through a government decree. This chapter delves into the politics of land redistribution and highlights how both the Palu begs and agricultural producers worked to acquire or regain land in the following decades. The Armenian inhabitants of Palu played an active role, leveraging connections with the imperial capital through itinerant Armenian merchants, sarrafs and the Armenian Patriarchate in Istanbul. The chapter provides a detailed account of land sales and the resulting changes in land ownership and agricultural production relationships. It demonstrates that the forces shaping the land program and the prospects of the Palu nobility were influenced by provincial negotiations and struggles, rather than being dictated by a blueprint imposed by the central Ottoman state.
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