Gorani comprises a group of similar Northwestern Iranian dialects and consist of Kandula, Bāǰalānī, Šabaki, Ṣārlī and Hawrāmāni (Avromān). Gorani dialects consist of Hawramani, Kakai, Zardayana, Bajalani and Shabaki.
Bajelani Bajelani is a Gorani dialect near
Khanaqin and near the Khosar valley.
Hewrami Hewrami () also known as
Avromani,
Awromani ,
Hawrami, or
Horami, is a Gorani dialect and is regarded as the most archaic one. It is mostly spoken in the
Hawraman region, a mountainous region located in western
Iran (
Iranian Kurdistan) and northeastern
Iraq (
Iraqi Kurdistan). There are around 23,000 speakers, and it was classed as "definitely endangered" by
UNESCO in 2010. Due to concerns with the decline of Hawrami speakers, as people move away from the Hawraman region to cities like
Erbil, Jamal Habibullah Faraj Bedar, a retired teacher from Tawela, decided to translate the Qur'an from Arabic into Hawrami. The translation took two and a half months and 1000 copies of the publication were printed in Tehran. north of the
Little Zab river, on the confluence of the
Khazir River and the
Great Zab river, just west-northwest of the city of
Kirkuk. It has fewer than 20,000 speakers. Many speakers have been displaced by conflicts in the region. It is reportedly most similar to
Bajelani It contains
Kurdish,
Turkish and
Persian influences, like its neighbours Bajelani and Shabaki.
Shabaki ==Phonology==