Assamese language
Assamese (/ˌæsəˈmiːz/[6]), also Asamiya (/ɔxɔmija/ অসমীয়া),[7] is an Eastern Indo-Aryan language spoken mainly in the Indian state of Assam, where it is an official language. It is the easternmost Indo-European language, spoken by over 14 million speakers,[8] and serves as a lingua franca in the region.[9]
Assamese | |
---|---|
Asamiya | |
অসমীয়া | |
The word Asamiya ('Assamese') in Assamese script | |
Pronunciation | [ɔxɔmija] |
Region | Assam, Arunachal Pradesh and Nagaland |
Ethnicity | Assamese |
Native speakers | 14.81 million (2011 census)[1] |
Indo-European
| |
Early forms | |
Dialects |
|
Eastern Nagari (Assamese) Ahom script[3] (historical, rare) Assamese Braille Latin alphabet (Nagamese Creole)[4] | |
Official status | |
Official language in | |
Regulated by | Asam Sahitya Sabha (literature/rhetorical congress of Assam) |
Language codes | |
ISO 639-1 | as |
ISO 639-2 | asm |
ISO 639-3 | asm |
Glottolog | assa1263 [5] |
Linguasphere | 59-AAF-w |
Nefamese is an Assamese-based pidgin used in Arunachal Pradesh and Nagamese, an Assamese-based Creole language is widely used in Nagaland. The Kamtapuri language of Rangpur division of Bangladesh and Cooch Behar and Jalpaiguri districts of India are linguistically closer to Assamese, though the speakers identify with the Bengali culture and the literary language.[10] In the past, it was the court language of the Ahom kingdom from the 17th century.
Along with other Eastern Indo-Aryan languages, Assamese evolved at least before 7th century CE[11] from the middle Indo-Aryan Magadhi Prakrit, which developed from dialects similar to, but in some ways more archaic than Vedic Sanskrit.[12]
Its sister languages include Angika, Bengali, Bishnupriya Manipuri, Chakma, Chittagonian, Hajong, Rajbangsi, Maithili, Rohingya and Sylheti. It is written in the Assamese alphabet, an abugida system, from left to right, with many typographic ligatures.
History
Assamese originated in Old Indo-Aryan dialects, though the exact nature of its origin and growth is not clear yet.[14] It is generally believed that Assamese and the Kamatapuri lects derive from the Kamarupi dialect of Eastern Magadhi Prakrit[15] that kept to the north of the Ganges;[16] though some authors contest a close connection of Assamese with Magadhi Prakrit.[17] Assamese developed from Indo-Aryan settlements of Kamarupa—in urban centers and along the Brahmaputra river surrounded by Tibeto-Burman and Austroasiatic communities.[18] Kakati's (1941) assertion that Assamese has an Austroasiatic substrate is generally accepted — which suggests that when the Indo-Aryan centers formed in the 4th-5th centuries CE, there were substantial Austroasiatic speakers that later accepted the Indo-Aryan vernacular.[19] The Indo-Aryan vernacular in Kamarupa had differentiated itself from the original vernacular by the 7th-century, before it did in Bengal or Orissa, as observed by Xuanzang the Chinese traveler.[20] These changes were likely due to non-Indo-Aryan speakers adopting the language.[21][22][23] The evidence of the newly differentiated vernacular is found in the Prakritisms present in the Sanskrit of the Kamarupa inscriptions from which eventually Assamese emerged.[24][25]
The earliest forms of Assamese in literature are found in the ninth-century Buddhist verses called Charyapada,[26] and in 12-14th century works of Ramai Pundit (Sunya Puran), Boru Chandidas (Krishna Kirtan), Sukur Mamud (Gopichandrar Gan), Durllava Mullik (Gobindachandrar Git) and Bhavani Das (Mainamatir Gan). In these works, Assamese features coexist with features from other Modern Indian Languages.
A fully distinguished literary form (poetry) appeared first in the 13th-century — in the courts of the Kamata kingdom, where Hema Sarasvati created the poem Prahrāda Carita.[27] In the 14th-century, Madhava Kandali translated the Ramayana into Assamese (Saptakanda Ramayana) in the court of Mahamanikya, a Bodo-Kachari king from central Assam. From the fifteenth and sixteenth centuries, songs – Borgeets, dramas – Ankia Naat by Sankardev and Madhavdev and the first prose writings by Bhattadeva were composed. The literary language moved to the court of the Ahom kingdom in the seventeenth century,[28] where it became the state language. This period saw the widespread development of standardised prose in Buranjis, infused with Arabic and Persian elements.[29]
According to Goswami (2003), this included "the colloquial prose of religious biographies, the archaic prose of magical charms, the conventional prose of utilitarian literature on medicine, astrology, arithmetic, dance and music, and above all the standardised prose of the Buranjis.[30] The literary language, having become infused with the eastern idiom, became the standard literary form in the nineteenth century, when the British adopted it for state purposes. As the political and commercial center shifted to Guwahati after the mid-twentieth century, the literary form moved away from the eastern variety to take its current form.
Geographical distribution
Assamese is native to Brahmaputra Valley consisting of western and eastern Assam. It is also spoken in states of Arunachal Pradesh and Nagaland. Presence of Assamese script can be found in Rakhine state of present Myanmar. Pashupati temple in Nepal also have inscription in Assamese showing its influence and prosperity in the past. There are also significant Assamese-speaking diaspora worldwide.[31][32][33][34]
Official status
Assamese is the official language of Assam, and one of the 23 official languages recognised by the Republic of India. The Assam Secretariat functions in Assamese.[35]
Phonology
The Assamese phonemic inventory consists of eight vowels, ten diphthongs, and twenty-three consonants (including two semivowels).[36]
Front | Central | Back | |||||||
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
IPA | ROM | Script | IPA | ROM | Script | IPA | ROM | Script | |
Close | i | i | ই/ঈ | u | u | উ/ঊ | |||
Near-close | ʊ | w | ও | ||||||
Close-mid | e | é | এʼ | o | Ó | অʼ | |||
Open-mid | ɛ | e | এ | ɔ | o | অ | |||
Open | ɑ | a | আ |
a | i | u | |
---|---|---|---|
ɒ | ɔɪ, ɔi | ||
a | aɪ, ai | aʊ | |
i | iu | ||
u | ua | ui | |
e | ei | eu | |
ɔ | ɔɪ | ɔʊ |
Labial | Alveolar | Dorsal | Glottal | ||||||||||
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
IPA | ROM | Script | IPA | ROM | Script | IPA | ROM | Script | IPA | ROM | Script | ||
Nasal | m | m | ম | n | n | ন/ণ | ŋ | ng | ঙ/ং | ||||
Stop | voiceless | p | p | প | t | t | ত/ট | k | k | ক | |||
aspirated | pʰ | ph | ফ | tʰ | th | থ/ঠ | kʰ | kh | খ | ||||
voiced | b | b | ব | d | d | দ/ড | ɡ | g | গ | ||||
murmured | bʱ | bh | ভ | dʱ | dh | ধ/ঢ | ɡʱ | gh | ঘ | ||||
Fricative | voiceless | s | s | চ/ছ | x | x | শ/ষ/স | h | h | হ | |||
voiced | z | j | জ/ঝ/য | ||||||||||
Approximant | central | w | w | ৱ | ɹ | r | ৰ | j | y | য়/্য (য) | |||
lateral | l | l | ল |
Consonant clusters
Consonant clusters in Assamese include thirty-three pure consonant letters in the Assamese alphabet. Each letter represents a single sound with an inherent vowel, the short vowel /ɔ/.
The first twenty-five consonants letters are called sparxa barna . These sparxa barnas are again divided into five bargas. Therefore, these twenty-five letters are also called "bargia barna".
Alveolar stops
The Assamese phoneme inventory is unique in the Indic group of languages in its lack of a dental-retroflex distinction among the coronal stops as well as the lack of postalveolar affricates and fricatives.[39] Historically, the dental and retroflex series merged into alveolar stops. This makes Assamese resemble non-Indic languages of Northeast India (such as Austroasiatic and Sino-Tibetan languages).[40] The only other language to have fronted retroflex stops into alveolars is the closely related eastern dialects of Bengali (although a contrast with dental stops remains in those dialects). Note that /r/ is normally realised as [ɹ] or as a retroflex approximant.
Voiceless velar fricative
Assamese and Sylheti are unusual among Eastern Indo-Aryan languages for the presence of the /x/ (which, phonetically, varies between velar ([x]) and a uvular ([χ]) pronunciations, depending on the speaker and speech register), historically the MIA sibilant has lenited to /x/ and /h/ (non-initially).[41] The derivation of the velar fricative from the coronal sibilant /s/ is evident in the name of the language in Assamese; some Assamese prefer to write ⟨Oxomiya⟩ or ⟨Ôxômiya⟩ instead of ⟨Asomiya⟩ or ⟨Asamiya⟩ to reflect the sound change.[42] The voiceless velar fricative is absent in the West Goalpariya dialects[43] though it is found in lesser extent in East Goalpariya and Kamrupi,[44] otherwise used extensively further east. The change of /s/ to /h/ and then to /x/ has been attributed to Tibeto-Burman influence by Dr. Chatterjee.[45]
Velar nasal
Assamese, Odia, and Bengali, in contrast to other Indo-Aryan languages, use the velar nasal (the English ng in sing) extensively. In many languages, while the velar nasal is commonly restricted to preceding velar sounds, in Assamese it can occur intervocalically.[36] This is another feature it shares with other languages of Northeast India, though in Assamese the velar nasal never occurs word-initially.[46]
Vowel inventory
Eastern Indic languages like Assamese, Bengali, Sylheti, and Odia do not have a vowel length distinction, but have a wide set of back rounded vowels. In the case of Assamese, there are four back rounded vowels that contrast phonemically, as demonstrated by the minimal set: কলা kola [kɔla] ('deaf'), ক'লা kóla [kola] ('black'), কোলা kwla [kʊla] ('lap'), and কুলা kula [kula] ('winnowing fan'). The near-close near-back rounded vowel /ʊ/ is unique in this branch of the language family. But in lower Assam, ও is pronounced same as অ' (ó). কোলা kwla [kóla] মোৰ mwr [mór]
Vowel harmony
Assamese has vowel harmony. The vowels [i] and [u] cause the preceding mid vowels and the high back vowels to change to [e] and [o] and [u] respectively. Assamese is one of the few languages spoken in India which exhibit a systematic process of vowel harmony [47][48]
Writing system
Modern Assamese uses the Assamese script, and in the medieval times, the script came in three varieties: Bamuniya, Garhgaya, Kaitheli/Lakhari, which developed from the Kamarupi script. It very closely resembles the Mithilakshar script of the Maithili language, as well as the Bengali script.[49] There is a strong literary tradition from early times. Examples can be seen in edicts, land grants and copper plates of medieval kings. Assam had its own manuscript writing system on the bark of the saanchi tree in which religious texts and chronicles were written, as opposed to the pan-Indian system of Palm leaf manuscript writing. The present-day spellings in Assamese are not necessarily phonetic. Hemkosh (হেমকোষ [ɦɛmkʊx]), the second Assamese dictionary, introduced spellings based on Sanskrit, which are now the standard.
In the early 1970s, it was agreed upon that the Roman script was to be the standard writing system for Nagamese Creole.[4]
Morphology and grammar
The Assamese language has the following characteristic morphological features:[50]
- Gender and number are not grammatically marked.
- There is a lexical distinction of gender in the third person pronoun.
- Transitive verbs are distinguished from intransitive.
- The agentive case is overtly marked as distinct from the accusative.
- Kinship nouns are inflected for personal pronominal possession.
- Adverbs can be derived from the verb roots.
- A passive construction may be employed idiomatically.
Negation process
Verbs in Assamese are negated by adding /n/ before the verb, with /n/ picking up the initial vowel of the verb. For example:[51]
- /na laɡɛ/ 'do(es) not want' (1st, 2nd and 3rd persons)
- /ni likʰʊ̃/ 'will not write' (1st person)
- /nukutʊ̃/ 'will not nibble' (1st person)
- /nɛlɛkʰɛ/ 'does not count' (3rd person)
- /nɔkɔɹɔ/ 'do not do' (2nd person)
Classifiers
Assamese has a large collection of classifiers, which are used extensively for different kinds of objects, acquired from the Sino-Tibetan languages.[52] A few examples of the most extensive and elaborate use of classifiers are given below:
- "zɔn" is used to signify a person, male with some amount of respect
- E.g., manuh-zɔn – "the man"
- "zɔni" (female) is used after a noun or pronoun to indicate human beings
- E.g., manuh-zɔni – "the woman"
- "zɔni" is also used to express the non-human feminine
- E.g., sɔɹai zɔni – "the bird", pɔɹuwa-zɔni – "the ant"
- "zɔna" and "gɔɹaki" are used to express high respect for both man and woman
- E.g., kɔbi-zɔna – "the poet", gʊxaɪ-zɔna – "the goddess", rastrapati-gɔɹaki – "the president", tiɹʊta-gɔɹaki – "the woman"
- "tʊ" has three forms: tʊ, ta, ti
- (a) tʊ: is used to specify something, although someone, e.g., loɹa-tʊ – "the particular boy" (impolite)
- (b) ta: is used only after numerals, e.g., ɛta, duta, tinita – "one, two, three"
- (c) ti: is the diminutive form, e.g., kesua-ti – "the infant, besides expressing more affection or attachment to
- "kɔsa", "mɔtʰa" and "taɹ" are used for things in bunches
- E.g., sabi-kɔsa - "the bunch of key", saul-mɔtʰa – "a handful of rice", suli-taɹi or suli kɔsa – "the bunch of hair"
- dal, dali, are used after nouns to indicate something long but round and solid
- E.g., bãʱ-dal - "the bamboo", katʰ-dal – "the piece of wood", bãʱ-dali – "the piece of bamboo"
Classifier | Referent | Examples |
---|---|---|
/zɔn/ | males (adult) | manuh-zɔn (the man - honorific) |
/zɔni/ | females (women as well as animals) | manuh-zɔni (the woman), sɔrai-zɔni (the bird) |
/zɔna/ | honorific | kobi-zɔna (the poet), gʊxai-zɔna (the god/goddess) |
/ɡɔɹaki/ | males and females (honorific) | manuh-ɡɔɹaki (the woman), rastrɔpɔti-gɔɹaki (the president) |
/tʊ/ | inanimate objects or males of animals and men (impolite) | manuh-tʊ (the man - diminutive), gɔɹu-tʊ (the cow) |
/ti/ | inanimate objects or infants | kesua-ti (the baby) |
/ta/ | for counting numerals | e-ta (count one), du-ta (count two) |
/kʰɔn/ | flat square or rectangular objects, big or small, long or short | |
/kʰɔni/ | terrain like rivers and mountains | |
/tʰupi/ | small objects | |
/zak/ | group of people, cattle; also for rain; cyclone | |
/sati/ | breeze | |
/pat/ | objects that are thin, flat, wide or narrow. | |
/paɦi/ | flowers | |
/sɔta/ | objects that are solid | |
/kɔsa/ | mass nouns | |
/mɔtʰa/ | bundles of objects | |
/mutʰi/ | smaller bundles of objects | |
/taɹ/ | broomlike objects | |
/ɡɔs/ | wick-like objects | |
/ɡɔsi/ | with earthen lamp or old style kerosene lamp used in Assam | |
/zʊpa/ | objects like trees and shrubs | |
/kʰila/ | paper and leaf-like objects | |
/kʰini/ | uncountable mass nouns and pronouns | |
/dal/ | inanimate flexible/stiff or oblong objects; humans (pejorative) |
In Assamese, classifiers are generally used in the numeral + classifier + noun (e.g. /ezɔn manuh/ ejon manuh 'one man') or the noun + numeral + classifier (e.g. /manuh ezɔn/ manuh ejon 'one man') forms.
Nominalization
Most verbs can be converted into nouns by the addition of the suffix /ɔn/. For example, /kʰa/ ('to eat') can be converted to /kʰaɔn/ khaon ('good eating').[53]
Grammatical cases
Assamese has 8 grammatical cases:
Cases | Suffix | Example | Literal English translation | Normal English translation | Note |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
Absolutive | none | বাৰীত গৰু সোমাল। (barit góru- xwmal.) |
Garden-LOC cattle-ABS entered | Cattles entered into the garden. | |
Ergative | -এ, -ই (-e, -i) |
গৰুৱে ঘাঁহ খায়। (góru-e ghãh kha-e.) |
Cattle-ERG grass-ACC eat-(3rd person, habitual present) | Cattles eat grass. | The personal pronouns without a plural or other suffix are not marked. |
Accusative | -(অ)ক, − (-(o)k, −) |
১. শিয়ালটোৱে শহাটোক খেদি আছে। (1. xial-tw-e xoha-tw-k khedi ase.) ২. তেওঁলোকে চোৰটো পুলিচক গতালে। (2. tewlwk-e sür-tw- pulis-ok gotale.) |
1. Jackal-the-ERG hare-the-ACC chasing exist-(3rd person, present continuous). 2. They thief-the-ACC police-ACC handover-(recent past)-(3rd person). |
1. The jackal is chasing the hare. 2. They handed over the thief to the police. |
|
Genitive | -(অ)ৰ (-(o)r) |
তাইৰ ঘৰ (tai-r ghor) |
she-GEN house | Her house | |
Dative | -(অ)লৈ [dialectal: -(অ)লে]; -(অ)ক (-(o)lói [dialectal: -(o)le]; -(o)k) |
১. সি পঢ়াশালিলৈ গৈ আছে। (1. xi porhaxali-lói gói ase.) ২. বাক চাবিটো দিয়া। (2. ba-k sabi-tw- dia.) |
1. He school-DAT going exist-(3rd person, present continuous) 2. Eldersister-DAT key-the-ACC give-(familiar, imperative). |
1. He is going to (the) school. 2. Give elder sister the key. |
|
Terminative | -(অ)লৈকে [dialectal: -(অ)লেকে] (-(o)lói [dialectal: -(o)leke]) |
১. মই নহালৈকে কʼতো নেযাবা। (1. moi n-oha-lóike kót-w ne-ja-b-a.) ২. ১ৰ পৰা ৭লৈকে (2. 1-or pora 7-olóike) |
1. I not-coming-TERM where-even not-go-future-(3rd person) 2. 1-GEN from 7-TERM |
1. Don't go anywhere until I don't come. 2. From 1 up to 7 |
|
Instrumental | -(এ)ৰে [dialectal: -(এ)দি] (-(e)re [dialectical: -(e)di]) |
কলমেৰে লিখিছিলা। (kolom-ere likhisila.) |
pen-INS write-(2rd person, distant past). | You wrote with (a) pen. | |
Locative | -(অ)ত [sometimes: -এ] (-(o)t [sometimes: -e]) |
১. সি বহীখনত লিখিছে। (1. xi bóhi-khon-ot likhise.) ২. আইতা মঙলবাৰে আহিছিল। (2. aita moŋolbar-e ahisil.) |
1. He notebook-the-LOC write-(present perfect)-(3rd person). 2. Grandmother Tuesday-LOC come-(distant past)-(3rd person). |
1. He has written on the notebook. 2. Grandmother came on Tuesday. |
|
Pronouns
Number | Person | Gender | Pronouns | ||||
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Absolutive Ergative | Accusative Dative | Genitive | Locative | Dative | |||
Singular | 1st | m/f (I) | moi | mwk | mwr | mwt | mwlói |
2nd | m/f (you) | toi ᵛ tumi ᶠ apuni ᵖ | twk twmak apwnak | twr twmar apwnar | twt twmat apwnat | twloi twmalói apwnaloi | |
3rd | m (he) n (it, that) |
i * xi ** | iak tak | iar tar | iat tat | ialoi taloi | |
f (she) | ei * tai ** | eik taik | eir tair | eit tait | eilói tailói | ||
n & p (he/she) | ew/ekhet(-e ᵉ) * teü/tekhet(-e ᵉ) ** | ewk/ekhetok tewk/tekhetok | ewr/ekhetor tewr/tekhetor | ewt/ekhetot tewt/tekhetot | ewloi/ekhetólói tewlói/tekhetólói | ||
Plural | 1st | m/f (we) | ami | amak | amar | amat | amalói |
2nd | m/f (you) | tohot(-e ᵉ) ᵛ twmalwk(-e ᵉ) ᶠ apwnalwk(-e ᵉ) ᵖ | tohõtok twmalwkok apwnalwkok | tohõtor twmalwkor apwnalwkor | tohõtot twmalwkot apwnalwkot | tohõtolói twmalwkolói apwnalwkolói | |
3rd | m/f (they) | ihõt * ewlwk/ekhetxokol(-e ᵉ) ᵖ * xihõt ** tewlwk/tekhetxokol(-e ᵉ) ᵖ ** | ihõtok xihotõk ewlwkok/ekhetxokolok tewlwkok/tekhetxokolok | ihõtor xihotõr eülwkor/ekhetxokolor tewlwkor/tekhetxokolor | ihõtot xihotõt ewlwkot/ekhetxokolot tewlwkot/tekhetxokolot | ihõtoloi xihotõloi ewlwkok/ekhetxokololoi tewlwkoloi/tekhetxokololoi | |
n (these, those) | eibwr(-e ᵉ) ᵛ * eibilak(-e ᵉ) ᶠ * eixómuh(-e ᵉ) ᵖ * xeibwr(-e ᵉ) ᵛ ** xeibilak(-e ᵉ) ᶠ ** xeixómuh(-e) ᵖ ** | eibwrok eibilakok eixómuhok xeibwrok xeibilakok xeixómuhok | eibwror eibilakor eixómuhor xeibwror xeibilakor xeixómuhor | eibwrot eibilakot eixómuhot xeibwrot xeibilakot xeixómuhot | eibwrolói eibilakolói eixómuholói xeibwroloi xeibilakoleó xeixómuhólói |
m=male, f=female, n=neuter., *=the person or object is near., **=the person or object is far., v =very familiar, inferior, f=familiar, p=polite, e=ergative form.
Tense
With consonant ending verb likh (write) and vowel ending verb kha (eat, drink, consume).
Stem | Likh, Kha |
---|---|
Gerund | Likha, khwa |
Causative | Likha, khua |
Conjugative | Likhi, Khai & Kha |
Infinitive | Likhibó, Khabo |
Goal | Likhibólói, Khabólói |
Terminative | Likhibólóike, Khabólóike |
Agentive | Likhüta ⁿᵖ/Likhwra ᵐⁱ/Likhwri ᶠⁱ, Khawta ⁿᵖ/Khawra ᵐⁱ/Khawri ᶠⁱ |
Converb | Likhwte, Khawte |
Progressive | Likhwte likhwte, Khawte khawte |
Reason | Likhat, Khwat |
Likhilot, Khalot | |
Conditional | Likhile, Khale |
Perfective | Likhi, Khai |
Habitual | Likhi likhi, Khai khai |
For different types of verbs.
Tense | Person | tho "put" | kha "consume" | pi "drink" | de "give" | dhu "wash" | kor "do" | randh "cook" | ah "come" | ||||||||
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
+ | - | + | - | + | - | + | - | + | - | + | - | + | - | + | - | ||
Simple Present | 1st per. | thow | nothow | khaw | nakhaw ~ nekhaw | piw | nipiw | diw | nidiw | dhw | nudhw | korw | nokorw | randhw | narandhw ~ nerandhw | ahw | nahw |
2nd per. inf. | thwa | nothwa | khwa | nakhwa ~ nekhwa | piua | nipiua | dia | nidia | dhua | nudhua | kora | nokora | randha | narandha ~ nerandha | aha | naha | |
2nd per. pol. | thwa | nwthwa | khwa | nwkhwa | piua | nipiua | dia | nidia | dhwa | nwdhwa | kora | nokora | randha | narandha ~ nerandha | aha | naha | |
2nd per. hon. & 3rd per. | thoe | nothoe | khae | nakhae ~ nekhae | pie | nipie | die | nidie | dhwe | nudhwe | kore | nokore | randhe | narandhe ~ nerandhe | ahe | nahe | |
Present continuous | 1st per. | thói asw | thoi thoka nai | khai asw | khai thoka nai | pi asu | pi thoka nai | di asw | di thoka nai | dhui asw | dhui thoka nai | kori asw | kóri thoka nai | randhi asw | randhi thoka nai | ahi asw | ahi thoka nai |
2nd per. inf. | thoi aso | khai aso | pi aso | di aso | dhui aso | kori aso | randhi aso | ahi aso | |||||||||
2nd per. pol. | thoi asa | khai asa | pi asa | di asa | dhui asa | kori asa | randhi asa | ahi asa | |||||||||
2nd per. hon. & 3rd per. | thoi ase | khai ase | pi ase | di ase | dhui ase | kori ase | randhi ase | ahi ase | |||||||||
Present Perfect | 1st per. | thoisw | thwa nai | khaisw | khwa nai | pisw | pia nai | disw | dia nai | dhui asw | dhwa nai | korisw | kora nai | randhisw | rondha nai | ahi asw | oha nai |
2nd per. inf. | thóisó | khaisó | pisó | disó | dhuisó | kórisó | randhisó | ahisó | |||||||||
2nd per. pol. | thoisa | khaisa | pisa | disa | dhuisa | korisa | randhisa | ahisa | |||||||||
2nd per. hon. & 3rd per. | thoise | khaise | pise | dise | dhuise | korise | randhise | ahise | |||||||||
Recent Past | 1st per. | thölw | nothölw | khalw | nakhalw ~ nekhalw | pilw | nipilw | dilw | nidilw | dhulw | nudhulw | korilw | nokórilw | randhilw | narandhilw ~ nerandhilw | ahilw | nahilw |
2nd per. inf. | thöli | nothöli | khali | nakhali ~ nekhali | pili | nipili | dili | nidili | dhuli | nudhuli | kórili | nókórili | randhili | narandhili ~ nerandhili | ahilw | nahilw | |
2nd per. pol. | thöla | nothöla | khala | nakhala ~ nekhala | pila | nipila | dila | nidila | dhula | nudhula | kórila | nókórila | randhila | narandhila ~ nerandhila | ahila | nahila | |
2nd per. hon. & 3rd per. | thöle | nothöle | khale | nakhale ~ nekhale | pile | nipile | dile | nidile | dhule | nudhule | kórile | nókórile | randhile | narandhile ~ nerandhile | ahile / ahilᵗʳ | nahile / nahilᵗʳ | |
Distant Past | 1st per. | thoisilw | nothoisilw ~ thwa nasilw | khaisilw | nakhaisilw ~ nekhaisilw ~ khwa nasilw | pisilw | nipisilw ~ pia nasilw | disilw | nidisilw ~ dia nasilw | dhuisilw | nudhuisilw ~ dhüa nasilw | kórisilw | nókórisilw ~ kora nasilw | randhisilw | narandhisilw ~ nerandhisilw ~ rondha nasilw | ahisilw | nahisilw ~ oha nasilw |
2nd per. inf. | thoisili | nothóisili ~ thwa nasili | khaisili | nakhaisili ~ nekhaisili ~ khwa nasili | pisili | nipisili ~ pia nasili | disili | nidisili ~ dia nasili | dhuisili | nudhuisili ~ dhwa nasili | korisili | nokorisili ~ kora nasili | randhisili | narandhisili ~ nerandhisili ~ rondha nasili | ahisili | nahisili ~ oha nasili | |
2nd per. pol. | thoisila | nothóisila ~ thwa nasila | khaisila | nakhaisila ~ nekhaisila ~ khüa nasila | pisila | nipisila ~ pia nasila | disila | nidisila ~ dia nasila | dhuisila | nudhuisila ~ dhwa nasila | korisila | nokorisila ~ kora nasila | randhisila | narandhisila ~ nerandhisila ~ rondha nasila | ahisila | nahisila ~ oha nasila | |
2nd per. hon. & 3rd per. | thoisile | nothoisile ~ thwa nasile | khaisile | nakhaisile ~ nekhaisile ~ khwa nasile | pisile | nipisile ~ pia nasile | disile | nidisile ~ dia nasile | dhuisile | nudhuisile ~ dhüa nasile | korisile | nokorisile ~ kora nasile | randhisile | narandhisile ~ nerandhisile ~ rondha nasile | ahisile | nahisile ~ oha nasile | |
Past continuous | 1st per. | thoi asilw | thoi thoka nasilw | khai asilw | khai thoka nasilw | pi asilw | pi thoka nasilw | di asilw | di thoka nasilw | dhui asils | dhui thoka nasils | kori asils | kori thoka nasils | randhi asils | randhi thoka nasils | ahi asils | ahi thoka nasils |
2nd per. inf. | thoi asili | thoi thoka nasili | khai asili | khai thoka nasili | pi asili | pi thoka nasili | di asili | di thoka nasili | dhui asili | dhui thoka nasili | kori asili | kori thoka nasili | randhi asili | randhi thoka nasili | ahi asili | ahi thoka nasili | |
2nd per. pol. | thoi asila | thoi thoka nasila | khai asila | khai thoka nasila | pi asila | pi thoka nasila | di asila | di thoka nasila | dhui asila | dhui thoka nasila | kori asila | kori thoka nasila | randhi asila | randhi thoka nasila | ahi asila | ahi thoka nasila | |
2nd per. hon. & 3rd per. | thoi asil(e) | thoi thoka nasil(e) | khai asil(e) | khai thoka nasil(e) | pi asil(e) | pi thoka nasil(e) | di asil(e) | di thoka nasil(e) | dhui asil(e) | dhui thoka nasil(e) | kori asil(e) | kori thoka nasil(e) | randhi asil(e) | randhi thoka nasil(e) | ahi asil{e) | ahi thoka nasil(e) | |
Simple Future | 1st per. | thöm | nothöm | kham | nakham ~ nekham | pim | nipim | dim | nidim | dhum | nudhum | korim | nokorim | randhim | narandhim ~ nerandhim | ahim | nahim |
2nd per. inf. | thöbi | nothöbi | khabi | nakhabi ~ nekhabi | pibi | nipibi | dibi | nidibi | dhubi | nudhubi | koribi | nokoribi | randhibi | narandhibi ~ nerandhibi | ahibi | nahibi | |
2nd per. pol. | thöba | nothöba | khaba | nakhaba ~ nekhaba | piba | nipiba | diba | nidiba | dhuba | nudhuba | koriba | nókóriba | randhiba | narandhiba ~ nerandhiba | ahiba | nahiba | |
2nd per. hon. & 3rd per. | thöbo | nothöbo | khabo | nakhabo ~ nekhabo | pibo | nipibo | dibo | nidibo | dhubo | nudhubo | koribo | nokoribo | randhibo | narandhibo ~ nerandhibo | ahibo | nahibo | |
Future continuous | 1st per. | thoi thakim | thoi nathakim/nethakim | khai thakim | khai nathakim/nethakim | pi thakim | pi nathakim/nethakim | di thakim | di nathakim/nethakim | dhui thakim | dhui nathakim/nethakim | kori thakim | kori nathakim/nethakim | randhi thakim | randhi nathakim/nethakim | ahi thakim | ahi nathakim/nethakim |
2nd per. inf. | thoi thakibi | thoi nathakibi/nethakibi | khai thakibi | khai nathakibi/nethakibi | pi thakibi | pi nathakibi/nethakibi | di thakibi | di nathakibi/nethakibi | dhui thakibi | dhui nathakibi/nethakibi | kori thakibi | kori nathakibi/nethakibi | randhi thakibi | randhi nathakibi/nethakibi | ahi thakibi | ahi nathakibi/nethakibi | |
2nd per. pol. | thoi thakiba | thoi nathakiba/nethakiba | khai thakiba | khai nathakiba/nethakiba | pi thakiba | pi nathakiba/nethakiba | di thakiba | di nathakiba/nethakiba | dhui thakiba | dhui nathakiba/nethakiba | kori thakiba | kori nathakiba/nethakiba | randhi thakiba | randhi nathakiba/nethakiba | ahi thakiba | ahi nathakiba/nethakiba | |
2nd per. hon. & 3rd per. | thoi thakibo | thoi nathakibo/nethakibo | khai thakibo | khai nathakibo/nethakibo | pi thakibo | pi nathakibo/nethakibo | di thakibo | di nathakibo/nethakibo | dhui thakibo | dhui nathakibo/nethakibo | kori thakibo | kori nathakibo/nethakibo | randhi thakibo | randhi nathakibo/nethakibo | ahi thakibo | ahi nathakibo/nethakibo | |
The negative forms are n + 1st vowel of the verb + the verb. Example: Moi porhw, Moi noporhw (I read, I do not read); Tumi khelila, Tumi nekhelila (You played, You didn't play). For verbs that start with a vowel, just the n- is added, without vowel lengthening. In some dialects if the 1st vowel is a in a verb that starts with consonant, ne is used, like, Moi nakhaw (I don't eat) is Moi nekhaü. In past continuous the negative form is -i thoka nasil-. In future continuous it's -i na(/e)thaki-. In present continuous and present perfect, just -i thoka nai and -a nai' respectively are used for all personal pronouns. Sometimes for plural pronouns, the -hok suffix is used, like korwhok (we do), ahilahok (you guys came).Content
Relationship suffixes
Persons | Suffix | Example | English translation |
---|---|---|---|
1st person | none | Mwr/Amar ma, bap, kokai, vai, ba, voni | My/Our mother, father, elder-brother, younger-brother, elder-sister, younger-sister |
2nd person (very familiar; inferior) |
-(e)r | Twr/Tohõtor mar, baper, kokaier, vaier, bar, vonier | Your/Your(pl) mother, father, elder-brother, younger-brother, elder-sister, younger-sister |
2nd person familiar |
-(e)ra | Twmar/Twmalwkor mara, bapera, kokaiera, vaiera, bara, voniera | Your/Your(pl) mother, father, elder-brother, younger-brother, elder-sister, younger-sister |
2nd person formal; 3rd person |
-(e)k | Apwnar/Apwnalwkor/Tar/Tair/Xihotõr/Tewr mak, bapek, kokaiek, bhaiek, bak, voniek | Your/Your(pl)/His/Her/Their/His~Her(formal) mother, father, elder-brother, younger-brother, elder-sister, younger-sister |
Dialects
Regional dialects
The language has quite a few regional variations. Banikanta Kakati identified two broad dialects which he named (1) Eastern and (2) Western dialects,[54] of which the eastern dialect is homogeneous, and prevalent to the east of Guwahati, and the western dialect is heterogeneous. However, recent linguistic studies have identified four dialect groups listed below from east to west:[36]
- Eastern group in and around Sivasagar District, i.e., the regions of the former undivided Sivasagar district, areas of the present day Golaghat, Jorhat and Sivasagar. Standard Assamese is based on the Eastern group.
- Central group spoken in Nagaon, Sonitpur, Morigaon districts and adjoining areas
- Kamrupi group in the Kamrup region: (Barpetia, Nalbariya, Palasbaria).
- Goalpariya group in the Goalpara region: (Ghulliya, Jharuwa, Caruwa)
Comparison
English | Eastern | Central | Kamrupi | Western Goalpariya |
---|---|---|---|---|
Mother | Ma, Ai | Mai, Ai | Mai, Ai | Maö, Ai, Mai |
Why | Kiyo, Kelé | Kia | Kia | Kene, Ke |
Wind | Botah | Batah | Bataṣ | |
Money | Toka | Toka | Taka | Taka |
Crab | Kẽküra | Kakra | Kakra | |
And | Aru | A | Aro | Ar, Arö |
Young male | Deka, Sengeliya | Deka, Sengea | Sengra, Deka | Sengra |
Cattle | Goru | Goo | Goru | Göru |
Buffalo | Móh | Moh | Moih, Möh | Moiṣ |
Bad | Beya | Bea | Boea, Bwea | Bea, Boea |
Plough | Nangol, Hal | Langon, Hal | Nangal, Hal | |
Seedlings | Kothiya | Kothia | Koitha | |
Mud | Büka | Böka | Pek | |
Now | Etiya | Itia | Ite, Ethen | Ela |
Once | Ebar | Eba | Akbar | Ekbar |
I can, I can't, I could, I couldn't | Parü, Nwarü, Parilü, Nüarilü | Paong, Noong, Paĩlong, Noĩlong | Paru, Noru, Pallu, Nollu | Parong, Naparong/Parong na, Parlung, Naparlung/Parlung na |
Good person | Bhal manuh | Bhal manhu | Bhal manhu | Bhal manshi |
I went home. | Moi ghoroloi goisilü. | Moe ghook goesilong. | Moi ghorük geisilu. | Mui ghor geisilung. |
Will you go when I come? | Moi ahile toi jabine? | Moe ahili toi jabi na? | Moi aihli toi jabi na? | Mui/Moi ashile ki tui jabu? |
He told us to get off the vehicle. | Xi amak garir pora namiboloi kóle. | Xi amak gai pa namiba ligi kola. | Xi amak garir para nambak logi kolak. | Oui amak gaṛi thakia namibar koil. |
You should not cut the tree with the dao. | Toi gosdal dakhonere katibo nelage. | Toe gosdal daxanedi katiba nalage. | Toi gasdal dakhan di katba nalge. | Tui gasṭa daökhan dia kaṭiba nalage. |
Will he go? | Xi jabone? | Xi jabo na? | Xi jabo na | Oui ki jabe? |
If we die, you will also die. | Ami morile toiü moribi. | Ami moili toü moibi. | Ami molli toiü morbi. | Amra/Ami morle tuiö morbu/morbi |
I will tell who will be the king. | Roja kün hóbo moi kóm. | Raja kün hobu moe kom. | Raja kae hobo moi kom. | Raja kae hoibe mui koim. |
When I was bringing the eggs, they fell on the ground. | Moi konibilak anüte matit pori gól. | Moe konibilak anöngte matit pori gól. | Moi dimagilak ante matit pori gel. | Mui dimagilak anite matit poria geil. |
I brought fish for Nitu catching from the pond. | Nituloi pukhurir pora mas dhori anisü. | Nitu ligi puxui pa mas dhoi anisöng | Nituk lagi pukhrir para mas dhori ansü. | Nituk lagia pukhrir para mas dhoria ancung. |
You sit. (Polite) | Apuni bohok. | Aponi bohok. | Apni bohok. | Tömra boshö. |
Ram also went to his home eating rice with them. | Xihõtor logot Rameu bhat khai kamtü korile. | Tahõtü logot Amiu bhat khai kamtü koila. | Tahõtor logot Rameu bhat khai kamtü kollak | Umrar logot Ram(e)ö bhat khaea kamta korilek. |
I don't eat these in this manner. | Moi enekoi eibür nekhaü. | Moe eneke eibhu naxang. | Moi enke eigila nakhaü. | Mui engka eigila nakhang. |
When did you come? | Toi ketia ahiso? | Toe kitita ahiso? | Toi kitia aihso? | Tui kunbela ashcish? |
English | Eastern | Central | Kamrupi | Goalpariya |
Samples
Collected from the book, Assamese – Its formation and development.[55] The translations are of different versions of the English translations:
English: A man had two sons. The younger son told his father, 'I want my share of your estate now before you die.' So his father agreed to divide his wealth between his sons. A few days later this younger son packed all his belongings and moved to a distant land, and there he wasted all his money in wild living. About the time his money ran out, a great famine swept over the land, and he began to starve. He persuaded a local farmer to hire him, and the man sent him into his fields to feed the pigs. The young man became so hungry that even the pods he was feeding the pigs looked good to him. But no one gave him anything.
Eastern Assamese (Sibsagar): Künü ejon manuhor duta putek asil, tare xorutüe bapekok kole, "Oi büpai! xompottir ji bhag moi paü tak mük diok!" Tate teü teür xompotti duiü putekor bhitorot bati dile. Olop dinor pasot xorutw puteke tar bhagot ji pale take loi dur dexoloi goi beisali kori gutei xompotti nax korile. Tar pasot xei dexot bor akal hól. Tate xi dux paboloi dhorile. Tetia xi goi xei dexor ejon manuhor asroy lole, aru xei manuhe tak gahori soraboloi potharoloi pothai dile. Tate xi gahorir khüa ebidh gosor seire pet bhoraboloi bor hepah korileü tak küneü ekü nidile.
Central Assamese: Manuh ejonor duta putak asil. Tahãtor vitorot xoutw putake bapekok kóle,
Central/Kamrupi (Pati Darrang): Eta manhur duta putak asil, xehatör xorutui bapakök kolak, "He pite, xompöttir mör bhagöt zikhini porei, take mök di." Tate teö nizör xompötti xehatök bhagei dilak. Tar olop dinör pasötei xeñ xoru putektüi xokolöke götei loi kömba dexok legi polei gel aru tate lompot kamöt götei urei dilak. Xi xokolö bioe koraõte xeñ dexöt bor akal hol. Xi tate bor kosto paba dhollak. Teten xi aru xeñ dexor eta manhur asroe lolak. Xeñ mantui nizör potharök legi tak bora saribak legi pothei dilak. Tate xi aru borai khawa ekbidh gasör sei di pet bhorabak legi bor hepah kollak. Kintu kawei ekö tak nedlak.
Kamrupi (Palasbari): Kunba eta manhur duta putak asil. Ekdin xortö putake bapiakok kola, "Bapa wa, apunar xompöttir moi bhagöt zeman kheni pam teman khini mök dia." Tethane bapiake nizör xompötti duö putakok bhage dila. Keidinman pasöt xörtö putake tar bhagtö loi kunba akhan durher dekhok gel, aru tate gundami köri tar götei makha xompötti nohoa koilla. Tar pasöt xiai dekhot mosto akal hol. Tethian xi bor dukh paba dhoilla. Tar xi tarei eta manhur osarök zai asroe asroe lola. Manhtöi tak bara sarba potharöl khedala. Tate xi barai khawa ekbidh gasör seṅ khaba dhoilla. Teö tak kayö akö khaba neidla.
Kamrupi (Barpeta): Kunba eta manhör duta putek asil. Ekdin xorutu puteke bapekök kolak, "Pita, amar xompöttir moi zikhini mör bhagöt paü xikhini mök dia." Tethen bapeke nizör xompötti tahak bhage dilak. Tare keidinmen pisöte xei xoru putektui tar gotexopake loi ekhen duhrer dekhök gusi gel, arö tate xi lompot hoi tar gotexopa xompöttike ure phellak. Tar pasöt xei dekhkhenöt mosto akal hol. Tethen xi xei dekhör eta manhör osröt zai asroe lolak. Manuhtui tak bara sarbak login patharök khedolak. Tate xi ekbidh barai khawa gasör sẽi khaba dhollak. Take dekhiö kayö tak ekö khaba nedlak.
Western Goalpariya (Salkocha): Kunö ekzon mansir duizon saöa asil. Tar sötotae bapok koil, "Baba sompöttir ze bhag mör, tak mök de." Tat oë nizer sompötti umak batia dil. Tar olpo din pasöte öi söta saöata sök götea dur desot gel. Ore lompot beboharot or sompötti uzar koril. Oë götay khoros korar pasöt oi desot boro akal hoil. Ote oya kosto paba dhoril. Sela oë zaya öi deser ekzon mansir asroe löat öi manusi ok suar soraba patharot pothea dil. Ote suare khaöa ek rokom gaser sal dia pet bhoroba saileö ok kaho kisu nadil.
Non-regional dialects
Assamese does not have caste- or occupation-based dialects.[56] In the nineteenth century, the Eastern dialect became the standard dialect because it witnessed more literary activity and it was more uniform from east of Guwahati to Sadiya,[57] whereas the western dialects were more heterogeneous.[58] Since the nineteenth century, the center of literary activity (as well as of politics and commerce) has shifted to Guwahati; as a result, the standard dialect has evolved considerably away from the largely rural Eastern dialects and has become more urban and acquired western dialectal elements.[59] Most literary activity takes place in this dialect, and is often called the likhito-bhaxa, though regional dialects are often used in novels and other creative works.
In addition to the regional variants, sub-regional, community-based dialects are also prevalent, namely:
- Standard dialect influenced by surrounding centers.
- Bhakatiya dialect highly polite, a sattra-based dialect with a different set of nominals, pronominals, and verbal forms, as well as a preference for euphemism; indirect and passive expressions.[60] Some of these features are used in the standard dialect on very formal occasions.
- The fisherman community has a dialect that is used in the central and eastern region.
- The astrologer community of Darrang district has a dialect called thar that is coded and secretive. The ratikhowa and bhitarpanthiya secretive cult-based Vaisnava groups too have their own dialects.[61]
- The Muslim community have their own dialectal preference, with their own kinship, custom, and religious terms, with those in east Assam having distinct phonetic features.[59]
- The urban adolescent and youth communities (for example, Guwahati) have exotic, hybrid and local slangs.[59]
- Ethnic speech communities that use Assamese as a second language, often use dialects that are influenced heavily by the pronunciation, intonation, stress, vocabulary and syntax of their respective first languages (Mising Eastern Assamese, Bodo Central Kamrupi, Rabha Eastern Goalpariya etc.).[61] Two independent pidgins/creoles, associated with the Assamese language, are Nagamese (used by Naga groups) and Nefamese (used in Arunachal Pradesh).[62]
Literature
There is a growing and strong body of literature in this language. The first characteristics of this language are seen in the Charyapadas composed in between the eighth and twelfth centuries. The first examples emerged in writings of court poets in the fourteenth century, the finest example of which is Madhav Kandali's Saptakanda Ramayana. The popular ballad in the form of Ojapali is also regarded as well-crafted. The sixteenth and seventeenth centuries saw a flourishing of Vaishnavite literature, leading up to the emergence of modern forms of literature in the late nineteenth century.
Sample text
The following is a sample text in Assamese of Article 1 of the Universal Declaration of Human Rights:
Assamese in Assamese alphabet
- ১ম অনুচ্ছেদ: জন্মগতভাৱে সকলো মানুহ মৰ্যাদা আৰু অধিকাৰত সমান আৰু স্বতন্ত্ৰ। তেওঁলোকৰ বিবেক, বুদ্ধি আছে। তেওঁলোকে প্ৰত্যেকে প্ৰেত্যেকক ভ্ৰাতৃভাৱে ব্যৱহাৰ কৰা উচিত।[63]
Assamese in WRA Romanisation
- Prôthôm ônussêd: Zônmôgôtôbhawê xôkôlû manuh môrjada aru ôdhikarôt xôman aru sôtôntrô. Têû◌̃lûkôr bibêk, buddhi asê. Têû◌̃lûkê prôittêkê prôittêkôk bhratribhawê byôwôhar kôra usit.
Assamese in SRA Romanisation
- Prothom onussed: Jonmogotobhawe xokolü manuh morjada aru odhikarot xoman aru sotontro. Teulükor bibek, buddhi ase. Xokolüre bibek, buddhi ase. Teulüke proitteke proittekok bhratribhawe byowohar kora usit.
Assamese in SRA Romanisation
- Prothom onussed: Jonmogotovawe xokolu’ manuh morjada aru odhikarot xoman aru sotontro. Teulu’kor bibek, buddhi ase. Teulu’ke proitteke proittekok vratrivawe byowohar kora usit.
Assamese in CCRA Romanisation
- Prothom onussed: Jonmogotobhawe xokolu manuh morjada aru odhikarot xoman aru sotontro. Teulukor bibek, buddhi ase. Teuluke proitteke proittekok bhratribhawe byowohar kora usit.
Assamese in IAST Romanisation
- Prathama anucchēda: Janmagatabhāve sakalo mānuha maryādā āru adhikārata samāna āru svatantra. Tēõlokara bibēka, buddhi āchē. Tēõlokē pratyēkē pratyēkaka bhrātribhāvē byavahāra karā ucita.
Assamese in the International Phonetic Alphabet
- /pɹɔtʰɔm ɔnussɛd | dʒɔnmɔɡɔtɔbʰabɛ xɔkɔlʊ manuɦ mɔɹdʒada aɹu ɔdʰikaɹɔt xɔman aɹu sɔtɔntɹɔ || tɛʊlʊkɔɹ bibɛk buddʰi asɛ || tɛʊlʊkɛ pɹɔttɛkɛ pɹɔttɛkɔk bʰɹatɹibʰabɛ bjɔbɔhaɹ kɔɹa usit/
Gloss
- 1st Article: Congenitally all human dignity and right-in equal and free. their conscience, intellect exist. They everyone everyone-to brotherly behaviour to-do should.
Translation
- Article 1: All human beings are born free and equal in dignity and rights. They are endowed with reason and conscience. Therefore, they should act towards one another in a spirit of brotherhood.
See also
- Indo-Aryan languages
- Languages of India
- Languages with official status in India
- List of Indian languages by total speakers
- List of languages by number of native speakers
- Kamrupi litterateurs
- Assamese Language Movement
Notes
- https://digitalcollections.anu.edu.au/handle/1885/45743
- "SEAlang Library Ahom Lexicography". sealang.net.
- Bhattacharjya, Dwijen (2001). The genesis and development of Nagamese: Its social history and linguistic structure (PhD). City University of New York. ProQuest 304688285.
- Hammarström, Harald; Forkel, Robert; Haspelmath, Martin, eds. (2017). "Assamese". Glottolog 3.0. Jena, Germany: Max Planck Institute for the Science of Human History.
- "Assamese". Oxford Dictionaries UK Dictionary. Oxford University Press. Retrieved 2 March 2016.
- Assamese is an anglicized term used for the language, but scholars have also used Asamiya (Moral 1992, Goswami & Tamuli 2003) or Asomiya as a close approximation of /ɔxɔmijɑ/, the word used by the speakers for their language. (Mahanta 2012:217)
- "Statement". censusindia.gov.in. Archived from the original on 6 February 2012.
- "Axomiya is the major language spoken in Assam, and serves almost as a lingua franca among the different speech communities in the whole area." (Goswami 2003:394)
- "...Rajbangshi dialect of the Rangpur Division (Bangladesh), and the adjacent Indian Districts of Jalpaiguri and Cooch Behar, has been classed with Bengali because its speakers identify with the Bengali culture and literary language, although it is linguistically closer to Assamese." (Masica 1993, p. 25)
- Sen, Sukumar (1975), Grammatical sketches of Indian languages with comparative vocabulary and texts, Volume 1, P 31
- "...the MIA languages are not younger than ('classical') Sanskrit. And a number of their morphophonological and lexical features betray the fact that they are not direct descendants of Rigvedic Sanskrit, the main basis of 'Classical' Sanskrit; rather they descend from dialects which, despite many similarities, were different from Rigvedic and in some regards even more archaic." (Oberlies 2007:163)
- Proto-Kamta took its inheritance from ?proto-Kamarupa (and before that from ?proto-Gauda-Kamarupa), innovated the unique features ... in 1250-1550 AD" (Toulmin 2006:306)
- "Asamiya has historically originated in Old Indo-Aryan dialects, but the exact nature of its origin and growth is not very clear as yet." (Goswami 2003:394)
- "Dr. S. K. Chatterji basing his conclusions on the materials accumulated in LSI, Part I, and other monographs on the Bengali dialects, divides Eastern Mag. Pkt. and Ap. into four dialect groups. (1) Raddha dialects which comprehend Western Bengali which gives standard Bengali colloquial and Oriya in the South West. (2) Varendra dialects of North Central Bengal. (3) Kumarupa dialects which comprehend Assamese and the dialects of North Bengal. (4) Vanga dialects which comprehend the dialects of East Bengal (ODBL VolI p140)." (Kakati 1941, p. 6)
- Goswami, Golockchandra (1982), Structure of Assamese, Page 3
- There is evidence that the Prakrit of the Kamarupa kingdom differed enough from the Magadhi Prakrit to be identified as either a parallel Kamrupi Prakrit or at least an eastern variety of the Magadha Prakrit (Sharma 1990:0.24–0.28)
- "(W)e should imagine a linguistic patchwork with an eastern Indo-Aryan vernacular (not yet really "Assamese") in the urban centers and along the river and Tibeto-Burman and Austroasiatic communities everywhere." (DeLancey 2012:15–16)
- "While Kakati's assertion of an Austroasiatic substrate needs to be re-established on the basis of more systematic evidence, it is consistent with the general assumption that the lower Brahmaputra drainage was originally Austroasiatic speaking. It also implies the existence of a substantial Austroasiatic speaking population till the time of spread of Aryan culture into Assam, i.e. it implies that up until the 4th-5th centuries CE and probably much later Tibeto-Burman languages had not completely supplanted Austroasiatic languages." (DeLancey 2012:13)
- "It is curious to find that according to (Hiuen Tsang) the language of Kamarupa 'differed a little' from that of mid-India. Hiuen Tsang is silent about the language of Pundra-vardhana or Karna-Suvarna; it can be presumed that the language of these tracts was identical with that of Magadha." (Chatterji 1926, p. 78)
- "Perhaps this 'differing a little' of the Kamarupa speech refers to those modifications of Aryan sounds which now characterise Assamese as well as North- and East-Bengali dialects." (Chatterji 1926, pp. 78–89)
- "When [the Tibeto-Burman speakers] adopted that language they also enriched it with their vocabularies, expressions, affixes etc." (Saikia 1997)
- Moral 1997, pp. 43-53.
- "... (it shows) that in Ancient Assam there were three languages viz. (1) Sanskrit as the official language and the language of the learned few, (2) Non-Aryan tribal languages of the Austric and Tibeto-Burman families, and (3) a local variety of Prakrit (ie a MIA) wherefrom, in course of time, the modern Assamese language as a MIL, emerged." Sharma, Mukunda Madhava (1978). Inscriptions of Ancient Assam. Guwahati, Assam: Gauhati University. pp. xxiv–xxviii. OCLC 559914946.
- Medhi 1988, pp. 67–63.
- "The earliest specimen of Assamese language and literature is available in the dohās, known also as Caryās, written by the Buddhist Siddhacharyas hailing from different parts of eastern India. Some of them are identified as belonging to ancient Kāmarūpa by the Sino-Tibetologists." (Goswami 2003:433)
- "However, the earliest literary work available which may be claimed as distinctly Asamiya is the Prahrāda Carita written by a court poet named Hema Sarasvatī in the latter half of the thirteenth century AD.(Goswami 2003:433)
- Guha 1983, p. 9.
- "The prose of the Burañjīs is a standardized literary prose in the true sense of the term. It is through this prose that Arabic and Persian elements crept into the language in abundance. This prose comes very near to the literary language of the modern period." (Goswami 2003:434)
- Goswami 2003, p. 434.
- "Assamese Association – of Australia (ACT & NSW)".
- "Welcome to the Website of "Axom Xomaj",Dubai, UAE (Assam Society of Dubai, UAE)!".
- "Constitution". Archived from the original on 27 December 2018. Retrieved 5 June 2016.
- "AANA - AANA Overview".
- "Secretariat Administration Department". assam.gov.in. Archived from the original on 20 June 2018. Retrieved 5 June 2016.
- Assamese Archived 28 July 2012 at the Wayback Machine, Resource Centre for Indian Language Technology Solutions, Indian Institute of Technology, Guwahati.
- (Mahanta 2012:220)
- (Mahanta 2012:218)
- "Assamese, alone among NIA languages except for Romany, has also lost the characteristic IA dental/retroflex contrast (although it is retained in spelling), reducing the number of articulations, with the loss also of /c/, to three." (Masica 1993, p. 95)
- Moral 1997, p. 45.
- The word "hare", for example: śaśka (OIA) > χɔhā (hare). (Masica 1993, p. 206)
- Whereas most fricatives become sibilants in Eastern Goalpariya (sukh, santi, asa in Eastern Goalpariya; xukh, xanti, axa in western Kamrupi) (Dutta 1995, p. 286); some use of the fricative is seen as in the word xi (for both "he" and "she") (Dutta 1995, p. 287) and xap khar (the snake) (Dutta 1995, p. 288). The /x/ is completely absent in Western Goalpariya (Dutta 1995, p. 290)
- B Datta (1982), Linguistic situation in north-east India, the distinctive h sound of Assamese is absent in the West Goalpariya dialect
- Goswami, Upendranath (1970), A Study on Kamrupi, p.xiii /x/ does not occur finally in Kamrupi. But in St. Coll. it occurs. In non-initial positions O.I.A sibilants became /kʰ/ and also /h/ whereas in St. Coll. they become /x/.
- Chatterjee, Suniti Kumar, Kirata Jana Krti, p. 54.
- Moral 1997, p. 46.
- Directionality and locality in vowel harmony: With special reference to vowel harmony in Assamese (Thesis) – via www.lotpublications.nl.
- (Mahanta 2012:221)
- Bara, Mahendra (1981). The Evolution of the Assamese Script. Jorhat, Assam: Asam Sahitya Sabha. OCLC 59775640.
- Kommaluri, Subramanian & Sagar K 2005.
- Moral 1997, p. 47.
- Moral 1997, pp. 49-51.
- Moral 1997, p. 48.
- "Assamese may be divided dialectically into Eastern and Western Assamese" (Kakati 1941, p. 16)
- "Assamese:Its formation and development" – via Internet Archive.
- (Goswami 2003:403)
- Kakati 1941, p. 14-16.
- Goswami 2003, p. 436.
- (Dutta 2003, p. 106)
- Goswami 2003, pp. 439-440.
- (Dutta 2003, p. 107)
- (Dutta 2003, pp. 108–109)
- https://www.ohchr.org/EN/UDHR/Documents/UDHR_Translations/asm.pdf
References
- Dutta, Birendranath (1995). A Study of the Folk Culture of the Goalpara Region of Assam. Guwahati, Assam: University Publication Department, Gauhati University.
- Dutta, Birendranath (2003). "Non-Standard Forms of Assamese: Their Socio-cultural Role". In Miri, Mrinal (ed.). Linguistic Situation In North-East India (2nd ed.). Concept Publishing Company, New Delhi. pp. 101–110.
- Goswami, G. C.; Tamuli, Jyotiprakash (2003), "Asamiya", in Cardona, George; Jain, Dhanesh (eds.), The Indo-Aryan Languages, Routledge, pp. 391–443
- Guha, Amalendu (December 1983), "The Ahom Political System: An Enquiry into the State Formation Process in Medieval Assam (1228-1714)" (PDF), Social Scientist, 11 (12): 3–34, doi:10.2307/3516963, JSTOR 3516963
- Kakati, Banikanta (1941), Assamese: Its Formation and Development, Gauhati, Assam: Government of Assam
- DeLancey, Scott (2012). Hyslop, Gwendolyn; Morey, Stephen; w. Post, Mark (eds.). "On the Origin of Bodo-Garo". Northeast Indian Linguistics. 4: 3–20. doi:10.1017/UPO9789382264521.003. ISBN 9789382264521.
- Kommaluri, Vijayanand; Subramanian, R.; Sagar K, Anand (2005), "Issues in Morphological Analysis of North-East Indian Languages", Language in India, 5
- Mahanta, Sakuntala (2012). "Assamese". Journal of the International Phonetic Association. 42 (2): 217–224. doi:10.1017/S0025100312000096.
- Masica, Colin P (1993). The Indo-Aryan Languages. Cambridge University Press. ISBN 9780521299442. Retrieved 4 February 2013.
- Medhi, Kaliram (1988), Assamese Grammar and the Origin of Assamese Language, Guwahati: Publication Board, Assam
- Moral, Dipankar (1997), "North-East India as a Linguistic Area" (PDF), Mon-Khmer Studies, 27: 43–53
- Oberlies, Thomas (2007), "Chapter Five: Aśokan Prakrit and Pāli", in Cardona, George; Jain, Danesh (eds.), The Indo-Aryan Languages, Routledge, ISBN 978-1-135-79711-9
- Sharma, M. M. (1990), "Language and Literature", in Borthakur, H. K. (ed.), The Comprehensive History of Assam: Ancient Period, I, Guwahati, Assam: Publication Board, Assam, pp. 263–284
- Toulmin, Mathew W S (2006). Reconstructing linguistic history in a dialect continuum: The Kamta, Rajbanshi, and Northern Deshi Bangla subgroup of Indo-Aryan (Ph.D.). The Australian National University.
- Chatterji (1926). The Origin and Development of the Bengali Language.
- Saikia, Nagen (1997). Paniker (ed.). Medieval Indian Literature: Surveys and selections. ISBN 978-81-260-0365-5.
External links
Wikivoyage has an entry for Assamese phrasebook. |
Wikimedia Commons has media related to Assamese language. |
Assamese edition of Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia |
- Assamese language at Encyclopædia Britannica
- Axamiyaa Bhaaxaar Moulik Bisar by Mr Devananda Bharali (PDF)
- Candrakānta abhidhāna : Asamiyi sabdara butpatti aru udaharanere Asamiya-Ingraji dui bhashara artha thaka abhidhana. second ed. Guwahati : Guwahati Bisbabidyalaya, 1962.
- A Dictionary in Assamese and English (1867) First Assamese dictionary by Miles Bronson from (books.google.com)
- Assamese proverbs, published 1896