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Abahatta
Aer language
Ahom kingdom
Aimaq dialect
Alveolar plosive
Angika language
Apabhraṃśa
Apabhramsa
Arunachal Pradesh
Askunu language
Assam
Assamese language
Assamese literature
Assamese script
Austroasiatic
Avestan language
Awadhi language
Axom Xahitya Xabha
Azari Language
Bactrian language
Bagheli language
Bagri language
Bakhtiari dialect
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Bishnupriya Manipuri language
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Braj Bhasha
Bukhori language
Bundeli
Caspian languages
Chakma language
Charyapada
Chhattisgarhi language
Chittagonian language
Coronal consonant
Dakhni
Dameli
Dardic languages
Dari (Eastern Persian)
Dari (Zoroastrian)
Deccan College (Pune)
Dehwari
Dental consonant
Derawali
Dhanwar Rai language
Dhatki language
Dhivehi language
Dialect
Dialects
Dialects of Central Iran
Dialects of Fars
Diphthongs
Dogri language
Domaaki language
Domari language
Dramatic Prakrit
Eastern Nagari script
Elu
English language
Fiji Hindi
Gāndhārī language
Gamit language
Ganges
Garhwali
Garo language
Gawar-Bati language
Gilaki language
Goalparia
Goaria language
Gojri
Gorani language
Gorgani dialect
Gujarati language
Gupta script
Hajong language
Halbi language
Haryanvi
Harzandi language
Hazaragi
Hemkosh
Hindi languages
Hindko language
Hindustani language
IITG
IPA
ISO 639-1
ISO 639-2
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This article appears to contradict another article. Please see discussion on the linked talk page. Please do not remove this message until the contradictions are resolved. (December 2010)
Assamese
অসমীয়া Ôxômiya
Spoken in
India, Bhutan & USA (DE, NJ & NY)
Region
Assam, Arunachal Pradesh
Total speakers
13,079,696 (in 1991)1
Ranking
52
Language family
Indo-European
Indo-Iranian
Indo-Aryan
Eastern Group
Bengali-Assamese
Assamese
Writing system
Assamese script
Official status
Official language in
India (Assam)
Regulated by
No official regulation
Language codes
ISO 639-1
as
ISO 639-2
asm
ISO 639-3
asm
Linguasphere
–
This page contains Indic text. Without rendering support you may see irregular vowel positioning and a lack of conjuncts. More...
Assamese ( অসমীয়া Ôxômiya) (IPA: [ɔxɔmija]) is the easternmost Indo-Aryan language. It is used mainly in the state of Assam in North-East India. It is also the official language of Assam. It is also spoken in parts of Arunachal Pradesh and other northeast Indian states. Nagamese, an Assamese-based creole is widely used in Nagaland and parts of Assam. Small pockets of Assamese speakers can be found in Bhutan. The easternmost of Indo-European languages, it is spoken by over 13 million people.1
Assamese has derived its phonetic character set and its behaviour from Sanskrit. It is written using the Assamese script. Assamese is written from left to right and top to bottom, in the same manner as English. A large number of ligatures are possible since potentially all the consonants can combine with one another. Vowels can either be independent or dependent upon a consonant or a consonant cluster.
Apex literary body seeks legal tool Sabha stresses need for mother tongues
Dergaon (Golaghat), Feb. 1: Asam Sahitya Sabha, the apex literary organisation of the state, today called for a stringent legislation to preserve Assamese and mother tongues of all ethnic groups in Assam as these are “facing threat from English and Hindi”.
Assamese: Definition from Answers.com
Assamese (ăs'əmēz'), language belonging to the Indic group of the Indo-Iranian subfamily of the Indo-European family of languages. See Indo-Iranian languages. ...
The English word "Assamese" is built on the same principle as "Japanese", "Taiwanese", etc. It is based on the name "Assam" by which the tract consisting of the Brahmaputra valley was known. The people call their state Ôxôm and their language Ôxômiya.
Genealogically, Assamese belongs to the group of Eastern Indo-Aryan languages, here marked in yellow.
Contents
1 Formation of Assamese
2 Writing system
3 Morphology and grammar
4 Phonology
4.1 Alveolar Stops
4.2 Voiceless Velar Fricative
4.3 Velar nasal
4.4 Vowel inventory
5 Dialects
6 Assamese literature
7 See also
8 Notes
9 References
10 External links
Formation of Assamese
Assamese and the cognate languages, Maithili, Bengali and Oriya, developed from Magadhi Prakrit.2 According to linguist Suniti Kumar Chatterji, the Magadhi Prakrit in the east gave rise to four Apabhramsa dialects: Radha, Vanga, Varendra and Kamarupa; and the Kamarupa Apabhramsa, keeping to the north of the Ganges, gave rise to the North Bengal dialects in West Bengal and Assamese in the Brahmaputra valley.3 Though early compositions in Assamese exist from the 13th century, the earliest relics of the language can be found in paleographic records of the Kamarupa Kingdom from the 5th century to the 12th century.4 Assamese language features have been discovered in the 9th century Charyapada, which are Buddhist verses discovered in 1907 in Nepal, and which came from the end of the Apabhramsa period. Early compositions matured in the 14th century, during the reign of the Kamata king Durlabhnarayana of the Khen dynasty, when Madhav Kandali composed the Kotha Ramayana. Since the time of the Charyapada, Assamese has been influenced by the languages belonging to the Sino-Tibetan and Austroasiatic families.
Assamese became the court language in the Ahom kingdom by the 17th century.5
Writing system
Want special status for Assam like Kashmir, says ULFA leader
New Delhi, Feb 14 : Even as the United Liberation Front of Asom (ULFA) has begun peace talks with the government to end 30 years of insurgency in Assam, a top leader of the banned outfit has said the group wants the Indian Constitution "overhauled vis-a-vis Assam" to grant the northeastern state special status like Jammu and Kashmir.
Assamese Language
Assamese Language on WN Network delivers the latest Videos and Editable pages for News & Events, including Entertainment, Music, Sports, Science and ...
Assamese uses the Assamese script, a variant of the Eastern Nagari script, which traces its descent from the Gupta script. It resembles very closely to the Mithilakshar script of the Maithili language as well as to the Bengali script.6 There is a strong tradition of writing from early times. Examples can be seen in edicts, land grants and copper plates of medieval kings. Assam had its own system of writing on the bark of the saanchi tree in which religious texts and chronicles were written. The present-day spellings in Assamese are not necessarily phonetic. Hemkosh, the second Assamese dictionary, introduced spellings based on Sanskrit which are now the standard.
Morphology and grammar
The Assamese language has the following characteristic morphological features7
Gender and number are not grammatically marked
There is 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.
Phonology
The Assamese phonemic inventory consists of eight oral vowel phonemes, three nasalized vowel phonemes, fifteen diphthongs (two nasalized diphthongs) and twenty-one consonant phonemes.8 For a consistent phonemic representation of the Assamese language, all English-language Wikipedia articles that include words in Assamese will use the Romanization scheme.
In International Phonetic Alphabet (IPA) and Romanization (ROM) transcriptions
Vowels
Front
Central
Back
IPA
ROM
Script
IPA
ROM
Script
IPA
ROM
Script
High
i
i
ই
u
u
উ
High-mid
ʊ
û
ও
Mid
e
e
এ'
o
o
অ'
Low-mid
ɛ
ê
এ
ɔ
ô
অ
Low
a
a
আ
Consonants
Labial
Alveolar
Velar
Glottal
IPA
ROM
Script
IPA
ROM
Script
IPA
ROM
Script
IPA
ROM
Script
Voiceless stops
p
pʰ
p
ph
প
ফ
t
tʰ
t
th
ত/ট
থ/ঠ
k
kʰ
k
kh
ক
খ
Voiced stops
b
bʱ
b
bh
ব
ভ
d
dʱ
d
dh
দ/ড
ধ/ঢ
ɡ
ɡʱ
g
gh
গ
ঘ
Voiceless fricatives
s
s
চ/ছ
x
x
শ/ষ/স
h
h
হ
Voiced fricatives
z
z
জ/ঝ/য
Nasals
m
m
ম
n
n
ন/ণ
ŋ
ng
ঙ/ং
Approximants
w
w
ৱ
l, ɹ
l,r
ল,ৰ
Alveolar Stops
Wall magazines keep Darul traditions alive
In times when most youngsters express themselves through blogs and twitter, handwritten student magazines dominate the walls of Darul Uloom, the 145-year-old Islamic seminary.
Assamese Language facts - Freebase
Facts and figures about Assamese Language, taken from Freebase, the world's database.
The Assamese phoneme inventory is unique in the Indic group of languages in its lack of a dental-retroflex distinction in coronal stops. Historically, the dental stops and retroflex stops both merged into alveolar stops. This makes Assamese resemble non-Indic languages in its use of the coronal major place of articulation. 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).
Voiceless Velar Fricative
Unlike most eastern Indic languages, Assamese is also noted for the presence of the voiceless velar fricative x,(x, IITG, pronounced by a native speaker) historically derived from what used to be coronal sibilants. 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/Ôxômiya instead of Asomiya/Asamiya to reflect the sound, represented by [x] in the International Phonetic Alphabet. This sound appeared in the phonology of Assamese as a result of lenition of the three Sanskrit sibilants. It is present in other nearby languages, like Chittagonian.
The sound is variously transcribed in the IPA as a voiceless velar fricative [x], a voiceless uvular fricative [χ], and a voiceless velar approximant [ɰ̥] by leading phonologists and phoneticians. Some variations of the sound is expected within different population groups and dialects, and depending on the speaker, speech register, and quality of recording, all three symbols may approximate the acoustic reading of the actual Assamese phoneme.
Velar nasal
Assamese and Bengali, in contrast to other Indo-Aryan languages, use the velar nasal (the English ng in sing) extensively. In many languages the velar nasal is always attached to a homorganic sound, whereas in Assamese it can occur intervocalically.9
Vowel inventory
24 litterateurs gets 'Sahitya Akademi Award 2010'
New Delhi, Feb 15 : Litterateurs in 24 Indian languages, including Bani Basu in Bengali, Esther David in English, Uday Prakash in English and Sheen Kaaf Nizam in Urdu, were honoured with 'Sahitya Akademi Awards 2010' here at the 'Festival of Letters.'
Learning the Assamese Language
Assamese is the state language of Assam, the eastern most state in India. It is also spoken and used in the states of Meghalaya, Arunachal Pradesh, ...
Eastern Indic languages like Assamese, Bengali, Sylheti, and Oriya 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, including ô [ɔ], o [o], û [ʊ], and u [u]. These four vowels contrast phonemically, as demonstrated by the minimal set কলা kôla [kɔla] 'deaf', ক'লা kola [kola] 'black', কোলা kûla [kʊla] 'lap', and কুলা kula [kula] 'winnowing fan'.
The high-mid back rounded vowel ও û [ʊ] is unique in this branch of the language family, and sounds very much to foreigners as something between অ' o [o] and উ u [u]. This vowel is found in Assamese words such as পোত pût [pʊt] "to bury".
Dialects
In the middle of the 19th century the dialect spoken in the Sibsagar area came into focus because it was made the official language of the state by the British and because the Christian missionaries based their work in this region. Now the Assamese spoken in and around Nagaon District), located geographically in the middle of the Assamese spoken region, is accepted as the standard Assamese. The Assamese taught in schools and used in newspapers today has evolved and incorporated elements from different dialects of the language. Banikanta Kakati identified two dialects which he named (1) Eastern and (2) Western dialects. However, recent linguistic studies have identified four dialect groups [1] (Moral 199210), listed below from east to west:
Eastern group, spoken in and other districts around Sibsagar district
Central group spoken in present Nagaon, Sonitpur, morigaon districts and adjoining areas
Kamrupi group spoken in undivided Kamrup, Nalbari, Barpeta, Darrang, Kokrajhar and Bongaigaon districts
Goalparia group spoken primarily in the Dhubri and Goalpara districts and in certain areas of Kokrajhar and Bongaigoan districts
Assamese literature
Main article: Assamese literature
Amend Constitution, give us special status: ULFA
Sashadhar Chowdhury, in an exclusive interview to CNN-IBN, makes ULFA's demands clear.
Assamese language -- Britannica Online Encyclopedia
Assamese language, eastern Indo-Aryan (Indic) language that is the official language of Assam state of India. The only indigenous Indo-Aryan language ...
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 the 8th-12th century. The first examples emerge in writings of court poets in the 14th century, the finest example of which is Madhav Kandali's Kotha Ramayana, as well as popular ballad in the form of Ojapali. The 16th—17th century saw a flourishing of Vaishnavite literature, leading up to the emergence of modern forms of literature in the late 19th century.
See also
Charyapada
Languages of India
Languages with official status in India
List of Indian languages by total speakers
List of languages by number of native speakers
Notes
^ a b Indian Census
^ There is evidence that the Prakrit in Kamarupa kingdom differed enough from the Magadhi Prakrit to be identified as either a parallel (Kamarupa Prakrit), or at least an eastern variety of the Magadha Prakrit (Sharma 1990:264–265). This would mean that the branch-off occurred at the Prakrit stage and not at the later Apabhramsa stage.
^ (Goswami 2003:394)
^ (Medhi 1988:67–63)
^ Guha, Amalendu The Ahom Political Sysem Social Scientist, Vol 11, No. 12 (Dec., 1983), pp3–34.
^ Bara, Mahendra The Evolution of the Assamese Script, Axom Xahitya Xabha, Jorhat, 1981.
^ Kommaluri, Vijayanand, et al. Issues in Morphological Analysis of North-East Indian Languages Language in India, Volume 5 : 7 July 2005
^ Asamiya, Resource Centre for Indian Language Technology Solutions, Indian Institute of Technology, Guwahati.
^ Assamese Design Guide, The Resource Centre for Indian Language Technology Solutions, Indian Institute of Technology, Guwahati.
^ Moral, Dipankar. A phonology of Asamiya Dialects : Contemporary Standard and Mayong, PhD Thesis, Deccan College, Pune 1992.
References
Goswami, G. C.; Tamuli, Jyotiprakash (2003), "Asamiya", in Cordona, George; Jain, Dhanesh, The Indo-Aryan Languages, Routledge, pp. 391–443
Medhi, Kaliram (1988), Assamese Grammar and the Origin of Assamese Language, Guwahati: Publication Board, Assam
Sharma, M. M. (1990), "Language and Literature", in Borthakur, H. K., The Comprehensive History of Assam: Ancient Period, I, Guwahati, Assam: Publication Board, Assam, pp. 263–284
External links
Assamese language edition of Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Candrakānta abhidhāna : Asamiyi sabdara butpatti aru udaharanere Asamiya-Ingraji dui bhashara artha thaka abhidhana. 2nd ed. Guwahati : Guwahati Bisbabidyalaya, 1962.
A Dictionary in Assamese and English (1867) First Assamese dictionary by Miles Bronson from (books.google.com)
English-Assamese Online Dictionary
English translation - Assamese Literature
The Creative Visionary: Jyoti Prasad Agarwalla (1903-1951)
Assamese Language and Literature
Assamese Language Sample
Ethnologue report for Assamese
Xophura - Collection of writings in Assamese
Assamese – UCLA Phonetics Lab Data
Assamese computing resources at TDIL
v · d · e (Official) Languages of India
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Sanskrit scholar worried about fate of classical works
Wasfia JalaliJaipur, Jan 25 (PTI) Can India afford to lose the troves of literary treasures piled up in its classical coffers for thousands of years, in languages as numerous as one can imagine?These worries are at the back of Sanskrit scholar Sheldon Pollock�s mind as the Columbia University professor, a Padma Shri awardee, undertakes a massive work of publication of translations of works of ...
Talk:Assamese language - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Language portal. v · d · e This article is within the scope of ... The native Assamese speakers wrote only buranji puthi in the native Assamese language ...
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Unclassified
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Dameli · Domaaki · Gawar-Bati · Kalami · Kalash · Kashmiri · Khowar · Kohistani · Nangalami · Palula · Pashayi · Shina · Shumashti · Torwali · Ushoji
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Askunu · Kalasha-ala · Kamkata-viri · Tregami language · Vasi-vari
Italics indicate extinct languages.
Why people from N-E excel in the services sector
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Assamese Language,official Language of Assam, Regional ...
Indian Language, Literature and script guide providing detailed info on origins of the ... The oldest Assamese writer was perhaps Hema Saraswati, who wrote his famous Prahlada ...
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Assamese language - Sajun.org
Assamese (অসমীয়া) or Asamiya is the language spoken by the natives of the state of Assam in northeast India. It is also the official language of Assam. ...













