Oriya ଓଡ଼ିଆ odiā Spoken in India Region Orissa Total speakers 31 million (1996) Language family Indo-European Indo-Iranian Indo-Aryan Eastern Group Oriya group Oriya Writing system Oriya script Official status Official language in Orissa Regulated by No official regulation Language codes ISO 639-1 or ISO 639-2 ori ISO 639-3 ori Linguasphere – Distribution of native Oriya speakers in India This page contains Indic text. Without rendering support you may see irregular vowel positioning and a lack of conjuncts. More... Oriya or Odia (ଓଡ଼ିଆ oṛiā) is an Indian language, belonging to the Indo-Aryan branch of the Indo-European language family. It is mainly spoken in the Indian state of Orissa. The language is also one of the many official languages in India. Contents 1 Overview 1.1 Oriya language in neighbouring states and in other linguistics regions 1.2 Oriya language in foreign countries 1.3 Major dialects 2 History 2.1 Ancient Form of Oriya Language in 2nd Century BC Rock edict King Ashoka 2.2 Charyapada of 8th Century and its affinity with Oriya language 2.3 Poet Jayadeva's literary contribution 3 Literature 4 Phoneme inventory 5 Morphology 6 See also 7 Bibliography 8 Further reading 9 References 10 External links Overview Oriya is the predominant language of Orissa (now officially known as Odisha), where Oriya speakers comprise around 83.33% of the population according to census surveys. Oriya language in neighbouring states and in other linguistics regions Outside Orissa, there are also significant Oriya-speaking populations in other linguistic regions, such as the Midnapore District of West Bengal, the Singhbhum, Seraikela Kharsawan district of Jharkhand, the Srikakulam, Vizianagaram & Vishakhapatnam District of Andhra Pradesh,eastern districts of Chhattisgarh state. Due to the increasing migration of labour, the west Indian state of Gujarat also has a significant Oriya speaking population with Surat being the second largest Oriya-speaking city in India. The Oriya-speaking people are also found in significant numbers in the cities of Vishakhapatnam, Hyderabad, Pondicherry, Bangalore, Chennai, Goa, Mumbai, Raipur, Jamshedpur, Baroda, Ahmedabad, New Delhi, Kolkata, Kharagpur and Guwahati in India. Oriya language in foreign countries The diasporic Oriyas constitute sizeable number in several countries around the world. They are significant in number in countries such as Bangladesh, Indonesia, Java, Sumatra and Bali and in the western countries such as United States, Canada, Australia and England. Oriyas are regarded as one of the ‘Transnational Ethnic Indian Groups’. In India, the language is spoken by over 31 million people, and globally over 45 million speak Oriya. It is one of the official languages of India and the major language of Orissa. Oriya language has spread to the other parts of the globe such as Burma, Malaysia, Fiji, Indonesia, Java, Sumatra, the USA, UK, Canada, Australia, Sri Lanka, Pakistan and UAE. Major dialects Midnapori Oriya: (spoken in the Midnapore District of West Bengal) Singhbhumi Oriya: Spoken in East Singhbhum, West Singhbhum and Saraikela-Kharsawan district of Jharkhand Baleswari Odia (Oriya) : (spoken in Baleswar, Bhadrak and Mayurbhanj district of Orissa) Ganjami Odia (Oriya):(spoken in Ganjam and Gajapati districts of Orissa & Srikakulam district of Andhra Pradesh) Kalahandia Language or Kalahandia Oriya:Spoken in Kalahandi district of Orissa Desiya Oriya: Spoken in Koraput, Rayagada, Nowrangpur and Malkangiri Districts of Orissa and in the hilly regions of Vishakhapatnam, Vizianagaram District of Andhra Pradesh. Sambalpuri oriya : Spoken in Sambalpur, Bargarh, Jharsuguda, Debagarh, Bolangir, Subarnapur, Boudh and Sundargarh districts of Orissa and by some people in Raigarh, Mahasamund, Raipur districts of Chhattisgarh state. Bhatri:Spoken in South-western Orissa and eastern-south Chhattisgarh.

In search of the roots of his ancestors
His friend confirmed that that the script was written in Oriya language. Revelation The revelation made Ramroom Jugurnauth so desperate to know his roots and he embarked upon an investigation on his own. He landed in Mahatama Gandhi Institute of Library ...
http://www.hindu.com/2011/03/02/stories/2011030252250300.htm

Korean Maithili Malayalam Marathi Oriya Portuguese Polish Punjabi
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Oriya Language

The language is also one of the many official languages in India. ... Oriya, also known as Odia, is the predominant language of Orissa (now unofficially known as Odisha), where ...
Oriya is written with the Oriya script.The Oriya spoken in undivided Cuttack, Kendrapara, Puri, and Dhenkanal district is known as Mughalbandi Oriya or Standard Oriya with little variance. History Oriya is an Eastern Indo-Aryan language belonging to the Indo-Aryan language family. It also is the closest language to Sanskrit in terms of pronunciation. It is thought to be directly descended from the Prakrit known as Purva Magadhi that was spoken in eastern India over 1,500 years ago. It bears a very strong resemblance to the Bengali, Maithili, and Assamese. Of all the languages spoken in eastern India, Oriya appears to be the least influenced by Persian and Arabic. The history of the Oriya language is divided into: Old Oriya (7th century-1200): The origin of the Oriya literature can be traced to "Bauddha Gana O Doha", otherwise known as Charyapada written by the Buddhist Siddhas of Orissa. The Oriya language begins to appear in inscriptions with Oriya scripts in temples, copper plates, palm-leaf manuscripts etc. Traces of Oriya words and expressions have been found in inscriptions dating from the 7th century AD. For example, the Oriya word କୁମ୍ଭାର /kumbha:rɔ/ ‘potter’ occurs in a copperplate inscription ‘belonging to a date not later than the 7th century AD’. Similarly, in inscriptions of 991 AD, Oriya words like ଭିତୁରୁ /bhituru/ ‘from inside’ and ପନ୍ଦର /pɔndɔrɔ/ ‘fifteen’ can be found. ‘An Oriya Passage’ also has been found in another inscription of about 715 AD. Early Middle Oriya (1200–1400): The earliest use of prose can be found in the Madala Panji or the Palm-leaf Chronicles of the Jagannatha temple at Puri, which date back to the 12th century. Middle Oriya (1400–1700): Mahabharat, Chandi Puran, Vilanka Ramayan of Shudramuni Sarala Das. Arjuna Das, a contemporary to Sarala Dasa, wrote Rama-Bibha, a significant long poem in Oriya. Towards the 16th century, five poets emerged, though there are hundreds year gap in between them. But they are known as Panchasakha's as they believed to same school of thought, Utkaliya Vaishnavism. The poets are Balaram Das, Jagannath Das, Achyutananda Das, Ananta Das and Jasobanta Das. Late Middle Oriya (1700–1850): Usabhilasa of Sisu Sankara Das, the Rahasya-manjari of Deva-durlabha Dasa and the Rukmini-bibha of Kartikka Das were written. A new form of novels in verse evolved during the beginning of the 17th century when Ramachandra Pattanayaka wrote Haravali. Upendra Bhanja took a leading role in this period, his creations were Baidehisha Bilasa, Koti Brahmanda Sundari, Lavanyabati were proved landmark in Oriya Literature. Dinakrushna Das’s Rasokallola and Abhimanyu samanta Simhara’s Bidagdha Chintamani are prominent Kavyas of this time. Four major poets emerged in the end of the era are Kabi surya Baladeb Rath,Santha Kabi or Andha Muni Bhima Bhoi, Brajanath Badajena and Gopal Krushna Pattanaik. Modern Oriya (1850 till present day): The first Oriya printing typeset was cast in 1836 by the Christian missionaries which made a great revolutions in Oriya literature and language. Ancient Form of Oriya Language in 2nd Century BC Rock edict King Ashoka

ICSE exams from Feb 28
February 28, Monday, 11 am: English Language - English Paper I (2 hours ... Manipuri, Marathi, Nepali, Oriya, Punjabi, Sanskrit, Tamil, Telugu, Tibetan, Urdu (3 hours). Modern Foreign Languages: Arabic, Chinese, French, German, Korean, Modern Armenian ...
http://www.deccanherald.com/content/122628/icse-exams-feb-28.html

Oriya
http://www.yek.me.uk/languagegroups.html

Oriya Language,official Language of Orissa,Regional Languages ...

Indian Language, Literature and script guide providing detailed info on origins of the ... The Language History. The history of Oriya language is divided into Old Oriya (10th ...
The script in the edicts of Ashoka in 2nd century BC at Dhauli and Jaugada and the inscriptions of Kharavela in Hati Gumpha of Khandagiri give us the first glimpse of possible origin of Oriya language. From the point of view of language, the inscriptions of Hati Gumpha are near modern Oriya and essentially different from the language of the Ashokan edicts. A point has also been made as to whether Pali was the prevalent language in Orissa during this period. The Hati Gumpha inscriptions, which are in Pali, are perhaps the only evidence of stone inscriptions in Pali. This may be the reason why the German linguist Prof. Oldenburg mentioned that Pali was the original language of Orissa. Traces of Oriya words and expressions have been found in inscriptions dating from the 7th century AD. For example, the Oriya word କୁମ୍ଭାର /kumbha:rɔ/ ‘potter’ occurs in a copperplate inscription ‘belonging to a date not later than the 7th century AD’. Similarly, in inscriptions of 991 AD, Oriya words like ଭିତୁରୁ /bhituru/ ‘from inside’ and ପନ୍ଦର /pɔndɔrɔ/ ‘fifteen’ can be found. ‘An Oriya Passage’ also has been found in another inscription of about 715 AD.[1] Charyapada of 8th Century and its affinity with Oriya language The beginnings of Oriya poetry coincide with the development of Charya Sahitya, the literature thus started by Mahayana Buddhist poets. This literature was written in a specific metaphor named “Sandhya Bhasha” and the poets like Luipa, Kanhupa are from the territory of Orissa. The language of Charya was considered as Prakrita. In one of his poems, Kanhupa wrote: "Your hut stands outside the city Oh, untouchable maid The bald Brahmin passes sneaking close by Oh, my maid, I would make you my companion Kanha is a kapali, a yogi He is naked and has no disgust There is a lotus with sixty-four petals Upon that the maid will climb with this poor self and dance." The language of Kanhupa's poetry has strange resmblence with modern Oriya language. For example : "Ekaso padumo chowshathi pakhudi Tahin chadhi nachao dombi bapudi" Padumo (Padma:Lotus), Chowshathi (64), Pakhudi (petals) Tahin (There), Chadhi (rise) nachao (to dance) Dombi (a female of Orissa from untouchable caste), Bapudi (a very colloqual Oriya language to apply as 'poor fellow'). or "Hali Dombi,Tote puchhami sadbhabe. Isisi jasi dombi kahari nabe." These poems needn't require any translation in modern Oriya dilects. Poet Jayadeva's literary contribution

Ensuring safety in foundries
COIMBATORE: Foundries have started employing persons with knowledge of Hindi or Oriya to ensure safety on their shop floor ... units in the region as a platform to develop soft skills – language. V. Navaneethakrishnan, Chairman, National Safety Council ...
http://www.hindu.com/2011/03/01/stories/2011030159380200.htm


http://www.lokvani.com/lokvani/article.php?article_id=5691

Category:Oriya language - Wiktionary

Links related to Oriya language in sister projects at Wikimedia Commons ... This is the main category of the Oriya language, represented in Wiktionary by the code or. ...
Jayadeva was a Sanskrit poet. He was born in an Utkala Brahmin family of Puri in circa 1200 AD. He is most known for his composition, the epic poem Gita Govinda, which depicts the divine love of the Hindu deity Krishna and his consort, Radha, and is considered an important text in the Bhakti movement of Hinduism. About the end of the 13th century and the beginning of the 14th, the influence of Jayadeva's literary contribution changed the pattern of versification in Oriya. Literature The history of Oriya literature begins in the 14th century, with the great poet Sarala Dasa's works Chandi Purana and Vilanka Ramayana, in praise of the goddess Durga. Rama-bibaha, written by Arjuna Dasa, was the first long poem written in the Oriya language. The following era is termed the Panchasakha Age and stretches until the year 1700. The period begins with the writings of Shri Chaitanya whose Vaishnava influence brought in a new evolution in Oriya literature. Notable religious works of the Panchasakha Age include the Balarama Dasa, Jagannatha Dasa, Yasovanta, Ananta and Acyutananda. The authors of this period mainly translated, adapted, or imitated Sanskrit literature. Other prominent works of the period include the Usabhilasa of Sisu Sankara Dasa, the Rahasya-manjari of Deva-durlabha Dasa and the Rukmini-bibha of Kartikka Dasa. A new form of novels in verse evolved during the beginning of the 17th century when Ramachandra Pattanayaka wrote Haravali. Other poets like Madhusudana, Bhima, Dhivara, Sadasiva and Sisu Isvara-dasa composed another form called kavyas (long poems) based on themes from Puranas, with an emphasis on plain, simple language. However, during the Bhanja Age (also known as the Age of Riti Yuga) beginning with turn of the 18th century, verbally tricky Oriya became the order of the day. Verbal jugglery, obscenity and eroticism characterise the period between 1700–1850, particularly in the works of the era's eponymous poet Kabi Samrat Upendra Bhanja (1670–1720). Bhanja's work inspired many imitators of which the most notable is Arakshita Das. Family chronicles in prose relating religious festivals and rituals are also characteristic of the period. The first Oriya printing typeset was cast in 1836 by Christian missionaries. Although the handwritten Oriya script of the time closely resembled the Bengali and Assamese scripts, the one adopted for the printed typesets was significantly different, leaning more towards the Tamil script and Telugu script.

Gandhi varsity dreams of Hindi dictionary
We want to develop comparative literature and various dictionaries: Garo-Hindi, Oriya-Hindi." But will Rs 20 crore suffice ... Some felt the little attention given to the national language was a good beginning. "It's heartening that the government is ...
http://timesofindia.indiatimes.com/city/mumbai/Gandhi-varsity-dreams-of-Hindi-dictionary/articleshow/7598150.cms

Source
http://www.odiya.org/misc/vasa.shtml

Learn Oriya online

Offers basic words and phrases for learning Oriya language. Translation of Oriya language phrases available in English and 8 other Indian languages; ...
Oriya has a rich literary heritage dating back to the thirteenth century. Sarala Dasa who lived in the fourteenth century is known as the Vyasa of Orissa. He translated the Mahabharata into Oriya. In fact, the language was initially standardised through a process of translating classical Sanskrit texts such as the Mahabharata, Ramayana and Srimad Bhagabatam. The translation of the Srimad Bhagabatam by Jagannatha Das was particularly influential on the written form of the language. Oriya has had a strong tradition of poetry, especially devotional poetry. Other eminent Oriya poets include Kabi Samrat Upendra Bhanja and Kabi Surya Bala Dev Ratha. Prose in the language has had a late development. Three great poets and prose writers, Kabibar Radhanath Ray (1849–1908), Fakir Mohan Senapati (1843–1918) and Madhusudana Rao (1853–1912) made Oriya their own. They brought in a modern outlook and spirit into Oriya literature. Around the same time the modern drama took birth in the works of Rama Sankara Ray beginning with Kanci-Kaveri (1880). One of the prominent writers of 19th and 20th century was Mr. Muralidhar Mallick(1927–2002). His contribution to Historical novels is beyond words. He was last felicitated by the Sahitya Academy in the year 1998 for his contributions to Oriya literature. His son Dr.Khagendranath Mallick(1951-) is also a well known writer of the 20th and the 21st century. His contribution towards Poetry, Criticism, Essays, Story and novels is commendable. He was the former President of Utkal Kala Parishad and also former President of Orissa Geeti Kabi Samaj. Presently he is a member of the Executive Committee of Utkal Sahitya Samaj.Another illustrious writer of the 20th century was Mr. Chintamani Das. A noted academician, he was written more than 40 books on fiction, short stories, biographies, storybooks for children. Born in 1903 in Sriramachandrapur village under Satyabadi block, Chintamani Das is the only writer who has written biographies on all the five 'Pancha Sakhas' of Satyabadi namely Pandit Gopabandhu Das, Acharya Harihara, Nilakantha Das,Krupasindhu Mishra and Pandit Godabarisha. Having served as the Head of the Oriya department of Khallikote College, Berhampur,Chintamani Das was felicitated with the Sahitya Akademi Samman in 1970 for his outstanding contribution to Oriya literature in general and Satyabadi Yuga literature in particular. Some of his well-known literary creations are 'Bhala Manisha Hua', 'Manishi Nilakantha', 'Kabi Godabarisha', 'Byasakabi Fakiramohan', 'Usha', 'Barabati'.

24 litterateurs gets 'Sahitya Akademi Award 2010'
An autobiography and play writers won in Oriya and Santhali language category respectively. Awards in Telugu and Maithili language, which were declared a bit late, went to Syed Saleem for his novel 'Kaluthunna Poolathota' and Ushakiran Khan for her fiction ...
http://www.newkerala.com/news/world/fullnews-148447.html


http://www.ilts-utkal.org/

Oriya alphabet, pronunciation and language

The earliest known inscription in the Oriya language, in the Kalinga script, dates from 1051. ... Oriya, an Indo-Aryan language spoken by about 31 million people ...
20th century writers in Oriya include Pallikabi Nanda Kishore Bal (1875–1928), Gangadhar Meher (1862–1924), Chintamani Mahanti and Kuntala-Kumari Sabat Utkala-Bharati, besides Niladri Dasa and Gopabandhu Das (1877–1928). The most notable novelists were Umesa Sarakara, Divyasimha Panigrahi, Gopala Praharaja and Kalindi Charana Panigrahi. Sachi Kanta Rauta Ray is the great introducer of the ultra-modern style in modern Oriya poetry. Others who took up this form were Godabarisa Mohapatra, Dr Mayadhara Manasimha, Nityananda Mahapatra and Kunjabihari Dasa. Prabhasa Chandra Satpathi is known for his translations of some western classics apart from Udayanatha Shadangi, Sunanda Kara and Surendranatha Dwivedi. Criticism, essays and history also became major lines of writing in the Oriya language. Esteemed writers in this field were Professor Girija Shankar Ray, Pandit Vinayaka Misra, Professor Gauri Kumara Brahma, Jagabandhu Simha and Hare Krushna Mahatab. Oriya literature mirrors the industrious, peaceful and artistic image of the Oriya people who have offered and gifted much to the Indian civilization in the field of art and literature. Now Writers Manoj Das's creations motivated & inspired people towards a possitive lifestyle .Distinguished prose writers of the modern period include Fakir Mohan Senapati, Madhusudan Das, Godabarisha Mohapatra, Kalindi Charan Panigrahi, Surendra Mohanty, Manoj Das, Kishori Charan Das, Gopinath Mohanty, Rabi Patnaik, Chandrasekhar Rath, Binapani Mohanty, Jagadish Mohanty, Sarojini Sahoo, Yashodhara Mishra, Ramchandra Behera, Padmaja Pal. But it is poetry that makes modern Oriya literature a force to reckon with. Poets like Kabibar Radhanath Ray, Sachidananda Routray, Guruprasad Mohanty, Soubhagya Misra, Ramakanta Rath, Sitakanta Mohapatra , Rajendra Kishore Panda, Pratibha Satpathy have made significant contributions towards Indian poetry. Phoneme inventory Oriya has 28 consonant phonemes and 6 vowel phonemes. Vowels   Front Back High i u Mid e o Low a ɔ Consonants   Labial Dental Alveolar Retroflex Palatal Velar Glottal Voiceless stops p pʰ t̪ t̪ʰ   ʈ ʈʰ t͡ʃ t͡ʃʰ k kʰ   Voiced stops b bʱ d̪ d̪ʱ   ɖ ɖʱ d͡ʒ d͡ʒʱ ɡ ɡʱ   Voiceless fricatives     s       h Nasals m   n ɳ       Liquids     l, r ɭ       Morphology

Ek Saal Baad’ released
"Though an Oriya, Nand has an excellent command of Hindi language," Udgata said. Nand has also written another book in Hindi, 'Viraasat', and two books in English, 'Remix of Orchid' and 'In Harness'.
http://timesofindia.indiatimes.com/city/patna/Ek-Saal-Baad-released/articleshow/7578644.cms

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Learn to speak the basics of 26 Indian languages. Offers useful words and phrases in Bengali, Gujarati, Hindi, Kannada, Malayalam, Marathi, Oriya, Punjabi, Sinhala, ...
Morphological rules and structure of the Oriya language are peculiar. Morphemes in Oriya have unique characteristics and different from rules of Sanskrit and Hindi. See also Oriya script Oriya literature Oriya people Languages of India Kalahandia Language Sambalpuri Language Languages with official status in India List of Indian languages by total speakers Brahmic family of scripts Madala Panji Laxmi Puran Bibliography Neukom, Lukas and Manideepa Patnaik. 2003. A grammar of Oriya. (Arbeiten des Seminars für Allgemeine Sprachwissenschaft; 17). Zürich: Seminar für Allgemeine Sprachwissenschaft der Universität Zürich. ISBN 3-9521010-9-5 Further reading Ghosh, A. (2003). An ethnolinguistic profile of Eastern India: a case of South Orissa. Burdwan: Dept. of Bengali (D.S.A.), University of Burdwan. Masica, Colin (1991). The Indo-Aryan Languages. Cambridge Language Surveys. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press. ISBN 978-0-521-29944-2 Mohanty, Prasanna Kumar (2007). The History of: History of Oriya Literature (Oriya Sahityara Adya Aitihasika Gana). References External links Oriya language edition of Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia Oriya language test of Wiktionary at Wikimedia Incubator Romanised to Unicode Oriya transliterator Unicode Entity Codes for the Oriya Script Free/Open Source Oriya Computing Rebati project [2] A Comprehensive English-Oriya Dictionary (1916–1922), available free at Google Books. ORB-TTGarima to Unicode Oriya Converter (Online) v · d · e (Official) Languages of India Union-level Official languages Hindi · English State-level Official languages Assamese · Bengali · Bodo · Chhattisgarhi · Dogri · English  · Garo · Gujarati · Hindi · Kannada · Kashmiri · Khasi · Kokborok · Konkani · Maithili · Malayalam · Manipuri · Marathi · Mizo · Nepali · Oriya · Punjabi · Sanskrit  · Santali · Sindhi · Telugu · Tamil · Urdu v · d · e Indo-Iranian languages  Indic (Indo-Aryan)  Old · Middle Old Sanskrit (Vedic · Classical) · Mitanni superstrate Middle Abahatta · Apabhraṃśa · Dramatic Prakrits (Magadhi · Maharashtri · Shauraseni) · Elu · Gāndhārī · Jain · Paisaci · Pāli · Prakrit  Modern Central Hindi Awadhi · Bagheli · Bambaiya Hindi · Brij Bhasha · Bundeli · Chhattisgarhi · Fiji Hindi · Haryanvi · Kannauji · Sansiboli · Sadhukaddi (early form) Urdu Dakhni · Rekhta (early form) Others Dhanwar Rai Eastern Bengali Chittagonian · Sylheti Others Angika · Assamese · Bhojpuri · Bishnupriya Manipuri · Chakma · Halbi · Hajong · Kayort · Kharia Thar · Magahi · Maithili · Majhi · Mal Paharia · Nahari · Oriya · Rajbanshi · Rohingya · Sadri Northern Garhwali · Kumaoni · Nepali (Palpa) · Potwari North western Punjabi Saraiki · Majhi Others Aer · Derawali · Dogri · Hindko · Kangri · Kutchi · Sindhi Southern Dhivehi · Konkani · Mahal · Marathi · Sinhala Western Bhil Bhili · Gamit Rajasthani Bagri · Goaria · Gojri · Jaipuri · Malvi · Marwari · Mewari · Dhatki (sociolect) Others Domari · Gujarati · Kalto · Khandeshi · Parkari Koli · Romani · Saurashtra  Iranian  Old · Middle Old Western Old Persian · Median Eastern Avestan · Old Scythian Middle Western Middle Persian · Parthian Eastern Bactrian · Khwarezmian · Ossetic (Jassic) · Sakan (Sacian) · Scythian · Sogdian  Modern Western Persian Aimaq · Bukhori · Dari · Dehwari · Dzhidi · Hazaragi · Iranian Persian · Judeo-Shirazi · Khuzestani · Larestani · Tajik Kurdish Kermanshahi · Kurmanji · Soranî · Laki Others Old Azari · Balochi · Bashkardi · Caspian · Central Iran · Dari (Zoroastrian) · Fars · Gilaki · Gorani · Harzandi · Juhuri · Kumzari · Luri · Bakhtiari Lori · Mazandarani (Gorgani) · Ormuri · Sangsari · Parachi · Semnani · Taleshi · Tajik · Tat · Tati · Zazaki Eastern Pamir Ishkashimi · Munji · Roshani (Roshni) · Shughni · Sarikoli · Wakhi · Yazgulami · Yidgha Others Bartangi · Hindukush group · Ishkashmi · Karakoram group · Khufi · Munji · Oroshori · Ossetic · Pashto · Sanglechi · Vanji · Waziri · Yaghnobi · Zebaki Unclassified Tangshewi  Other Indo-Iranian languages Dardic Dameli · Domaaki · Gawar-Bati · Kalami · Kalash · Kashmiri · Khowar · Kohistani · Nangalami · Palula · Pashayi · Shina · Shumashti · Torwali · Ushoji Nuristani Kamkata-viri Kamviri · Kata-vari · Mumviri Others Askunu · Kalasha-ala · Kamkata-viri · Tregami language · Vasi-vari Italics indicate extinct languages. v · d · eState of Orissa · Capital Bhubaneswar Topics History · Economy · Geography · Flora and Fauna · Culture · Arts · Tourism Districts


pitch for incorporating prosody in the output The classification on the silence region and the unvoiced regions are also studied to place these in proper places
http://www.ilts-utkal.org/tts.html

Oriya morphology - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Oriya morphology is the identification, analysis and description of the structure of morphemes and other units of meaning in the Oriya language. ...
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Two Bengali Testimonies Testimonies of New Life in Christ 1 Joddi s left Testimony Delivered
http://www.foundationsforfreedom.net/Topics/Language/India/Bengali.html

Oriya language -- Britannica Online Encyclopedia

Oriya language, Indo-Aryan language with some 32 million speakers. A language officially recognized, or "scheduled," in the Indian constitution, it ...
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Here are some examples of Samskrita texts written in various scripts
http://www.samskritabharati.org/sb/script-and-language

Oriya Language

Oriya Language - Informative & researched article on Oriya Language from Indianetzone, the largest free encyclopedia on India.
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Title FAQ on Seed Bill 2004 a hand book for the Farmer leaders to understand the Frequently Asked Questiona about the bill This is in Oriya language and not an exact translation of the
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