Sylheti language

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Sylheti
সিলটী Silôţi
Total speakers: 10,300,000 
Language family: Indo-European
 Indo-Iranian
  Indo-Aryan
   Eastern Group
    Bengali-Assamese
     Sylheti 
Language codes
ISO 639-1: none

Sylheti (native name সিলটী Silôţi; Bengali name সিলেটী Sileţi) is the language of Sylhet, the north-eastern region of Bangladesh, and also spoken in parts of the North-East Indian states of Assam (the Barak valley) and Tripura (the North Tripura district). It is also spoken by a significant population in the other north-eastern states of India and amongst the large expatriate communities in the United Kingdom, United States, and countries of the Gulf States.

Sylheti is often either considered a dialect of Bengali (Bangla) or an Assamese dialect due to many similarities between the languages, and also often considered a separate language due to significant differences between them all and lack of mutual intelligibility. Given that Sylhet was part of the ancient kingdom of Kamarupa,[1] the language has many common features with Assamese, including the existence of a larger set of fricatives than other East Indic languages. According to Grierson,[2] "The inflections also differ from those of regular Bengali, and in one or two instances assimilate to those of Assamese". Indeed it was formerly written in its own script, Sylheti Nagari, similar in style to Kaithi but with differences, though nowadays it is almost invariably written in Bengali script.[3]

Sylheti is distinguished by a wide range of fricative sounds (which correspond to aspirated stops in closely-related languages such as Bengali), the lack of breathy voiced stops seen in many other Indic languages, word-final stress, and a relatively large set of loanwords from Arabic, Hindi and Persian. Sylheti is spoken by about 10 percent of Bangladeshis, but has affected the course of standard Bengali in the rest of the state.

[edit] History

[edit] Geographical distribution

Sylheti is the language of the Surma river valley region bordering what are today the nations of Bangladesh and India. Sylheti is spoken throughout Sylhet Division in Bangladesh (comprising the districts of Sylhet, Habiganj, Maulvi Bazar and Sunamganj). It is also spoken across the border in the Barak Valley region of Assam in India. The Bangladeshi diaspora community in the United Kingdom also speaks Sylheti, where about 95% of the people speak the dialect (estimated at 268,000 speakers), mostly concentrated in the east London boroughs. Many of these Sylhetis arrived in the UK since the 1960s and 70s.[4] There are over 10,000,000 [5] speakers of the language throughout the globe, including 8,000,000 speakers in Bangladesh.

Further information: Sylhet Division

[edit] Phonology

[edit] Writing system

The Sylheti language is written in the Sylheti Nagri script[1]. Sylhet has a rich heritage of literature in the Sylheti Nagri script going back at least 200 years. [2]. The Sylheti Nagri script includes 5 independent vowels, 5 dependent vowels attached to a consonent letter and 27 consonants. [3]. The Sylheti Nagri alphabet differs from the Bengali alphabet as it was derived from the Kaithi script of Bihar. [4].

Up to 1970's, the Sylheti Nagri script [5] was used to write the Sylheti language. The government of the newly formed Bangladesh discouraged it’s use in favour of the Bengali alphabet. Efforts to establish Sylheti as a modern language were vigorously opposed by the political and cultural dominance by successive Bangladeshi governments. [6]

[edit] References

^ Edward Gait, History of Assam, p274 ^ George Grierson, Language Survey of India, Vol II, Pt 1, p224 ^ "Sylheti Literature". Sylheti Translation And Research. Retrieved on 2007-04-24. ^ Hampshire School ^ Sylheti

[edit] External links


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