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Asur language

Munda language spoken in India From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

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Asuri is an Austroasiatic language spoken by the Asur people, part of the Munda branch.[2] Asuri has many Dravidian loanwords due to contact with Kurukh.[3]

Quick Facts Asuri, Native to ...

Sociolinguistic

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The majority of Asuri speakers reside in the Gumla district of Chota Nagpur. In addition, there are smaller groups of Asuri speakers in Chhattisgarh, West Bengal, Odisha.[4]

Ethnologue states that Birjia is a dialect of Asuri, but also that there is a related language Birjia; it is not clear if these refer to the same thing. However, Anderson (2008:195), based on Prasad (1961:314), suggests that Birjia (Binjhia) may be an Indo-Aryan language, although the Birjia are an ethnic subgroup of the Asuri tribe, along with the Asur proper and the Agariya.

Majhwar is unclassified, but based on location and other clues, it may turn out to be a dialect of Asuri. If so, its 35,000 speakers (reported in 1995, out of an ethnic group of 175,000) would make it the most populous form of Asuri.

Asuri is considered to be an endangered language.[5] One important reason for its distinction as endangered is due to a lack of any written form of the language. It exists only as a spoken language There are a total of 31 phonemes in Asuri, made up of twenty-six "segmental" and five "supra-segmental" phonemes. Of the former, there are twenty-one consonants and five vowels.[5]

The Asur language is listed in UNESCO Interactive Atlas of the World's Languages in Danger. Using mobile radio, the Asur community, a Particularly Vulnerable Tribal Group(PVTG) in Jharkhand, has been spreading the popularity of the language within their geographical limits. News and entertainment programmes are broadcast on speakers at public places.[6]

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Geographical distribution

Ethnologue lists the following districts and states where Asuri is spoken.

Phonology

Vowels

Asuri lacks phonemic nasalization, so a nasalised vowel cannot affect word meaning. Nasalizations are consistently used in words borrowed from Hindi and in onomatopoeic words like words for animal sounds. No acoustic studies have ever been done focusing on Asuri vowel length, durations, quality, frequencies, correlated features, and syllable prominence neither.[7]

More information Front, Central ...

Consonants

Morphology

Person indexation

Asuri belongs to the Mundaric type of Kherwarian languages which allows a transitive verb to encode maximum two pronominal clitic markers.[8] The shorter forms of these person clitics only attach to the last open syllables.

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Tense, mood, aspect/aktionsart

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Voice-valency

More information Marker, Passive ...
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References

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