Top Qs
Timeline
Chat
Perspective
Dehan dialect
Dialect of Assamese From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Remove ads
Dehan, Dewan, Dheyan, Dhiyan or Cachari dialect is a regional variety of Assamese, spoken mainly in the Cachar district of Barak valley.[3][4][5] More specifically, Dehan speakers are mainly found in ten villages in the eastern part of Barak river namely Horinagar, Japirbon, Leburbon, Gororbon, Dewan (Labok) or Dewan Bosti, Narayanpur, Larchingpar, Thaligram, Lakkhichora, and Digli. Though Dehan speakers are located in the same district, however, they are scattered in different places. Out of ten villages, Japirbon is the biggest and the populous one.[6]
Remove ads
Other than Assamese, Dehan shares its lexical items and linguistic features with Sylheti and Bishnupriya Manipuri as well, which is due to long language contact apart from being closely related. Dehan is closely related to the Kamrupi and Standard dialects of Assamese.[7][8]
Remove ads
History
Among the communities of Barak valley, the Dehans are one of the early settlers as their settlement dates back to 16th century. They entered Cachar during Chilarai’s conquest of Cachar plains, but some of them didn't return to Brahmaputra valley and made Cachar their permanent home. Chilarai campaigned through Maibong, Manipur, Jaintia, Srihatta and Tripura and finally the plains of Cachar were annexed to the Koch kingdom as Khaspur kingdom in 1562. Later the Koch principality in Cachar was reduced to a small zamindari in and around Khaspur.[9]
The Koch-Rajbongshis of Barak valley are better known as Dehans. They initially had their settlements around Khaspur but later, owning to different socio-political compulsions, they had to branch off to different villages.[10]
Remove ads
Morphology
Summarize
Perspective
Pronouns
Grammatical cases
1 = Used after vowel-ending words.
Remove ads
Sample text
Summarize
Perspective
Remove ads
Notes
Reference
Wikiwand - on
Seamless Wikipedia browsing. On steroids.
Remove ads