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Majhi dialect

Dialect of Punjabi From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Majhi dialect
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Majhi (Shahmukhi: ماجھی; Gurmukhi: ਮਾਝੀ; Punjabi: [mä˦d̆.d͡ʒi˨][1]), also known as Central Punjabi, is the most widely-spoken dialect of the Punjabi language,[2] natively spoken in the Majha region of Punjab in present-day Pakistan and India. The dialect forms the basis of Standard Punjabi.

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Dialects of Punjabi

The native speakers of the dialect are known by the demonym 'Majhail'.

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Subdialects and geographic distribution

There are various subdialects of Majhi spoken across Majha. Although each city or district speaks slightly differently from the next, there are a few major categories of Majhi subdialects.

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Notable features

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Personal pronouns

Majhi does not use the second-person oblique pronoun tē̃.

In urban Majhi, the plural oblique pronouns tusā̃ and asā̃, as well as the ablative pronouns, are sometimes lost.

Pronominal suffixes

One of Majhi's most noteworthy features is the usage of pronominal suffixes, which it shares with Western Punjabi.

Pronominal suffixes are auxiliary replacements of the copula which act like pronouns. They function as a particular thematic role and agree to it in person and number (as a pronoun would).

The thematic/syntactic roles a pronominal suffix can function as are:

Majhi uses pronominal suffixes for the second and third persons and for both present and past tense.[3]

More information Tense, Present ...

Examples in perfect transitive verbs (marking the ergative agent):

More information Tense, Person ...

Copula

Oftentimes, the two plural present-tense pronominal suffixes will entirely overtake the regular copula in Majhi.

This is most common with the third-person ne (ਨੇ / نے) or nẽ (ਨੇਂ / نیں), used instead of han. It has become so widespread that it is now regarded as a fundamental characteristic of Majhi, used to distinguish it from other dialects.

In some Majhi varieties, particularly in areas like Lahore and Gurdaspur, it is also common with the second-person je (ਜੇ / جے), used instead of ho.

More information Phrase, Standard Punjabi ...

- Alternate auxiliary verbs[clarification needed]

First person singular ā̃ or (ਆਂ, ਜੇ / آں، جے) is used. E.g. mẽ karnā ʷā̃ / (ਮੈਂ ਕਰਨਾ ਆਂ, ਮੈਂ ਕਰਨਾ ਜੇ / میں کرنا آں، میں کرنا جے)

Third person singular ī or è (ਏ, ਵੇ, ਈ / اے، وے، ای) is used. E.g. ṓ kardā ī (ਉਹ ਕਰਦਾ / اوہ کردا ای)

Other Features

In Majhi, more often in certain regions, the s sound shifts to an h. This causes words like asī (ਅਸੀਂ/ اسیں), asāḍā (ਅਸਾਡਾ / اساڈا) and pēse (ਪੈਸੇ / پیسے), to be heard as ahī̃, ahāḍā and pēhe respectively. This h is distinguished from the regular h from its lack of tonality.

hē(gā) sī is used instead of sīgā.[clarification needed]

Adverbial pronouns

Majhi uses the kiññ and kivẽ classes of adverbial pronouns of manner, which, at their base, are common with Western Punjabi dialects.

More information Adverbial pronoun, Malwai ...

- Use of -na verb ending instead of -da ending for first-person and second-person point of view

More information Phrase, Standard Written Punjabi ...

Examples of Majhi

More information Sentence, Transliteration ...
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Subdialectal differences

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Eastern Majhi

Eastern Majhi refers to the subdialect native to region of Majha east of Lahore, i.e. the Amritsar and Tarn Taran districts and surrounding areas. It is also spoken by the descendants of those who migrated out of these areas.

The subdialect has considerable Doabi influence, and often uses the past-tense inflection of the verb ḍahiṇā (ਡਹਿਣਾ / ڈہݨا) to form continuous tenses, rather than pēṇā (ਪੈਣਾ/ پَیݨا) which is used by most other Majhi subdialects and Punjabi dialects.

More information Phrase, Eastern Majhi ...

Northwestern Majhi

Northwestern Majhi refers to the subdialect spoken in the northwestern side of the Majha region in Pakistan, primarily in the districts of Gujrat, Jhelum, and Bhimber.

In these areas, word-initial 'h' is fainter and more tonal, eventually disappearing in upper Punjabi dialects like Pahari-Pothwari and Hazarewal Hindko, as well as Dogri. Words like hatth (ਹੱਥ / ہَتّھ) "hand" are said more as àtth.

Another notable difference is the use of the suffix instead of for indicative future tense.

More information Standard / Central Majhi, Northwestern Majhi ...

See also

Notes

  1. kàr, meaning "home", is often said as kār in Northwestern Majhi (spoken in Gujrat, Jhelum, and Bhimber districts) as the vowel is elongated.

References

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