Assamese

Assamese
Description

Assamese 


Assamese

Assamese is the easternmost member of the Indo-Aryan branch of the Indo-European language family. It is spoken as a first language by 12.8 million people primarily in the Indian state of Assam and in the neighboring states of West Bengal, Meghalaya, and Arunachal Pradesh as well as in Bangladesh and Bhutan (Ethnologue).

Assam mapAssamese is thought to have evolved from an eastern branch of the Apabhramsha dialects spoken in India in the 6th-13th centuries. It first appeared in 14th-century documents, although there is  written evidence of the language in documents and poems of an earlier period.

Status

In 1826, Bengali became the official language of Assam as a result of the British occupation. However, Assamese was reinstated as the official language some fifty years later in the 1870’s. Today, Assamese is recognized as the official language of the Indian state of Assam. It is used in government, mass media, and in everyday communication.

Dialects

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Standard Assamese is based on the Central dialect. There is also an Assamese-based creole called Naga Pidgin. There are several mutually intelligible dialects of Assamese.

    • Central
    • Eastern
    • Kamrupi
    • Goalparia

 

Structure

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Sound system

 

Vowels
Assamese is rich in vowels. It has eight vowel phonemes, i.e., sounds that make a difference in word meaning. Vowels can be oral or nasal. Nasalization makes a difference in word meaning. In addition, Assamese has a wide variety of diphthongs and vowel sequences.

 
Front
Central
Back
Close
i
 
u
Close-mid
e
 
o
Open-mid
ε
 
ɔ
Open  
a
ɒ
  • /ε/ = e in bed
  • /ɔ/ = o in bog
  • /ɒ/ = a in father

 

Consonants
Assamese has twenty-one consonants, depending on the variety analyzed. The number of consonants is somewhat smaller than in other Indo-Aryan languages. Consonant clusters occur in word-initial, medial, and final positions. Word-initial clusters are restricted to sequences of consonant + semivowel, word-final clusters are restricted to sequences of homorganic nasal + consonants.

   
Bilabial
Apico-dental
Alveolar
Velar
Glottal
Stops voiceless unaspirated
p
t
 
k
 
aspirated
 
 
Stops voiced unaspirated
b
d
 
g
 
aspirated
 
 
Fricatives voiceless    
s
x
h
voiced    
z
   
Nasals  
m
 
n
ŋ
 
Lateral  
……x
l
     
Flap    
r
     
Semi-vowels  
w
       
  • There is a contrast between aspirated versus unaspirated voiceless and voiced stops, e.g., /p – pʰ, t – tʰ, k – kʰ, b – bʰ, d – dʰ, g – gʰ/. Aspirated consonants are produced with a strong puff of air.
  • Most consonants can be geminated (doubled).
  • There are no retroflex consonants common to other Indo-Aryan languages.
  • The voiceless velar fricative /x/ is atypical of Indo-Aryan languages. It resembles the last consonant in Scottish pronunciation of Loch.
  • /ŋ/ = ng in song

 

Stress
Stress can fall on any syllable of a word. As a result, words that are otherwise identical, can have a different meaning, depending on the position of stress.

 

Grammar

Assamese grammar is very similar to that of other Indo-Aryan languages. Like all these languages, Assamese is agglutinative, i.e., it adds suffixes to roots to build words and to express grammatical relations.

Nouns and adjectives 
Assamese nouns are marked for the following grammatical categories:

  • number: singular and plural
  • gender: masculine, feminine
  • case: nominative, accusative, genitive, dative, instrumental, locative. All cases are marked by postpositions. Assamese has preserved the case-marking of agents of transitive verbs, but unlike other Indo-Aryan languages, it marks transitive agents and some intransitive agents in all tenses.
  • There is a strong system of classifiers which have different forms in the singular and plural.
  • There is a well-developed system of honorifics that cover formal and informal relationships in a variety of social situations.
  • Adjectives are not marked for gender.

 

Verbs
Verbs agree with their subjects (in the active voice), or with their objects (in the passive voice) in person, number and gender. Verbs have the following grammatical categories:

  • person: 1st, 2nd, 3rd
  • number: singular and plural
  • tense: present, past, future
  • aspect: imperfective and perfective
  • mood: indicative, imperative, subjunctive, conditional;
  • voice: active, passive
  • negation is marked by a prefix added to the verb root.

 

Word order
The normal word order in Assamese is Subject – Object – Verb. Modifiers precede the nouns they modify. Indirect objects precede direct objects.

 

Vocabulary

The basic vocabulary of Assamese is Sanskrit in origin, but over the years Assamese has borrowed words from Hindi, English, Bengali, and other neighboring languages. Click hereto see some basic Assamese words.

Below are Assamese numerals 1-9 in Latin transcription. Click hereto see them written in Assamese script.

1
2
3
4
5
6
7
8
9
ek
dui
tini
cār
pāc
cay
xāt
āt
na

 

Writing

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Assamese is written in the Assamese script, a version of the Bengali script, a syllabic alphabet in which all consonants have an inherent vowel which has two different pronunciations or which may be silent. The Assamese alphabet contains 11 symbols for vowels and 54 for consonant+vowel syllables plus other symbols. Click here to learn more about the Assamese alphabet

 

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  1. Swipe in from the right edge of the screen, tap Settings, and then tap Change PC settings. (If you're using a mouse, point to the lower-right corner of the screen, move the mouse pointer up, click Settings, and then click Change PC settings.)
  2. Tap or click Time and language, and then tap or click Region and language, and then tap or click Add a language.
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  1. Swipe in from the right edge of the screen, tap Settings, and then tap Change PC settings. (If you're using a mouse, point to the lower-right corner of the screen, move the mouse pointer up, click Settings, and then click Change PC settings.)
  2. Tap or click Time and language, and then tap or click Region and language.
  3. Tap or click the language that you want to see Windows in, and then tap or click Set as primary. The Will be display language after next sign-inmessage will appear under the language.
  4. Tap or click Set as primary to move the language to the top of the list. If the language can become your Windows display language, you'll see Will be display language after next sign-in appear under the language.
  5. Sign out of Windows, and then sign back in. When you change your primary language, your keyboard layout might also change. When signing back in to Windows, make sure you're using the right keyboard layout for entering your password. Otherwise, you might not be able to sign in. You can change your keyboard layout on the sign-in screen by tapping or clicking the language abbreviation button in the lower-right corner.

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Whenever you add a language, a keyboard layout or input method is added so you can enter text in the language. If you want to use a different keyboard layout or input method, you can add a new one or switch between the ones you have. Add a keyboard layout or input method for a language

  1. Swipe in from the right edge of the screen, tap Settings, and then tap Change PC settings. (If you're using a mouse, point to the lower-right corner of the screen, move the mouse pointer up, click Settings, and then click Change PC settings.)
  2. Tap or click Time and language, and then tap or click Region and language.
  3. Tap or click the language you want to add a keyboard to, and then tap or click Options.
  4. Tap or click Add a keyboard, browse the input method list for the one you want to use, and then tap or click it.

Switch between keyboard layouts or input methods You can enter text with different keyboard layouts or input methods by switching between them. There are a few different ways to switch between keyboard layouts or input methods:

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Windows Install or change a display language

You can change the language Windows uses to display text in wizards, dialog boxes, menus, and other items in the user interface. Some display languages are installed by default, while others require you to install additional language files.
Hide all To install a display language To install a Language Interface Pack (LIP), double-click the file to open the setup program. To install a language pack, follow these steps:
  1. Open Region and Language by clicking the Start button  , clicking Control Panel, clicking Clock, Language, and Region, and then clicking Region and Language.
  2. Click the Keyboards and Languages tab.
  3. Under Display language, click Install/uninstall languages, and then follow the steps. If you're prompted for an administrator password or confirmation, type the password or provide confirmation. Note: The Display language section will be visible only if you have already installed a Language Interface Pack or if your edition of Windows supports a language pack. Language packs are available only in Windows 7 Ultimate and Windows 7 Enterprise.  To change your display language When you change the display language, the text in menus and dialog boxes for some programs might not be in the language that you want. This happens because the program might not support Unicode. 
  1. Open Region and Language by clicking the Start button  , clicking Control Panel, clicking Clock, Language, and Region, and then clicking Region and Language.
  2. Click the Keyboards and Languages tab.
  3. Under Display language, choose a language from the list, and then click OK. Note: If you don't see the list of display languages, you need to install additional language files. 

Change your keyboard layout

  1. On the Language bar, click the Input language button, and then select an input language.   
  2. Click the Keyboard layout button, and then select a keyboard layout.
Note: If you don't see the Language bar, right-click the taskbar, point to Toolbars, and then click Language bar. To change the keyboard layout on the Welcome screen On the Welcome screen, click the Keyboard layout button, and then select a keyboard layout. Note: If you don't see the Keyboard layout button, you might not have more than one input language, or your regional and language settings might not be applied to reserved accounts.