Tamil

Tamil
Description

Tamil

tamil
Nalvaravu – Welcome

Tamil (தமிழ்) belongs to the Southern branch of the Dravidian language family, spoken in southern India and northeastern Sri Lanka from prehistoric times. It is spoken as a native language by 61.5 million people in India, primarily in Tamil Nadu and neighboring states, and in northeastern Sri Lanka, as well as by 8 million second-language speakers (Ethnologue).

During the British rule of India, Tamil-speaking indentured laborers were sent to many parts of the British empire where they founded Tamil-speaking communities. Today, their descendants form sizeable Tamil-speaking populations in Singapore, Malaysia, Mauritius and South Africa. Tamil is also spoken in Bahrain, Fiji, Germany, Netherlands, Qatar, Reunion, Singapore, Thailand, United Arab Emirates, United Kingdom. The worldwide population of first-language speakers of Tamil is estimated at around 69 million people with as many as additional 8 million speaking it as a second language.(Ethnologue).

Status

India
Tamil is one of the 22 official languages and 14 regional languages of India. It is the official language of the state of Tamil Nadu.

Sri Lanka
Tamil is spoken by 3.8 million people in Sri Lanka. It is the national language of Sri Lanka along with Sinhalese (Ethnologue).

Malaysia
Tamil is spoken by 3.8 million people in Malaysia (Ethnologue),

Singapore
Tamil is one of the official languages of Singapore, along with English, Malay, and Mandarin. It isi spoken in Singapore by 111,000 people (Ethnologue).

Dialects

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The dialects of Tamil have evolved along three different dimensions. These dialects differ in phonology, grammar, and vocabulary.

Geographic Dialects

  • Sri Lanka (the most conservative dialect)
  • Northern
  • Western
  • Central
  • Eastern
  • Southern

 

Caste Dialects(reflecting social distinctions between various castes)

  • Brahmin
  • non-Brahmin

 

Diglossic Variations

  • high variety used in most writing, media, speeches and public lectures
  • low variety used in face-to-face communication, movies and some modern fiction.

 

 

Structure

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Sound system

 


The phonemes of modern standard Tamil include native sounds (‘low’ variety) and peripheral sounds that came from lexical borrowings (‘high’ variety). Both sets of sounds are used by educated speakers of Tamil. 

Vowels
Tamil has 5 short and 5 long native vowels. Vowel length makes a difference in word meaning. In the table below, vowel length is indicated by a macron over the vowel. Vowels in parentheses are peripheral, i.e., they are used exclusively in loanwords. In addition, there are two diphthongs /ai/ and /au/.

 
Front
Central
Back
Close
i, ī
 
u, ū
Close-mid
e, ē
(ə)
o, ō
Open-mid    
(ɔ)
Near-open
(æ)
   
Open  
a, ā
 
  • /æ/ = a in cat
  • /ə/ = a in about
  • /ɔ/ = o in bog

 

Consonants
Tamil has 16 consonants. Consonants in parentheses occur only in borrowed words. The consonant system is characterized by the following features:

  • a contrast between apical and retroflex consonants, e.g., /ṱ/ – /ʈ/. Apical consonants are produced with the tip of the tongue touching the roof of the mouth, whereas retroflex consonants are produced with the tongue curled, so that its underside comes in contact with the roof of the mouth;
  • a variety of nasal sounds;
  • limited occurrence of consonant clusters in initial position.

 

 
Bilabial
Labiodental
Apicodental
Alveolar
Retroflex
Postalveolar
Palatal
Velar
Stops voiceless
p
 
 
ʈ
   
k
  voiced
(b)
 
(ḓ)
 
(ɖ)
  ….xx
(g)
Fricatives                
Affricates voiceless         xx
   
  voiced          
   
Nasals
m
 
(ṋ)
n
(ɳ)
 
ɲ
ŋ
Trill      
r
       
Tap      
ɾ
       
Laterals    
 
ɭ
 
     
Approximants  
ʋ
.xx  
ɻ
 
j
 
  • /ʈ, ɖ, ɳ, ɭ, ɻ/ are retroflex consonants with no equivalents in English
  • /ṱ, ḓ, ṋ, ḽ / are pronounced with the tip of the tongue touching the back of the front teeth
  • /tʃ/ = ch in chop
  • /dʒ/ = j in job
  • /ɲ/ = first n in canyon
  • /ŋ/ = ng in song
  • /ʋ/ has no equivalent in English
  • /j/ = y in yet

 

Stress
Stress in modern Tamil is fixed on the first syllable of a word.

Grammar

Like other Dravidian languages, Tamil is agglutinative, i.e., it adds suffixes, one after another, to stems to form words and to express grammatical functions. Since there is no limit on the number of suffixes, some words in Tamil can be very long.

Nominals
This class of words includes common nouns, proper names, numerals, pronouns and some adjectives. They are inflected for the following categories:

  • eight cases: nominative, accusative, genitive, dative, locative, instrumental, ablative, and vocative
  • two numbers: singular and plural
  • two genders: rational and irrational. Rational nouns include humans and deities (women may be rational or irrational, depending on dialect); irrational nouns include animals, objects, and everything else. These classifications are not absolute. For instance, irrational forms can be used for humans in a pejorative sense.
  • There are no articles. Other devices are used instead, e.g., the numeral oru ‘one’ can function as an indefinite article.
  • Personal pronouns are marked for first and second person.
  • Prefixes, i, a, u, e act like demonstratives in English. For example, they can modify the word vali ‘way’ to produce ivvali ‘this way,’ avvali ‘that way,’uvvali ‘the medial (somewhere between this and that in English) way,’ and evvali ‘which way.’

 

Verbs
A typical Tamil verb consists of a verb base plus a grammatical suffix. The base consists of a stem and two suffixes: one for voice, and one for expressing causality.

  • Voice
    There are two voices. The affective voice indicates that the subject of the sentence undergoes or is the object of the action named by the verb stem. The effective voice indicates that the subject of the sentence directs the action referred to by the verb stem. These voices are not equivalent to the notions of transitivity or causation, or to the active-passive or reflexive-nonreflexive division of voices in Indo-European languages.
  • Tense
    Tamil has three simple tenses (present, past, and future). They are marked by simple suffixes. Perfectives are marked by compound suffixes.
  • Negative tense
    There is a special verb paradigm in which a negative-tense marker is suffixed to the verb stem forming a negative tense. Negation is expressed by negative particles alla and illa in final position.
  • Mood
    Tamil mood indicates whether the action of the verb is unreal, possible, potential, or real.
  • Attitude
    Attitude is expressed by auxiliary verbs to show the speaker’s feelings towards an event expressed by the verb. For instance, the attitude can be a pejorative opinion, antipathy, relief, etc.

 

Word order
The standard word order in Tamil is Subject-Object-Verb. The verb must always be at the end of the sentence, even though variation in the order of other sentence constituents is sometimes possible. Not all Tamil sentences have subjects, verbs, and objects, but the those elements that are present must still follow the Subject-Verb-Object order.

Vocabulary

Modern Tamil vocabulary is largely based on that of classical Tamil. This makes classical Tamil comprehensible to speakers of modern Tamil. The language has also retained some loanwords from Sanskrit, especially in the area of religion and spirituality. Tamil also has some loanwords from Persian and Arabic. Some modern technical terminology is borrowed from English, though attempts are being made to have a pure Tamil technical terminology. Technical dictionaries in Tamil are readily available.

There are lexical differences between Brahmin and non-Brahmin dialects, e.g., Brahmin word for ‘house’ is ām, whereas the non-Brahmin word is vītu.

Tamil uses compounding and reduplication to form new words. Compound nouns are extremely common, e.g., the noun maratt-ati-nizal ‘shadow at the base of the tree’ consists of maratt ‘tree’ + ʈai ‘base’ + ‘nizal’ shadow.’ In addition, there are numerous onomatopoeic words. Such words usually represents natural sounds, and many of them are reduplicated, e.g., muņumuņu ‘murmur’.

Below are a few basic words and phrases in Tamil given in romanization.

Hello vaṇakkam
Goodbye poiṭṭu varēṉ
Please thayavu ceythu
Thank you naṉṟi
Excuse me, sorry maṉṉikka vēṇṭukirēṉ
Yes

ām

No illai
Man ān
Woman peņ

 

Below are Tamil numerals 1-10 given in romanization.

1
2
3
4
5
6
7
8
9
10
oṉṟu
iraṇṭu
mūṉṟu
nāṉku
ainthu
āṟu
ēḻu
eṭṭu
oṉpathu
paththu

 

Writing

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Tamil has the greatest geographical spread and the richest and most ancient literature of all Dravidian languages, paralleled only by that of Sanskrit. It has an unbroken literary tradition of over two thousand years, during which time the written language has undergone relatively little change. As a result, classical literature is a part of everyday Tamil along with modern literature. The rich and varied Tamil literature includes an indigenous grammar that was created independently from that of Sanskrit. The earliest records of Tamil are inscriptions on stone dating back from 200 BC. Along with these inscriptions, there is a large body of literature, inscribed on palm leaves and transmitted orally, that goes back two thousand years.

The Tamil script is derived from a descendant of the ancient Brahmi script of India. It was designed to write literary Tamil that has changed little in the past thousand years, but it is not particularly well-suited for writing modern colloquial Tamil that has many loanwords from other languages. Attempts were made in the 19th century to create a writing system for the colloquial spoken language, but these efforts met with mixed success. The colloquial written language today can be found mostly in textbooks and in dialogs in literature.

Tamil is written horizontally from left to right, and its basic set of symbols consists of 18 consonants and 12 vowels. It is written with a syllabic alphabet in which all consonants have an inherent vowel. Diacritics, which can appear above, below, before or after the consonant, indicate change to another vowel or suppression of the inherent vowel. In contrast to many other Indic scripts, Tamil uses a reduced inventory of consonants. For example, there are no symbols for aspirated consonants since these sounds do not occur in Tamil. European punctuation is used.

Click here to learn more about the Tamil alphabet and the sounds represented by its symbols.

Tamil letters have rounded shapes, so the Tamil script is sometimes referred to as the “round alphabet”. This is due to the fact that writing was done by carving symbols on palm leaves with a sharp instrument which made it easier to produce carved lines than straight lines and angles.

Take a look at Article 1 of the Universal Declaration of Human Rights in Tamil script and in romanization.

உறுப்புரை 1
மனிதப் பிறிவியினர் சகலரும் சுதந்திரமாகவே பிறக்கின்றனர் ; அவர்கள் மதிப்பிலும், உரிமைகளிலும் சமமானவர்கள், அவர்கள் நியாயத்தையும் மனச்சாட்சியையும் இயற்பண்பாகப் பெற்றவர்கள். அவர்கள் ஒருவருடனொருவர் சகோதர உணர்வுப் பாங்கில் நடந்துகொள்ளல் வேண்டும்.
Maṉitap piṛaviyiṉar čakalarum čutantiramākavē piṛakkiṉṛaṉar; avarkaḷ matippilum urimaikaḷilum čamamāṉavarkaḷ. Avarkaḷ niyāyattaiyum maṉačāṭčiyaiyum iyaṛpaṇpākap peṛṛavarkaḷ. Avarkaḷ oruvaruṭaṉoruvar čakōtara uṇarvup pāṅkil naṭantukoḷḷal vēṇṭum.
All human beings are born free and equal in dignity and rights. They are endowed with reason and conscience and should act towards one another in a spirit of brotherhood.

Did You Know?

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These English words came from Tamil?

curry
from Tamil kari ‘sauce, relish for rice’
candy
possibly from Tamil kantu ‘candy’
catamaran
from Tamil kattu-maram ‘tied wood’, from kattu ‘tie’ + maram ‘wood, tree’
coolie
possibly from Tamil kuli ‘to hire’
ginger
possibly from ancient Dravidian inchiver, from inchi ‘root’
mango
from Tamil mankay, from man ‘mango tree’ + kay ‘fruit’
pariah
from Tamil paraiyar, plural of paraiyan ‘drummer’ (at festivals, the hereditary duty of members of the largest of the lower castes of southern India), from parai ‘large festival drum.’ Especially numerous at Madras, where its members supplied most of the domestics in European service. Applied by Hindus and Europeans to members of any low Hindu caste and even to outcastes. Meaning of ‘social outcast’ is first attested in 1819.

http://frontype.com/keyboard/Tamil-keyboard-layout.html

Most Popular keyboard for Download

Change your keyboard layout

  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.
  3. Browse for the language you want, and then tap or click it to add it to your language list.

Download and install a language pack

  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. If the language says Language pack available, tap or click Options. Note: If you don't see Language pack available, you might be able to download the language pack at the Download Center.
  4. Tap or click Download. The download process might take a while, depending on your PC and the size of the language pack. 

Set a language as your primary 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 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.

Change the keyboard layout or other method you use to type

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:

Change the default keyboard layout or input method

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.