Dogri language
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
- Not to be confused with the Dogrib language.
Dogri डोगरी ḍogrī |
||||
---|---|---|---|---|
Spoken in: | India, Pakistan | |||
Region: | Jammu, Kashmir, Himachal Pradesh, Punjab | |||
Total speakers: | 2 million | |||
Language family: | Indo-European Indo-Iranian Indo-Aryan Central Zone Punjabi languages Dogri |
|||
Language codes | ||||
ISO 639-1: | none | |||
ISO 639-2: | doi | |||
ISO/FDIS 639-3: | variously: doi — Dogri (generic) dgo — Dogri (specific) xnr — Kangri |
|||
|
Dogri is an Indic language spoken by some two million people in South Asia, chiefly in the Jammu region of Jammu and Kashmir but also in Punjab, Himachal Pradesh, other parts of Kashmir and elsewhere. Dogri speakers are called Dogras. Dogri has in the past been widely considered a dialect of Punjabi, but it has taken on a literary life of its own. Recently Dogri was recognized as a scheduled language in the Indian constitution. Amir Khusrao was the first person to record the existence of Dogri as a distinct North Indian dialect, in the 14th century.
Dogri was recognized as a scheduled language in the Indian constitution (one hundreth amendment) on 22 December 2003, which has been remembered as Red Letter Day in the history of Dogri.[1]
Dogri is one of the state languages of the Indian state of Jammu and Kashmir. It is written either in Devanagari, or in the Nasta'liq form of the Perso-Arabic script.
Padma Sachdev is a noteworthy modern Dogri poet; she has been rewarded for her work by the Sahitya Akademi.
[edit] See also
[edit] References
- Gopal Haldar. 2000. Languages of India. National Book Trust, New Delhi.
- The Dogri Language, article by Ved Kumari Ghai
|
|||
Indo-Aryan | Sanskrit: Vedic Sanskrit - Classical Sanskrit | Prakrit: Pāli - Magadhi | Hindustani (Registers: Hindi, Urdu) | Bengali (Dialects: Chittagonian, Sylheti) | Angika | Assamese | Bhojpuri | Bishnupriya Manipuri | Dhivehi | Dogri | Gujarati | Konkani | Mahl | Maithili | Marathi | Mitanni | Nepali | Oriya | Punjabi | Romani | Sindhi | Sinhala | ||
Iranian | Avestan | Persian: Old Persian - Middle Persian (Pahlavi) - Modern Persian (Varieties: Farsi, Dari, Tajik) Bukhori | Bactrian | Balochi | Dari (Zoroastrianism) | Gilaki | Kurdish | Mazandarani | Ossetic | Pamir | Pashto | Saka | Sarikoli | Scythian | Shughni | Sogdian | Talysh | Tat | Wakhi | Yaghnobi | Zazaki | | ||
Dardic | Dameli | Domaaki | Gawar-Bati | Kalasha-mun | Kashmiri | Khowar | Kohistani | Nangalami | Pashayi | Palula | Shina | Shumashti | ||
Nuristani | Askunu | Kalasha-ala | Kamkata-viri | Tregami | Vasi-vari |