Majhi language

From Bharatpedia, an open encyclopedia
Majhi
RegionNepal, India
EthnicityMajhi people
Native speakers
L1 44,800, L2 1,320 (worldwide)[1]
Devanagari
Language codes
ISO 639-3mjz
Glottologmajh1253

Majhi is an Indo-Aryan language spoken in parts of Nepal and formerly in some small pockets of neighboring India.[2]:1 The language is associated with the Majhi people, an ethnic group in those regions who dwell historically near the Saptakoshi River and its tributaries and elsewhere in central and eastern Nepal. The Majhi people generally subsist off of work associated with rivers, including fishing and ferrying.[2]:2 Majhi is written using the Devanagari writing system.[1]

Ethnologue classifies Mahji as a 6b threatened language. There are roughly 24,400 L1 speakers of Majhi in Nepal and roughly 46,120 L1 and L2 speakers of the language around the globe.[1] Most of the Majhi speakers in Nepal are bilingual with the more predominant Nepali language,[2]:2 and the latter language is replacing Majhi in use.[1] Majhi's lack of official status, use in education, in media, in print, etc. places the survival of the language in a precarious position.[2]:2

The last speaker in India, Thak Bahadur Majhi of Jorethang in Sikkim state, died in 2016.[3]

Phonology[edit]

Vowels[edit]

Majhi has a total of 13 vowels, five of which are diphthongs.[2]:6, 8

Front Central Back
High i u
High-mid e o
Low-mid ə

əː

Low a

N.B. Diphthongs in Majhi include: eu, əu, au, əi, oi.[2]:8 The vowels /ɜː, acː/ do not occur anywhere except in the word-final position while other vowels can appear in any position in a word.[2]:7

Consonants[edit]

Majhi has a total of 29 consonants, covering six different areas of articulation and seven different modes of articulation.[2]:9 In the chart below, symbols to the right are voiced, and those to the left voiceless.

Bilabial Dental Alveolar Palatal Velar Glottal
vl. vd. vl. vd. vl. vd. vl. vd. vl. vd. vl. vd.
Stops p

b

t

d

ʈ

ʈʰ

ɖ

ɖʱ

k

g

Affricates ts

tsʰ

dz

dzʱ

Fricatives s h
Nasals m n ŋ
Lateral l
Trill r
Glides w j

Syllable structure[edit]

Majhi allows consonant clusters to form in the onset but not the coda. However, researchers believe that further study on syllable structure is necessary to ascertain a fuller understanding of the syllable structure.[2]:17 When Majhi features two consonants in the onset, the second consonant will be a glide (/j, w/).[2]:13 Some examples of the syllable structure are included in the chart below.

Pattern Example Translation
CVC nun 'salt'
CCV hje 'this'
CCVC sjal 'jackal'
CV ṭe.ṭhi 'niece'[2]:17

Morphology[edit]

Affixation[edit]

Derivational affixation[edit]

Majhi uses affixation to derive words through nominalization, verbalization, and negation. For nominalizers and verbalizers, Majhi uses suffixation. For negation, Majhi uses prefixation. Examples are included in the chart below.

Example 1[2]:19 Example 2[2]:58 Example 3[2]:58 Example 4[2]:70
Function Nominalizer (from verb) Verbalizer (from noun) Verbalizer (from adjective) Negator (noun to noun)
Majhi Template:Interlinear Template:Interlinear Template:Interlinear Template:Interlinear

Inflectional affixation[edit]

Majhi uses morphemes to inflect words (specifically, to decline nouns and to conjugate verbs). Nouns are declined for case, number, and gender. Nouns are also declined for pronominal possessive suffixes, which indicate the possessor of the noun (see example below).[2]:43 Verbs are conjugated for person, number, tense, aspect, and mood.[2]:89

Example 1[2]:21 Example 2[2]:19 Example 3[2]:48
Function Noun declension Noun declension (with pronominal possessive suffix) Verb conjugation
Majhi Template:Interlinear Template:Interlinear Template:Interlinear

Other morphological processes[edit]

Compounding[edit]

Majhi can form new words by combining two roots. In the example below, combining the words for grandfather and grandmother yields the plural grandparents.[2]:22

First Root Second Root Combined New Word
adze adza adzeadza
'grandfather' 'grandmother' 'grandparents'

Reduplication[edit]

Majhi sometimes completely reduplicates a full noun, verb, adjective, or adverb form in order to add extra emphasis. For nouns, Majhi also adds a suffix "-e" to the first instance of the noun. For example, the noun "kapal" means 'head,' and, when it is reduplicated with the suffix as "kapal-e kapal," the combined phrase means 'all heads.'[2]:20 Verbs do not have such a suffix. For example, the verb "bəl-ni" means 'I said,' but, when reduplicated "bəl-ni bəl-ni," the combined reduplication would mean 'I said it (which I will definitely not change).'[2]:89 Adjectives can be reduplicated for emphasis in the same manner. For example, the adjective "lamo" means "long," and, when it is reduplicated as "lamo lmao," it means very long.[2]:54 Adverbs can be reduplicated in the same manner as adjectives. For example, the adverb "tshiṭo" means 'quickly,' and, when it is reduplicated as "tshiṭo tshiṭo," it means 'very quickly.'[2]:96

Particles[edit]

Mahji features several particles that perform various functions, including indicating questions, emphasis, and hearsay.[2]:73, 97 Mahji also shares some particles with Nepali.[2]:97 Examples of some Mahji particles are given below.

Question particle te[edit]

The particle te comes at the end of a sentence and indicates a question.[2]:97

Template:Interlinear

Contrastive, emphatic particle ta[edit]

Mahji uses the particle ta in order to provide an emphatic contrast.[2]:97

Template:Interlinear

Hearsay particle ni[edit]

Mahji uses the hearsay particle ni to indicate an uncertain secondhand knowledge.[2]:73

Template:Interlinear

Syntax[edit]

Standard word order[edit]

The basic word order of Majhi is SOV.[2]:111 This word order is fairly consistent across the language. Mahji is an in situ language for wh-questions and yes-no questions, meaning that it maintains its standard word order for questions.[2]:118 The three examples below illustrate this word order:

Declarative sentence[2]:85

Template:Interlinear

Wh-question[2]:119

Template:Interlinear

Yes-no question[2]:120

Template:Interlinear

Noun phrases and adpositional phrases[edit]

Possessee + possessor[edit]

With the possessee + possessor relationship (genitive modifiers), the possessor precedes the possessee.[2]:105

Template:Interlinear

Adposition + noun phrase[edit]

Majhi uses adpositions as analytical rather than synthetic markers.[2]:28 In the example below, the noun phrase also appears with a specific case (the genitive case) with this postposition.[2]:29

Template:Interlinear

Adverb placement[edit]

In Mahji, the adverb generally precedes the verb. For example, see below.[2]:96

Template:Interlinear

Notes[edit]

References[edit]

  1. 1.0 1.1 1.2 1.3 1.4 "Majhi". Ethnologue. Retrieved 2019-04-20.
  2. 2.00 2.01 2.02 2.03 2.04 2.05 2.06 2.07 2.08 2.09 2.10 2.11 2.12 2.13 2.14 2.15 2.16 2.17 2.18 2.19 2.20 2.21 2.22 2.23 2.24 2.25 2.26 2.27 2.28 2.29 2.30 2.31 2.32 2.33 2.34 2.35 2.36 2.37 2.38 Dhakal, Dubi Nanda (2014). A Grammar of Majhi. Munich: LINCOM EUROPA. ISBN 9783862885497.
  3. TNN (22 July 2016). "Last speaker of Majhi language dead | Vadodara News - Times of India". The Times of India. Retrieved 2021-04-15.{{cite web}}: CS1 maint: url-status (link)

Template:Eastern Indo-Aryan languages

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