North Central Bengali dialect
North Central Bengali or Varendrī (বরেন্দ্রী) is a dialect of the Bengali language,[1] spoken in the Varendra region (primarily consisting of the Rajshahi Division in Bangladesh and the Malda division in India). Varendri was classified by two Indian linguists; Suniti Kumar Chatterji and Sukumar Sen. It is also spoken in adjoining villages in neighbouring Bihar. Varendri is tonal, and its vocabulary and phonology have a great deal of influence from Maithili and other Bihari languages.
Varendri | |
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bôrendri | |
বরেন্দ্রী | |
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Native to | Bangladesh, India |
Region | Rajshahi, Malda |
Dialects | Bangladeshi variation Indian variation |
Bengali alphabet | |
Language codes | |
ISO 639-3 | – |
Glottolog | rajs1238 Rajshahi |
ComparisonEdit
Varendri is a dialect belonging to North Bengal. The standardised register of Bengali was chosen to be the dialect spoken in Nadia (West-Central Bengal). Examples:
- English: A man had two sons.
- English: (First person) will eat
- Standard Bengali: খাবো (khabo)
- Varendri: খাইমোঁ (khaimõ); খামোঁ (khamõ); খাইম (khaim)
- English: Money
- Standard Bengali: টাকা (taka)
- Varendri: টেকা (tæka)
ReferencesEdit
- ↑ বাংলা ভাষা ও উপভাষা, সুকুমার সেন, আনন্দ পাবলিশার্স [Bangla language and dialect, Sukumar Sen, Anand Publishers] (in Bengali).