5 Marwari
5 Marwari
5 Marwari
KAKALI MUKHERJEE 1. INTRODUCTION Marwari is a speech of a community called Marwari (alternatively Marvari, Marwadi, Marvadi etc.) mainly in the state of Rajasthan of Indian Union. The language as well as the community is also found in the neighbouring state of Gujarat and in some adjacent areas of Pakistan. In Rajasthan the Marwari people live mainly in Jodhpur, Bikaner, Barmer, Nagaur, Pali and almost all the districts of Rajasthan.
1.1.
FAMILY AFFILIATION In Linguistic Survey of India by Sir George Abraham Grierson Marwari has
been attested as one of the dialects of Rajasthani language that belongs to the Central group of Inner Indo-Aryan languages. Rajasthani is comprised of Western, Central-Eastern, NorthEastern and South-Eastern dialect groups. Marwari is the principal member of Western Rajasthani dialect which is spoken in various forms in Marwar, Mewar, Eastern Sindh, Jaisalmer, South Punjab and north-west of Jaipur state. Jaipuri and Harauti mainly constitute the Central-Eastern Rajasthani whereas Mewati and Ahirwati comprise the north-eastern
Rajasthani group and Malvi being the principal member of South-eastern dialect meets Bundeli (a Western Hindi dialect) to its east and Gujarati to its west. The other member of this South-eastern group is Nimadi (LSI, Vol.IX Part II, pp 1-3). In Language Handbook on Mother tongues in Census by R.C. Nigam. Marwari has been classified as the principal dialect of Western Rajasthan spread along a wide area and also written as a common form of speech by the native speakers who are found spread along all over country. Marwari is known to have several traits showing affinity with Sindhi (1971, pp-162-163). Dr. L.P. Tessitori in his Notes on the Grammar of the Old Western Rajasthani with special reference to Apabhramsa and to Gujarati and Marwari has opined that Marwari language along with Gujarati is affiliated to Old Western Rajasthani which is the immediate off spring of the Sauraseni Apabhramsa (1914 -1916 ; p-1). Marwari is
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included in Wikipedia (the free encyclopaedia) as the largest member of Rajasthani cluster of western dialects of Hindusthani. However, in Indian Census Marwari has been appearing as a member of Rajasthani language till 1961. The treatment has undergone changes from 1971 census onwards when Marwari along with Rajasthani has been classified as one of the mother tongues grouped under Hindi language. 1.2. LOCATION According to Grierson, Marwari is bounded by the Eastern dialects of Rajasthani (of which Jaipuri is the Standard) on the east; on the south-east it is bounded by Malvi dialect of Rajasthani and a number of Bhili dialects; on the south-west it is bounded by Gujarati. On the west Marwari meets with Sindhi. And on the north-west Marwari merges into Punjabi and the Bangaru dialect of Western Hindi through Bagri (LSI Vol.IX Part-II, p-16). Presently, Marwari is spoken in the state of Rajasthan which is constituted of 32 districts according to 2001 census, being the latest published census report. It is spoken also in Maharashtra, Gujarat with considerable number of speakers. In the year of 1829 the word Rajasthan first came into use by Sir Colonel Tod in his well known book Annals and Antiquities of Rajasthan which gradually gained popularity and was consequently accepted by the Indian National Congress prior to Independence of India. The same has been accepted by the Government of India after Independence of the country. Rajasthan became a full fledged state on 1st November, 1956 through a process of state formation effected from 28 th February of 1948. The present Rajasthan state covers an area of 342,274 square kilomtres (Census of India, 2001, Primary Census Abstract) and is situated in the North-West direction of the country. As a state it is bounded by Uttar Pradesh state in the east and from east to south by Madhya Pradesh while the South-Western boundary is marked by the state of Gujarat. The west of Rajasthan meets the area of Sind (at present Sindh is beyond the territory of Independent India). Haryana and Punjab are the two states marked as the northern boundary of Rajasthan.
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Keeping this geographic surrounding of Rajasthan state in view it can be said that starting from east to west via south and from south to north via west, Marwari is bounded by the Hindi dialects gradually assimilating with Gujarati through Bhili/Bhilodi on its way from east to west and that from western tract to northern tract Marwari meets Sindhi, Lahnda and Punjabi. 1.3. SPEAKERS STRENGTH: Language - Mother Tongue - Bilingualism Till 1961 Census Marwari has been treated as a dialect of Rajasthani which has changed in subsequent Censuses. Since 1971 Census it has been classified and presented as a grouped mother tongue of Hindi one of the 22 Scheduled Languages of Indian Union - . According to latest Census of 2001, the Marwari is spoken by 79,36,183 speakers in India and they are majorly concentrated in the states of Rajasthan, Maharashtra and Gujarat. The following is the distribution of Marwari along with Rural-Urban break-up as per 2001 Census.
Total Male 4120598 3240288 Female 3815585 3038817 Person 5860397 5389868
Rural Male 3018075 2774550 Female 2842322 2615318 Person 2075786 889237
Maharashtra Gujarat Karnataka Madhya Pradesh West Bengal Andhra Pradesh Jharkhand
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The Marwari has been returned from all 32 districts of Rajasthan which is presented below in descending order :
State/District Rajasthan Barmer Jalor Jodhpur Pali Sirohi Ajmer Nagaur Jaisalmer Bikaner Jaipur Churu Jhunjhunun Sikar Bhilwara Ganganagar Hanumangarh Kota Rajsamand* Udaipur Total 6279105 1058704 1046963 883651 732307 718547 463544 341903 247690 234020 171656 93210 82814 52015 44103 38031 18006 10977 9268 6158 Male 3240288 559291 532176 459931 365972 366896 237349 175011 134044 123528 89935 47670 42328 26426 22498 20323 9511 5739 4665 3387 Female 3038817 499413 514787 423720 366335 351651 226195 166892 113646 110492 81721 45540 40486 25589 21605 17708 8495 5238 4603 2771
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Chittaurgarh Bundi Alwar Bharatpur Baran* Tonk Banswara Dungarpur Jhalawar Dausa* Sawai Madhopur Karauli* Dhaulpur
5166 5152 3515 2889 2666 2088 1539 938 772 551 176 78 8
2754 2731 1874 1533 1377 1018 896 558 424 309 83 47 4
2412 2421 1641 1356 1289 1070 643 380 348 242 93 31 4
1.4. BILINGUALISM Information on bilingualism in Marwari or any mother tongue grouped under Hindi has not been appearing in Indian Census since 1971 onwards as Marwari bilingual figures are clubbed with bilingual returns of Hindi language. Hence the information on
bilingual/trilingual returns of Hindi language include the information/returns of Marwari also in the published Census data from 1971-2001. The individual bilingual figures of Marwari last appeared in Indian census in 1961, according to which the bilingual returns of Marwari both in India and Rajasthan ar e as follows:
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India Language/ Mother Tongue Total Marwari Male Female Bilingual break up Total Male Female 101,800
290,032 188,232
The Major languages in which people are Bilingual 1. Marathi 104,712 (M-57,450; F-47,262) 2. Hindi - 90,439 (M-57,904; F-32,535) 3. English 44,979 (M-38,902 ; F-6,077) 4. Gujarati - 12,772 (M-9,144 ; F-3,628) 5. Urdu - 10,933 (M-8,010 ; F-2,923) 6. Kannada 7,411 (M 4,050 ; F-3,361) 7. Other languages 18,786 (M-12,772 ; F-6,014) [Census of India 1961 Vol.I, Part-1-c(ii) Language Tables c-VI Bilingualism pp-489-490] Rajasthan Language/ Mother Tongue Total Marwari Male Female Bilingual break up Total 54,039 Male 44,665 Female 9,374
The major languages in which people are bilingual 1. English 33,892 (M-29,191 ; F-4,701) 2. Urdu 9,476 (M-7,058 ; F-2,418)
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3. Gujarati 2,990 (M-2,594 ; F-396) 4. Marathi 636 (M-572 ; F-64) 5. Kannada 169 (M-164 ; F-5) 6. Others 6,876 (M-5,086 ; F-1790) [Census of India of 1961 Vol.XIV Rajasthan Part-II c (i) Social and Culrtural Tables, pp 489 - 490] However, the major bilingual picture of Hindi language in Rajasthan state, as appeared in 2001 Census is presented below in descending order.
Total speakers of languages Persons Males Females
1 HINDI 51407216 2 3
Name
4
Females
7
26798769
24608447
Accordingly, it is established that Hindi language speakers are majorly bilingual in English which is applicable to Marwari also, being a mother tongue of Hindi. English language is followed by Urdu language by Marwari as well as Hindi speakers as a language of bilingualism. Hence, the influence of Urdu may be realized in Marwari in perceivable quantity. 1.5. SOCIOLINGUISTIC SITUATION/ INFORMATION The first and foremost distinguishing feature so far as sociology of Marwari language is concerned that throughout the Rajasthan state, whether consciously or unconsciously, people avoid using or uttering the names of the dialects like Marwari, Harauti, Mewari, Mewati etc. Instead, people feel encouraged to identify themselves as speakers of Rajasthani only, whether
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he be a Marwari or Mewati or Mewari or Malvi or so on. And this trend is general irrespective of linguistic dimension or any socio-political or others dimension. Prior to Independence of India the Marwari speaking area was larger among the Rajputana Agency. Moreover, the people of Marwar have dispersed into the various parts of India as well as abroad, mainly in connection with business and industry, for which the term Marwari has become most popular and widely known by the people. The general use of the name Marwari has been co-termed for Rajasthani language and literature. After the independence of India when the states of India were reorganized under State Reorganisation Act, 1956 the people of Rajasthan expected that Rajasthani will be recognized as the language of the state. Out of this expectation the people of Rajasthan consciously adopted the strategy for promoting Rajasthani at all level in the whole province under which Rajasthani is used consciously and awarely to distinguish as the language of Rajasthan. Marwari along with other mentioned mother tongues are treated as the varieties of Rajasthani along with the acceptance of Marwari as the written/literary variety of Rajasthani language. The people of Rajasthan have become aspirant that by implementing this strategy of identifying themselves and their language as Rajasthani in the near future it will gain the status of one of the Scheduled Languages in India at par with other Scheduled Languages of Indian Union. Further, the name Marwari is traced back to the old and popular name(s) of Rajasthani like Maru Bhasha, Marubhum Bhasha, Marwadi Bhasha, Maru Bani etc. The name Rajasthani is the later one which has been named after the name of the state i.e. Rajasthan. But Marwadi/Marwari is widely popular as well as famous name than Rajasthani. For its use in Dingal Literature (a form of Rajasthani literature since 15th century) Marwari or Maru Bhasha was treated as identical with Dingal and was considered as the most important among the dialects spoken in Rajasthan. Rajasthani, as such, is better known through its several dialects (like Marwari, Mewari, Jaipuri or Dhundhari, Harauti, Mewati, Ahirwati, Malvi etc.) than Rajasthani language itself. However, presently Sahitya Academy, National Academy of Letters, University Grants Commission recognize Rajasthani as the individual language which is taught in the University of Jodhpur and Udaipur as well as which is an optional subject under the Rajasthan Board of Secondary Education since 1973. Moreover, Marwari has been considered as the language of the oldest, richest, varied and unbroken literary tradition among the five branches of Rajasthani namely, 1. Marwari-Mewari,
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2. Jaipuri-Harauti, 3. Mewati-Ahirwati, 4. Malvi, 5. Bhili or Wagdi (Bagadi). Marwari has achieved the form of poetic speech as well as the standard variety through its use in literature for about last 500 years (Maheswari, 1980, pp-12-13). Keeping this sociolinguistic scenario as the background in the state of Rajasthan the over all sociolinguistic situation prevailing in the Marwari speaking region is presented in the following dimensions based on the survey conducted in Rajasthan during the period 21st April, 1998 to 16th June 1998 in connection with the Linguistic Survey of India Rajasthan scheme. 1. Marwari as a L1 in the home domain In the home domain Marwari is used as a mother tongue in the parent-ego children situation. The usage varies since the so called pure Marwari is restricted among the older generation people and it has started reshaping in the tongue of the younger generation Marwaris whose speech is a kind of Marwari mixed with Hindi, the superposed variety and the official language of the state of Rajas than. 2. Marwari as L1 in domain other than home Marwari is used in the public places, locality and the market where even the nonMarwaris come down to Marwari in their interaction with Marwari brethren. 3. Marwari in the domain of education It has already been discussed that consciously people of Rajasthan are avoiding the use of the term Marwari for the sake of Rajasthani though the language used in literature and other written documents is mainly Marwari - a variety of Rajasthani.
Footnote The five-tier classification of Rajasthani as pointed out by Dr, Hiralal Maheswari in History of Rajasthan literature (1980 p-12-13) is the following 1. Marwari Mewari spoken in the Jodhpur, Bikaner, Jaisalmer, Udaipur, Sirohi, Sekhawati region of Jaipur, part of Kishangarh and Ajmer Mewara, some parts of Punjab and Haryana around the district of Ganganagar with slight variations; 2. Jaipuri Harauti a popular speech spoken in Jaipur (Except Sekhawati), Tonk, Part of Kishangarh and Ajmer-Mewara and the Harauti regions including Bundi, Kota, Jhalwar; 3. Mewati Ahirwati spoken in Bharatpur, Alwar, some parts of Gurgaon in Haryana and Mathura in Uttar Pradesh (It carries slight influences of Brajbhasha and Hariani). ; 4. Malwi having the characteristics of Marwari and Jaipuri Harauti is spoken in the Malwa region of Madhya Pradesh. (It has a slight tinge of Gujarati as well as Marathi and Bundeli) ; 5. Bhili or Wagadi popularly spoken in Dungarpur, Banswara and some parts of Mewar. It is slightly influenced by Gujarati. Relevantly it may be mentioned also that Banjari and Gujari, spoken in different parts of the country, have affinity with Rajasthani, as most of the Banjaras and Gujars were originally the residents of Rajasthan.
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In schools under Rajasthan Board the same Marwari variety is taught in the name of Rajasthani narratives and poems as the main vernacular paper up to Secondary level. For Senior Secondary i.e. XIth and XIIth standard the same Marwari variety of
Rajasthani is taught as an optional subject for vernacular. In B.A. Degree course Rajasthani is an optional subject. In Jay Narayan Vyas University at Jodhpur and in Sukharia University at Udaipur there is a full fledged department of Rajasthani from where M.A., M. Phil., Ph.D.. degree and D.Litt in Rajasthani are awarded. In the University of Rajasthan at Jaipur, Rajasthani is an individual paper under Hindi M.A. course. In addition to this, UGC has recognized Rajasthani as a separate subject for NET and the Department of Education of Government of Rajasthan has sanctioned few projects on Rajasthani among which Rajasthani Folklore project coordinated by the Department of Rajasthani of Jay Narayan Vyas University is mentioanable one. In state Public Service Commission, Ajmer there is an individual compulsory paper on Rajasthani language-literature-culture for 100 marks. Leaving aside the educational institutions in the state of Rajasthan there is an autonomous body named Rajasthani Language Academy at Bikaner established and funded by Government of linguistic-literary and cultural Rajasthan which is working sincerely to promote the activities in Rajasthani language. Some of the most
remarkable literary magazines published from this Academy are Jagti Jodh, Sodh Patrika, Maru bharati etc. which cover the linguistic as well as grammatical features of language communities, literary, cultural, social aspect, specially, of the state of Rajasthan. 4. Use of Marwari as L2 Among the people of Rajasthan, that too, especially, among the so-called Rajasthani speech-community, generally the Marwari variety of Rajasthani is used for common interaction whether he happens to be Jaipuri or Mewati or Harauti or any one else. And in the cultural assembly, or meeting or any discussion on literature/language of Rajasthan, the Marwari is used by the participants as the lingua franca. But in the common gatherings where both the Rajasthanis and non-Rajasthanis assemble Hindi is commonly used for interaction.
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5. Use of Marwari in Judiciary In rural court the pleading is processed in Marwari or in relevant local dialect In Sub-Divisional court - The pleading proceeds in Marwari/relevant local dialect & In Tahsildar Court or Hindi or English according to the convenience in language use of the person concerned be he the Advocate or the accused. In District Courts Hindi/English is the main language of the court but the evidence is permissible in local dialect. In High Court The principal language from pleading to delivery of Judgement is English although hearing and crossexamination are done in Hindi and English either according to the situation. Of course, if the plaintiff or the defendant is a rural one he is heard and crossexamined in Marwari/or relevant local dialect with the help of interpreter. 6. Use of Marwari in Assembly In Assembly of the Sate of Rajasthan, Hindi is the lingua franca though communication in Rajasthani local dialects is also privileged. 7. Script The script of Marwari presently is Devanagari. An older Marwari as well as Rajasthani script also is traced which is popularly known as Modi/Modiya/Muriya / Mhajani / Vaniyavati etc. The character of this script is like Gujarati script since the script characterizes without overhead line. Even today the old rural people are used to write in this script only. But now the younger generation and specially the literate people have shifted to the Devanagari script for representing Rajasthani. This script is used in literature, text books, primers, partial Government instructions in the state of Rajasthan. 8. Literature Marwari (Rajasthani) is having a rich literary heritage. Starting from the early and medieval period upto the present Century the major trend of literature is poetic only which have five distint divisions 1. Jain 2. Charan 3. Akhyan 4. Sant and 5. Laukik including secular love.
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Among the above five divisions the Charan trend deserves special mention. The relations between Charan poets and the Rajput warriors were deep rooted in medieval period. The Charan poets used to accompany their heroes to battle fields even. Charan poets used Maru Bhasha or Dingal and the Bhats Pingal in their poetic compositions. According to Maheswari (1980 p-7), upto the end of the 19th Century Dingal was treated as identical or synonymous with Maru Bhasha , which is the literary and poetic speech as well as the speech of the people. The Maru Bhasha is otherwise called as Marwari Bhasha. The old writers of Dingal or Maru Bhasha confirm the fact that the language and metre used by them is the spoken language of the land. Dingal literature was mainly composed as a form of hero-worshipping. On the other hand, Pingal means prosody originally but in Rajasthan the term Pingal is used to denote a form of language which is a combination of Brajbhasha and Marwari variety of Rajasthani. The modern Marwari as well as Rajasthani poetry has come out from the heroworshipping trend and presently distinguished by compositions on the themes of nature,
sufferings of human beings, socio-political condition of the country etc. The modern period of Rajasthani (Marwari) dates back from 1850 onwards. Along with poetic composition of different tastes and styles, the Modern period experiences Humour, Satire, Prose forms like Novels, Stories, Dramas, One-act plays, Biographies and sketches, Essays, Literary criticism etc. The literary activities in Rajasthani (Marwari) has been advancing through different Institutions which are working to promote Rajasthani (Marwari) language (and literature) for recognition of the same as one of the Scheduled languages in India. Mention may be made in this regard about the following : a. The formation of Rajasthan Sahitya Akademi (Sangam) established at Udaipur in 1958. The journal Madhumati being its publication has given a new impetus to the writers of Rajasthani as well as of Marwari. The Rajasthani Bhasha-Sahitya Akademi (Sangam) at Bikaner, established in 1972 as a separate unit of the Akademy and the journal Jagti Jodh is its regular publication. In different stations of All India Radio and Doordarshan of Rajasthan state specific schedule have been programmed for presentation of Rajasthani on daily basis where programmes in Marwari and in other regional varieties are
b.
c.
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d.
e.
aired by the arrangement of Ministry of Information and Broadcasting of the State of Rajasthan. Rajasthani has been introduced as a full-fledged Department in the Jay Narayan Vyas University at Jodhpur. Marwari language and literature is the main concern of the Department. Last but not least, the Rajasthani has been recognized by the Sahitya Akademi, New Delhi (National Academy of Letters, India) by which Marwari is also taken care.
1.6. REVIEW OF EARLIER LITERATURE AVAILABLE Before the present survey several other studies were carried out towards the description of Marwari as well as Rajasthani language. A brief account of the earlier studies is given below in chronological order i. First and foremost the name of Rajasthani language was brought in the light of Indian linguistic scenario by Sir George Abraham Grierson in his Linguistic Survey of India (LSI Vol.IX Part-II) where Rajasthani was genealogically classified as an Indo-Aryan language mentioning Marwari as its most important and prominent dialect substantially keeping distance from Western Hindi. ii. Next, mention may be made of Dr. L.P. Tessitoris Notes on the
grammar of the old western Rajasthani with special reference to Apabhramsa and to Gujarati and Marwari which is an approach of historical grammar deriving its source from old Indo-Aryan passing through the stages of Middle Indo-Aryan and coming down to the gateway of new Indo-Aryan, that is, Apabhramsa state (sourced from Sauraseni Prakrit) correlating Marwari and Gujarati as the two branches descending from old Western Rajasathani. iii. Next comes the works of Professor Suniti Kumar Chatterji. His a. Rajasthani Bhasha projects Rajasthani language or the socalled Marwari as coming out with its structural independence from that of Hindi through its literary exposure in the form of Dingal.
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Indo-Aryan and Hindi - etymologically establishes the Sanskrit sources of the lexicons used in Marwari along with other New Indo-Aryan equivalents. iv. Narottam Das Swamis Sanksipta Rajasthani Vyakaran is a traditional b. Rajasthani grammar written in Hindi language in Devnagari script. v. Padmasree Sitaram Lalass Rajasthani Vyakaran is also a traditional reference grammar where Rajasthani language has been described in a most systematic way in Devnagari script. vi. Dr. Hiralal Maheswaris History of Rajasthani Literature is also a scholarly account about the origin and development of language and literature of Rajasthan from the period of 1050 A.D. to the end of the twentieth century establishing the rich literary heritage of Rajasthan under the royal patronage. vii. Dr. Sidheswar Vermas Bihari-Hindi and Rajasthani a linguistic analysis is a summarized version of Griersons narrated Bihari, Hindi and Rajasthani in Linguistic Survey of India Volumes VI and IX, following the modern descriptive format. viii. B.L. Malis Rajasthani Bhasha ar Vyakaran is a traditional grammar of Rajasthani along with historical source of Rajasthani language. ix. The most interesting and fascinating work on Marwari as well as Rajasthani towards the end of the twentieth Century is Dr. Kali Charan Bahl;s Adhunik Rajasthani ka Samracanatmak Vyakaran which is the Hindi version of original English book A structural grammar of Modern Rajasthani [Published from University of Chicago] is an exclusively scholarly work that deals with the Marwari speech of Jodhpur (Standard Marwari region) in the name of Rajasthani. The book presents a detailed grammatical description of Marwari from the structuralist point of view. x. In addition to above works, a list of publications on Marwari/Rajasthani languagre has been referred by Sir G.A. Grierson in his LSI Vol.IX Part-II p-19. These are :
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Robson, Rev. J
A selection of Khyals or Marwari plays with an Introduction and Glossary, Bewar Mission Press, 1866.
A Grammar of Hindi Language, in which are treated the High Hindi . also the colloquial Dialects of .. Rajputana.. with copious Philological Notes. First Edn., Allahabad and Calcurtta, 1876. Second Edn. London, 1893.
Fallon, S.W.
A Dictionary of Hindustani Proverbs, including many Marwari, Panjabi, Maggah, Bhojpuri and Tirhuti Proverbs, Sayings, Emblems, Aphorisms, Maxims and Similes, by the Late S.W.F. Edited and Revised by Capt. R.C. Temple, assisted by Lala Faquir Chand Vaish, of Delhi. Benaras and London, 1886.
Pandit Ram Karan Sarma MarwaRi VyakaraN. A Marwari grammar written in Marwari. No date or place of publication in my copy ? Jodhpur, About 1901.
1.7. BASE FOR ANALYSIS AND DETAILS OF INFORMANTS The present work is a Descriptive Grammar of Marwari in Rajasthan, which is one of the major members of Indo-Aryan languages surrounded by the languages like Hindi, Gujarati, Bhili, Sindhi, Lahnda and Punjabi. Ofcourse, Marwari is one of the mother tongues grouped with Hindi in Indian Census. The present description covers Phonology, Morphophonemics, Morphology and Syntax of Marwari language in the following chapters. Linguistic and socio-linguistic data were collected during the field trip to Rajasthan from April, 1998 to June, 1998. The data, based on which the present grammar has been prepared, consist of 500 core lexical items and around 2000 various lexical items, 800 sentences of different types and patterns along with one connected text. Apart from these data a few folk songs, folk stories and other relevant sociocultural literary information were collected during the field work. The analysis of Marwari language in this volume is based on the elicited data from the following informants : Shri Rajendra Singh (Barhath), Shri Prehlad Ram Solanki and Shri Kishan Singh Rathore of Jodhpur acted as the main informants for the collection of Standard Marwari data. Shri G.B. Goswami of Nagaur, Shri Narayan Singh Peethal of Jaipur, Mrs. Puspa Vyas, Shri Satya Prakash Acharya, Shri Srilal Nathmal Joshi of Bikaner and Shri Ghanashyam Acharya of Jaisalmer extended their help whole-heartedly for checking of the Marwari data collected from the basic informants.
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2. PHONOLOGY
Phonology being concerned with the patterns and organizations of a language in terms of the phonetic features and categories involved, the phonemic analysis consists in allotting all the indefinite number of sounds occurring in utterances to a definite and limited set of phonemes contrastive in at least some environments. Accordingly, the phonemic inventory given below will show the distinctive sound units occurring in the Marwari speech.
2.1. PHONEMIC INVENTORY Both the segmental and suprasegmental phonemes of Marwari are presented in the following inventory . 2.1.1 Segmental Phonemes
The Segmental sounds used in Marwari can be classed into a number of 42 phonemes of which 10 are the vowel phonemes and 32 are the Consonant phonemes. Out of the 10 vowel phonemes 4 are front, 2 are central and 4 are back. Among the 32 consonental phonemes 20 are stops, 4 nasals, 2 fricatives, 1 trill, I flap, 2 laterals and 2 approximants. The description of each phoneme has been presented in details in the following section
Vowels Front High Low-high High-mid Mean-mid Low-mid Low E a e A O i I U o Central Back u
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Consonants
BILABIAL DENTAL RETROFLEX PALATAL VELAR GLOTTAL
VL STOPS Unaspirated Aspirated NASALS FRICATIVES TRILL FLAP LATERALS APPROXIMANT (semi-vowel) p ph b
VD
VL
VD
VL
VD
VL
VD
VL
VD
VL
t th
d dh n
T Th
D Dh N
c ch
j jh
k kh
g gh M h
bh m
s r R l w L y
In addition to the above consonantal phonemes 2 other phonemes are realized in Marwari as the marginal ones as these occur only word-initially. These are /b/ - bilabial recusive and /d/ - dental recursive. 2.1.2 Suprasegmental Phoneme
Suprasegmentation is significantly realised in Nasalisation. Nasalisation Nasalisation is phonemic in Marwari. Frequency of //, //, // are more in comparison to // and /. Initial / / t intestine trE distant T brick co upward c(No) (to) pick up Medial Final
dt tooth or other gTh knot mh we chk sneeze n not jhTa pigtail of Brahmins kA what mch moustache y thus pch tail tor ridgegourd ghTi neck ki what cT(No) (to) stick mh I
2.2.
PHONEMIC CONTRAST Vowels Initial i ~I imLi IN isAr Isar tamarind this God similar din poor dIn day mit friend mInAkhman Medial Final
Initial occurrence of /i/ and final occurrence of /I/ are rare. Initial e~E ved vEd beTO bEN Veda doctor son sister Medial Final
Initial occurrence of /E/ and final occurrence of /e/ are rare. Initial u~U dhuN dhUn guNti gUNti concentration tune donkey carried goods counting Medial Final
Initial occurrence of /u/ and final occurrence of /U/ are rare. Initial o~O Dhol a drum DhOLOweak kom ones community kOm work Initial occurrence of /O/ and final occurrence of /o/ are rare. Medial Final
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Initial i~e
Medial bir bel piTh peT brave creeper (big) back belly
Final
Initial occurrence of /i/ and final occurrence of /e/ are rare. Initial a~A phal phAL kalE kAl Final occurrence of /A/ is rare. nest and Initial e~a eDi aDo eRO aLO heel door such nest ret rat tel tal sand night oil rhythm Medial aLO Ar plough fruit yesterday/ tomorrow machine Medial Final
Final
Final occurrence of /e/ is rare. Initial a~o aRi axe kalE ori measles koL akhAr letter car okhAr excreta cor Final occurrence of /o/ is rare. Initial o~u odAr blab moL udAr womb muL ojri stomach moh ujar exhaust muh Final occurrence of /o/ is rare. buy root affection face Medial yesterday/ tomorrow big rat four thief Medial Final
Final
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Initial a~u abho ubho acho uco Consonants Initial pAn leaf bAL strength pita father bidam almond Initial tin din tarO daru shy stand good height
p~b
Medial khapAT TabAr kApRO dubLO Medial pita bidam pitAl badAl Medial beTi geDi moTO jaDO Medial bagicO pAnjO bec(NO) bij(NO) Medial bhAkAt jugAt kkAr AgAr
Final Top jeb pusAp dAbadAb Final nAkhAt nAnAd rut bind Final peT haD jaT laD Final kc khaj cc jej Final ek pug(NO) Dak Dag
t~d
T~D
Initial TaM leg Dag wing Topi hat Dikri daughter Initial cor thief joD field cawAL rice jal net Initial koL goLi keLO gilO
c~j
k~g
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m~n
Initial mArAd male nAnAd sister-in law ms flesh nAs neck Initial
Final kam kan nArAm gArAn Final nEN TaM jamAN lOM
Medial M~N paNi bEMgAN jANa kAMgi Initial occurrence of /M/ and /N/ are rare. Initial sat haD sal hAl Initial Medial posaL kAThAhAL mOsAm hahukAr
s~h
Final school kes jackfruit meh season m s money lendermh Final dry leaf gal brass utensil guL oven lal lock laL
l~L
Medial palO paLO culO taLO /L/ is not found in initial occurrence. Initial
Medial r~R daru kiRi ori aRi /R/ is not found in initial occurrence. Initial waL yar wo/wa y Medial riwaj riyaj dhwO hiyo
w~y
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p ~ ph
Initial pag turban phag a folk dance purO city/town phur(NO) to turn back Initial bari window
b ~ bh
Medial babO
bhari heavy abhO bAkri goat ambo bhakhri hill(small) gabhO Initial tarO tharO tau thuk Initial guN ghuN gilO ghosla Medial rato mathO pitAL sathAl Medial gArAn ghAr bagicO ghuMghAt Medial TeTO miThO khATai kAThAhaL Medial kacO kAchuO
Final ucchab lobh jeb jibh Final het hath jugAt sath Final bag bagh ag gagh Final ThaT kaTh peT puTh Final kc chch nac pach
t ~ th
g ~ gh
T ~ Th
Initial TAmkO flirt ThAMkOsound of anklet TOg supporting stone ThOg cheat Initial cori chori cawAl chal
c ~ ch
raw tortoise
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D ~ Dh
Initial DagO old camel DhagO old bullock DIl body DhiLO slow Initial babO bapu bal bAL Initial dan dukh dai dIl
b~ b
Medial elder brother ubO(howNO) standing father ubal(NO) boiling hair strength Medial dhardar dAbadAb
d ~ d
2.3
PHONEMIC DESCRIPTION AND DISTRIBUTION The description and distribution of ten vowel phonemes of Marwari are presented below. Vowels /i/ High front unrounded short vowel. It occurs in the medial and final positions. jiN that niras despaired gigAn sky /I/ lobhi greedy duji other kani towards
Lower high fron unrounded vowel. It occurs initially and medially. IN this isa this kind IgyarE eleven mIrc chilli mInAkh man kIwar wooden gate
/e/
High mid front unrounded vowel. It occurs initially and medially. ek eDi eRO one heel such ret pher geDi soil / sand then / again stick kAnE near larE behind pAchE after
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/E/
Low mid front unrounded vowel. It ocurs medially and finally. bEl vEd nEN creeper doctor eye E chE wE this six they
/A/
Mean-mid central unrounded vowel. It occurs initially and medially. Ar and AthE here AgAr if ghAr house kAnE at/near bAL strength
/a/
Low central unrounded vowel. It occurs initially, medially and finally. aLsi aLO aDO idle/lazy nest door badAL bhaTO tarO cloud stone star ba / wa boba pacha she female breast afterwards
/O/
Low mid back rounded vowel. It occurs medially and finally. DhOLO dORai kOm weak pain work moTO fat sugLO dirty sukhO dry
/o/
High mid back rounded vowel which occurs initially and medially. or ori oDa equal measles cover koL hTh thoth big rat lip hole
/U/
Lower high back unrounded vowel. It occurs initially and medially UN that UjaR spoil UdAr womb dhUN gUN lUgai tune quality woman/wife
/u/
High back rounded vowel. It occurs medially and finally. jugAt guRda tuphan means liver storm saru baLu daru for sand liquor
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Consonants /p/ Bilabial voiceless unaspirated stop. It occurs initially, medially and finally. pAn pun paNi /ph/ leaf air water kApas Topi khapAT cotton pusAp hat Top split bamboopap flower hat vice
Bilabial voiceless aspirated stop. It occurs initially and medially and finally. phAL fruit phul flower phuThrOsmart DophO tuphan phephRO dull storm lung baph bArAph hph steam snow pant
/b/
Bilabial voiced unaspirated stop. It occurs in all the three positions. bag garden balu sand birkha rain TabAr Abar ubasi child currently yawn jeb dAbadAb lAbalAb pocket fast quick
/bh/
Bilabial voiced aspirated stop. It occurs in all the three positions bhaTO stone abhO bhai brother(y.) nabhi bheN sister gabhO sky naval dress jibh lobh labh tongue greed profit
/t/
Dental voiceless unaspirated stop. It occurs in all the three positions. tin tarO three star pitAL rato pita brass red father ret rut nAkhAt sand weather/ season star
Dental voiceless aspirated stop. It occurs in all the three positions. thuk sputam thoRO some thaw utensils tithi mathO sathAl datE head thigh hath thoth Anath hand hollow orphan
/d/
Dental voiced unaspirated stop. It occurs in all the three positions. debLO lean man badAL dulhO bridegroom bidam dtlO sickle nAdi cloud almond river mArAd cd jAd male moon when/ then
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/dh/
Dental voiced aspirated stop. It occurs in all the three positions. dhAra earth dhANi husband dhAnAkh bow gAdhO bidhAwa Andho ass widow blind dudh bajubAndh bAndh milk armlet closed
/T/
Retroflex voiceless unaspirated stop. It occurs in all the three positions. TabAr child Top hat TaM leg moTO ghTi TeTO fat TaT neck peT unripe fruit ThAT baldness belly crowd
/Th/
Retroflex voiceless aspirated stop. It occurs in all the three positions. ThaDOcold puThi Thola finger joint miThO TheThi ear wax ThAThera back sweet cattle hoTh kaTh lath lip wood stick
/D/
Retroflex voiced unaspirated stop. It occurs in all the three positions. Dhil slack DoDhi Dhol drum/ trumpet daDh DhuNDhO rejected house buDhO door beard old man riDh spine DaDh molar tooth koDh leprosy
/c/
Palatal voiceless unaspirated affricate. It occurs in all the three positions cunO lime cokhO good cellO student ghoca kacO scO unused wood raw honest rac tool kc/kac mirror cc beak
/ch/
Palatal voiceless aspirated stop. It occurs in all the three positions. chorO boy AMochO choTO small pchRi chekRObullock cart pAche towel small tail afterwards pch tail chach butter milk rch bear
/j/
Palatal voiced unaspirated stop. It occurs in all the three positions. jaL net jaDO fat joD field kaju hejO ujaLO cashew nut cholera bright/ light aj khaj jej to-day itch delay
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/jh/
Palatal voiced aspirated stop. It occurs initially and medially. jhuTh lie jhamp wing jhupO hut jhajhARO mud stone jhunjhla(NO) to annoy sinjhya evening
/k/
Velar voiceless unaspirated stop. It occurs in all the three positions. kes hair keLO banana kaLO black akas / Akas takO bakO sky bitter mouth ek nak khak one nose arm-pit
/kh/
Velar voiceless aspirated stop. It occurs in all the three positions. khoTO bad bokhO toothless (male) hungry good dukh rkh sakh pain tree harvest
Velar voiced unaspirated stop. It occurs in all the three positions. gigAn sky gaE cow geNa jewel lagan lugai bAgicO marriage wife garden pAg Dag nag foot wing cobra
/gh/
Velar voiced aspirated stop. It occurs in all the three positions. ghAr house ghas grass ghoRO horse DighO siMghO ghuMghAT tall lion veil bagh tiger gagh wound jaMgh thigh
/m/
Bilabial voiced unaspirated nasal. It occurs initially, medially and finally. maLa garland moDO bald head mAkRi spider jAmi bimar jimAN land ill meal jAlAm birth kam work bidam almond
/n/
Dental voiced unaspirated stop. It occurs in all the three positions. nak nose nAs neck nagO naked bani junO sinO ashes old chest un wool kan/kAnear pAn leaf
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/N/
Retroflex voiced unaspirated nasal. It occurs essentially in medial and final positions. Rarely it occurs initially. Nal ruby ciNa khuNi beNi gram elbow pig tail of girls phAN hood of snake nEN eye lOsAN garlic
/M/
Velar voiced unaspirated nasal. It occurs medially and finally. aMi jhiMur DuMAr apron cricket/insect big hill siM TaM lOM horn leg clove
/s/
Dental voiceless fricative. It occurs in all the three positions sathAN siM skAL friend horn chain musAL lOsAN mOsAm pestle garlic season ms ss ghas meat breath grass
/h/
Velar voiced fricative. It occurs initially, medially and finally. haD bone dohitO rohi hahukAr grand son/ grand daughter forest money lender khoh cave meh neh rain love
Dental trill. It occurs in all the three positions. rut rkh rAmAt season tree play ori orO bhra chickpox room eye lash koThar godown ghAr house Amur grape
/R/
Retroflex flap. It occurs medially and finally. ciRi TiloRi kiRi sparrow squirrel ant hill / worm piR headache bAR banyan tree bAR fence
/l/
Dental lateral. It occurs initially, medially and finally. loL ear lobe laL saliva lOsAN garlic palAM lilar culO hearth forehead earthen oven gal al chal cheek ash gourd barks
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/L/
Retroflex lateral. It occurs medially and finally. aLO taLO koLO nest lock white gourd phAL fruit loL ear lobe guL gur
/w/
Bilabial approximant. It occurs in all the three positions initial, medial and final. waL wakAL wAkhAt meal dAwa well water dhwO time hAwa medicine smoke air sew taw byaw apple fever marriage
/y/
Palatal continuant. It occurs initially and medially. yar yohi y friend AniyarO this very hiyO in this way jyi face heart as soon as
Note As discussed in the phonemic inventory the distribution of /b/ and /d/ are shown below. The occurrence of these sounds are realized mostly in the initial position. /b/ baerO bakhAr baTkO baph Bilabial Implosive (Recursive) air hill metal dish steam /d/ dab daw Dental Implosive (Recursive) a small heap of grass animal
This feature of recursive in Marwari may be due to the influence of neighboring languages of Indo-Aryan family who is having this feature, specially Sindhi, Punjabi etc. 2.4. MAJOR ALLOPHONIC DISTRIBUTION The Vowel allophones are realized as free variational forms in Marwari. For example, 1. 2. 3. /E/ and /O/ occur medially and finally and not initially. /e/ and /u/ occur initially and medially and not finally. /a/ and /o/ occur initially and medially and not finally.
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Consonants 1. All the stops are half-released in word-final position. The half-released consonantal sounds are represented by [`] sign /b/ /t/ /T/ /k/ /g/ /j/ /D/ 2. [b`] [t`] [T`] [k`] [g`] [j`] [D`] in final position [gulab`] rose [kArot`] saw / blade [koT`] coat [thuk`] soab [pAg`] foot [khaj`] itch [giD`] eye sand
The dental /n/ is realised as palatal nasal [M] when it is a member of cluster with a
palatal stop. Thus /n/ is realised as [n] when it is a member of cluster with a stop other than palatal Andharo [M] elsewhere paM c five paM jo claw darkness cand moon
2.5 CLUSTERS A cluster is formed by two identical or non-identical phonemes. Both vowel and consonant clusters are identified in Marwari.
2.5.1 Vowel Clusters In Marwari there are non-identical vowel clusters like /ai/ occurs in all the three positions. /ia/ and /aE/ occurring in the medial and final positions. /oi/, /ui/, /ei/, /Ai/, /ua/ and /uO/ occurring in the final position. Below are exemples of the vowel clusters in Marwari Initial ai ia ae oi aiThaN corn of feet husiar cunning Medial mait parents Final lUgai wife
gaE loi
cow blood
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ui Ai ei ua uo
2.5.2
Consonant clusters
In Marwari the consonant clusters are the combination of two identical as well as two non-identical consonants occurring essentially in the medial position and rarely in the initial and final position. Besides there are also heterogeneous consonant clusters consisting of three non identical phonemes in Marwari which occurs in the word-medial position only. Combination of two identical consonants are the homogenous clusters. In Marwari these are the following. /t/ /T/ /D/ /c/ /k/ /n/ /l/ + /t/ + /T/ + /D/ + /c/ + /k/ + /n/ + /l/ The clusters = = = = = = = of two -tt-TT-DD-cc-kk-nn-llnon-identical kuttO dog TaTTu pony TiDDa grass hopper khAccAr pony / donkey cAkku knife minni cat hulli caterpillar etc. consonants, that is, the heterogeneous clusters are
formed as follows: a) b) c) d) e) f) Stop + Stop + Non-identical stop Nasal Flap/Trill Lateral Nasal Stop g) h) i) j) k) l) Nasal Fricative Flap/Trill Flap Lateral Lateral + + + + + + Fricative Stop Stop Fricative Stop Fricative
Stop + Stop +
Nasal + Nasal +
The examples as follows A. Clusters formed of Stop + Stop /p/ + /T/ /D/ + /g/ = = -pT-DgkhapTO DeDgO split of bamboo toad
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B.
Clusters formed of Stop +Nasal /j/ + /m/ /T/ +/N/ = = -jm-TNAjmO/ijmO biTNi ajowan nipple
C.
Clusters formed of Stop + Trill/Flap /p/ + /r/ = /b/ + /r/ = /Th/ + /r/ = /d/ + /r/ = /k/ + /r/ = /b/ + /R/ = /k/ + /R/ = /kh/ + /R/ = etc. -pr-br-Thr-dr-kr-bR-kR-khRkhopro nbro phuThrO AdrAkh DokrO chabRi kakRi pkhRO coconut neem smart / beautiful ginger old man basket cucumber feather
D.
Clusters formed of Stop + lateral /c/ + /l/ = -clchl-kl-kL-gL-tL-jL-khLkcli mAchli khaklO bodies fish straw / hay
/k/ + /L/ = /g/ + /L/ = /t/ + /L/ = /j/ + /L/ = /kh/ + /L/ =
takLi / takLO small spindle/ big spindle DagLO dtLO khujLi mekhLO roof sickle itch apron
E.
F.
Clusters formed of Nasal + Stop i. Word medial cluster /n/ + /t/ = n/ + /j/ = -nt-njbintak pAnjO brinjal claw
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-nch-mb-mbh-Mg-
ii)
Word final clusters /m/ + /p/= -mp-Mk-Mkh-NDhjhamp DaMk pAMkh dhuNDh wing sting of scorpion feather buttock
G.
2. Cluster formed of Nasal + Flap/Trill /m/ + /R/ = /n/ + /r/ = -mR-nrlomRi pAnra fox leaf
3. Clusters formed of Nasal + Lateral /m/ + /l/ = /M/ + /L/ = -ml-MLAmli aMLi tarmarind tree finger
H.
I.
Clusters formed of Trill/Flap + Stop /r/ + /b/ = /r/ + /t/ = -rb-rt-rc-rg-RcArbi dhArti mIrc murgO kuRci arum earth chilly cock ladle made of metal
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J.
K.
Clusters formed of Lateral + Stop /L/ + /j/ /l/ +/k/ = = -Lj-lklaLjO hAlkO heart light
L.
1. Clusters formed of Lateral + Fricative /l/ + /h/ /L/ + /s/ = = -lh-LsdulhO aLsi bridegroom lazy
Heterogeneous clusters formed of three non-identical consonants as follows: /n/ + /d/ + /r/ = -ndrundrO bandrO /n/ + /d/ + /N/ = /n/ + /d/ + /g/ = -ndN-ndgbindNi mandgi jindgani rat monkey newly married wife illness life
2.6 SYLLABLE A syllable is defined as a sequence of speech sounds having a peak of inherent sonority (Robins 1968). Generally, vowel has the peak of sonority since vowels are more sonorous than consonants in each syllable, A syllable which ends with a vowel is called open syllable whereas a syllable ending in a consonant is called closed syllable. The syllabic classification of Marwari words is as follows 1. Monosyllabic 2. Disyllabic 3. Trisyllabic 4. Tetrasyllabic Frequency of monosyllabic and disyllabic words are more than the other two types. Examples are the following.
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1.
Monosyllabic words i. v ii. vc iii. cv iv. cvc v. cvcc vi. ccvc a ag dhi rakh jhamp byaw this (feminine) fire daughter ashes wing marriage
Among the seven patterns under monosyllabic types the cvc pattern is more common in occurrence than the others. 2. Disyllabic words i. v cv ii. cv-cv iii. cv-cvc iv. cvc-cv v. cvv-cv a-bhO cho-rO Ta-bAr lAk-Ri baI-sa mo-Tyar sAm-dAr bind-Ni sky boy child wood elder brother male sea bride abhO chorO TabAr lAkRi baisa moTyar sAmdAr bindNi
Among the above nine patterns under disyllabic type the occurrence of cv-cv and cvc-cv patterns are more frequent than the rest. 3. Trisyllabic words i. vc-cv-cv ii. cv-cvv iii. cv-cv-cv iv. cv-cv-cvc v. cv-cv-ccv vi. cv-cvc-cvc vii. cvc-cv-cv as-ma-ni lU-gai bA-De-ra ha-hu-kAr ku-La-trO kA-mAN-DAL den-gi-ya blue wife ancestor money lender spider asmani lUgai bADera hahukAr kuLatrO
Out of the six patterns in trisyllabic type the cv-cv-cv and cvc-cv-cv patterns occur frequently in comparison to the other patterns.
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4.
Tetrasyllabic words i. v-cv-cv-cv ii. cv-cv-cv-cv A-ni-ya-rO kA-wa-Ri-yO face axe (big variety) mosquitonet AniyarO kAwaRiyO mAcchArdani
iii.cvc-cvc-cv-cv mAc-chAr-da-ni
Open syllables and Close syllables Marwari words have both open as well as close syllables. The monosyllabic words with vowels are the examples of the words of open syllable. /E/ /O/ /a/ E O a these this this (feminine)
In the word other than monosyllabic ones, the vowels which occur in the final position of an open syllable are /A/, /a/, /i/, /o/, /u/ /A/ /a/ /i/ /o/ /u/ hA - wa ba dAL gi - gO ro - hi a - DO bo - ba bu - DhO ba - lu air cloud baby forest door breast old man sand
All the vowels occur in the close syllables in Marwari like /i/ din poor bht wall /I/ dIn day IN this /e/ meh ran neh affection /E/ nEN eye bEN sister /A/ ghAr house phAL fruit /a/ ag fire TaM leg /o/ hTh lip koL big rat /O/ kOm work lOM clove /u/ phul flower dur far /U/ rUt weather gUN quality The occurrence of /A/ in close syllable is more in comparison to the rest.
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3. MORPHOPHONEMICS The alternants of morphemes when they occur with various kinds of affixes, phonological variations take place. Morphophonemics deals with such phonological variations. In Marwari most of the morphophonemic changes are related to the alternation of vowel which may be referred as regular morphophonemic variation. The bases of these variations are three in number 1. Insertion 2. Alternation 3. Deletion. I. Insertion 1. The third personal pronomind bases /wO/ and /wE/ are changed into oblique bases i.e /UN-/ and /UN-/ respectively when the different case suffixes nE, -s and rO are added. /wO/ he > UN - UNnE /wE/ they >UN - UNne to him to them UNs from him UNro his
2. The insertion of homophonous phonemes in the formation of higher numerals by the combination of allomorphs of one, two etc. with the allomorph of ten. Ikkis twenty one Ikattis thirty one < < ek- + -is ek- + tin + -is
3. When the monosyllabic verb roots in Marwari are inflected for person numbergender-tense then -w- is inserted between the verb base and the finite verb marker. kha lejato eat to take to go > > > khawE lewE jawE eats takes goes khawela lewela jawela will eat will take will go
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4. The occurrence r- in the causative verb base in case of irregular verb root like deto give, delele- to take is also an example of insertional morphophonemic change to give to take > > dewE he gives lewE he takes dirawE lirawE he causes to give he causes to take
5. The occurrence of w- in case of causative verb base is also an example of insertional morphophonemic change in Marwari ga kha to sing to eat > > gawE he sings > khawE he eats > gAwawE khAwawE makes to sing makes to eat
II.
Alternation The alternation of the nucleus vowel phoneme regularly varies in following way. 1. The word-final o in masculine singular noun is changed intoa (change of o to a) kuttO dog ghoRO horse chorO boy > > > kutta ghoRa chora dogs horses boys
2.
With the addition on the plural markers with the nouns ending with /-i/ the /-i/ is alternated by /-I-/ chori girl + -y -y -y > > > chorIy ghoRIy ciRIy girls mares birds
3.
The nucleus vowel /-a/ of the verb base is changed into /-A/ when the verb base changes to Causative verb base. Thus a- is changed to -Akhawe he eats gawe she sings > > khAwawe gAwawe he makes to eat she makes to sing
4.
The nucleus vowel phoneme /- / of the pronominals is changed when they occur with different case suffixes, for example.
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i) - > -A mh I th
before the accusative marker nE > mhAnE thanE > > mAnE tAnE to me to you
you >
ii) > -a mh th I
before the genitive marker rO/ri > mharO tharO my you mhari thari my (fem.) your (fem.)
you >
III.
Deletion The morphophonemic rule of deletion operates in Marwari with the dropping of -h- of pronominals when the accusative case marker nE is added. Thus mh th I you mAnE to me tAnE to you < mhAnE < thanE [-h- is dropped] [-h- is dropped]
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4. MORPHOLOGY
The internal structure of a word is dealt in morphology since Morphology is the study of morphemes and their arrangements in forming words (Nida, 1963, p-1). And considering pause as the basic potential of a word, a word is defined as Any segment of a sentence bounded by successive points at which pausing is possible (Hockett 1970 p167). Semantically a word may be defined as the union of particular meaning with a particular grammatical employment (Lyons 1969 p-200). Below is presented the details of word formation and word classes in Marwari.
4.1.
pronounced with a potential pause before and after it, as for example, / O ek kuttO hE / This is a dog where O, ek, kuttO, hE are all individual words with a particular pause between each other. And according to the semantic definition of a word, as given by Lyons, the Marwari words contain at least one stem which is a free form and takes the inflectional and derivational affixes to form a word. Thus a Marwari stem by itself can be a word such as /chori/ girl, /chorO/ boy, /pothi/ book, /beTO/ boy etc. which are all free morphemes as well as /-i/ - ending feminine words and /-O/ ending masculine words. Again /chorIy/ girls , /pothIy / books, /chora/ boys, /beTa/ sons
are also individual words consisting of stems /chori/ , /pothi/ , /chorO/ , /beTO/ and the plural suffixes / - (y) / and /-a/ respectively. Therefore, in Marwari morphologically a word may consist of one stem (or more than one) which is followed by affixes.
4.1.1. Word classes in Marwari Based on morphological and syntactical structure the word classes of Marwari are established. Since a morpheme is a minimum meaningful unit which is equivalent to stem the stem classes in Marwari can be divided into different groups on the basis of the inflectional endings e.g. kuttO dog a masculine stem (-O being the masculine marker) minni cat a feminine stem (-i being the feminine ending)
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Thus, forms (derived from stems) which show identical inflectional behavior or which have similar privileges of occurrences in building larger forms can be called as Form class (Hockett 1970 p-162). Accordingly, Marwari words are divided into
following classes 1. Nouns 2. Pronouns 3. Adjectives 4. Post-Positions 5. Conjunctions 6. Verbs 7. Adverbs. Out of these seven word classes the nouns, pronouns, adjectives and verbs are based on morphological grounds whereas rest are based on syntactic ground. The above mentioned seven word classes are broadly grouped into two categories ---- Declinables and Indeclinables. Declinables are those which are declined for number gender person, for example, nouns, pronouns, adjectives and verbs. And the postpositions, conjunctions, adverbs belong to the Indeclinables. The morphological processes found in the seven class of words in Marwari are Prefixation, Suffixation, Reduplication and Compounding. Prefixation in the word like Suffixation in the word like AgUN moTai quality = A- + gUN moTA- +-i kAda + kAda jam + phAL
Reduplication in the word like kAda kAda Compounding in the word like jam phAL
The morphological structure thus classed in Marwari is described in the following sections of Noun Morphology and Verb-Morphology
4.2.
Noun Morphology Noun Morphology deals with the forms and classification of Nouns, Pronouns and
their declensional/ inflectional pattern in association with Gender Number Adjective etc. The Marwari nouns denoting animate or non-animate, human or non-human being belong to one of the two genders Masculine and Feminine. Among the animate human nouns the classification of the gender is based on some suffixes consistently and among inanimate nouns the small variety is classed under feminine and the big variety is classed under masculine (e.g. DuMgri small hill DuMgAr big hill ; belRi small creeper bel big creeper etc.) in addition to the classification of gender based on vowel ending. And the distinction between human and non-human is natural as well as conventional.
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Most of the Marwari nouns end in vowels. The final vowel gives a clue to the gender of a particular noun. The nouns which end in consonant are masculine nouns. Below are presented the types of nouns available in Marwari: 1. Masculine Nouns i) ending in O ii) ending in u iii)ending in Consonant iv)ending in yO 2. Feminine Nouns i) ending in i ii) ending in vowel cluster iii)ending in Consonant
Examples for Masculine Nouns Animate and Human (i) beTO son chorO boy Animate and Non- Human kAburO ghoRO kuttO suwO j Ullu pAMkheru TabAr child hirAN cil bagh (iv) moriyO guMgliyO kirgTiyO pigeon horse dog parrot louse egg owl bird deer kite tiger peacock dung-bug chameleon Inanimate aLO aDO nest door
(ii)
(iii)
Examples for Feminine Nouns Animate and Human (i) chori girl beTi
mali
daughter
gardener
minni cat
bhAngi style ]
[Ofcouse /i/ ending nouns may sometime realized as non-feminine nouns also like
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(ii)
dhae
mid-wife
gae kai
cow moss
In addition to the above classification some nouns are found whose gender is not determined since those nouns are not declined for number. It is the agreement with adjective and verb which decides the gender. These nouns are i) Consonantal ending nouns like goh meh rom aiThaN jAlAm leech rain fur of animal corn of feet birth
ii)
loi Dui
blood anus
4.2.1 Classification of Nouns Following the above classification of noun the details of Marwari nounmorphology are discussed below. i) Noun The Marwari noun can be defined both morphologically and syntactically based on gender, number and case markers. 1. The noun marked with gender - chorO (masculine)boy=chori (feminine)girl 2. The noun marked with number - chorO(singular)boy = chora (plural)boys 3. The noun marked with cases - chorO (stem as well as nominative) boy = choronE (accusative) to the boy choros (ablative) from the boy chororO (genitive) of the boy 4. The nouns followed by post positions like wastE, saru etc. For eg. chororO wastE for the boy. The nouns preceeded by the attributives adjective, numeral etc. choro (stem)boy = chokhO chorO good boy (cokhO an adjective) = tin chorO 71 three boys (tin a numeral)
Nouns thus realised in Marwari can be categorized into two broad classes, namely 1.Basic Nouns and 2. Derived nouns
Basic Nouns Basic Nouns are those which are a class by itself as they are not derived from any other word class.The examples are phul kuttO hath flower dog hand phAL gae pAg fruit cow leg
The basic nouns can further be divided into a) Mass nouns and b) Count nouns
Mass nouns are those which do not show number distribution and cannot be counted with cardinal numeral. They always occur in singular form. Examples are paNi dudh (kacca) cawAL loi badAl water milk (uncooked) rice blood cloud
Count nouns are those which can take some suffixes for indicating plurality. Examples are chorO boy chori girl chora boys chorIy girls iNDO egg pothi book iNDa eggs pothIy books
Derived Nouns In Marwari some nouns are derived either from the verb or adjective or from another noun. The derived nouns are formed in two ways i) by adding derivational suffix to other words; ii) by compounding words
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Derived nouns by adding derivational suffix In Marwari some nouns can be derived from the verb or adjective or from any other noun by the addition of derivative suffixes. These are 1. Verb + noun forming suffix = Noun (verbal Noun) ro kha rAm kAr to cry = to eat= to play= to do = rokharAmkAr+ + + +-NO -NO -NO NO = = = = roNO khaNO rAmNO kArNO crying eating playing doing
2. Adjective + noun forming suffix = Noun (Adjectival Noun) Andhar D moTa dark + deep + thick + -O -O -I = = = AndharO DO moTai darkness depth thickness
3. Noun + Noun forming suffix = Noun (Abstract Noun) TabAr chorO child + boy + -pANO -pANO = = TabArpANO childhood choropANO boy hood
Derived nouns by Compounding A compound word is defined as the combination of two or more words to form a new word, for example, mAcchAr (mosquito) + dani ( a stand base) = mAcchArdani mosquito net sita ( Sita literal meaning) + phAL fruit = sita phAL custard apple paTh (study) + sala (a sheltering place) = paTh sala school Dimunitive Noun In Marwari, a class of noun forms are available as Diminutives where the bigger and the smaller form of the context is distinguished by two forms like the following pAg foot of an adult pAglya badLi pchRi DuMri 73 foot of infant small variety of cloud tail of small animal small variety of hill
4.2.2. The Marwari nouns are inflected for Gender, Number, Case. The following description give the details of Marwari gender-number-case system.
Gender Gender in Marwari is grammatically determined by two ways Masculine and feminine. The masculine gender is marked by /-O/ (singular) and /-a/, /-Iya/ (for plural) and the feminine gender by /-i- (singular) /, /-y (plural)/ by shortening the /-i/ of the nouns
Feminine Singular chori girl beTi daughter chabRi basket pothi book Plural chorIy girls beTIy daughters chabRIy baskets pothIy books
boy chora boys son beta sons dog kutta dogs child TabArIya children
Since gender is grammatically significant in Marwari the preceeding inflected pronominal forms serving as adjunct to the subject or as complement to the object receive the same gender marker as of the noun. Examples are: mharO beTO my son tharO chorO your son mharO ghAr my house but but but mhari beTi thari my daughter
Number In Marwari nouns are inflected for number. The numbers are two singular and plural. The singular is unmarked. The plural suffixes are /-a/ , /-Iya/, /-wa/ for the masculine nouns and /-y/ (Iy) for the feminine nouns. Singular -o > -a kuttO ghoRO TTIyO -Con.>-iya TabAr hirAn dog horse dragon fly child > > > > kutta ghoRa TaTIya TabArIya hirANIya Examples are Plural dogs horses dragon flies children antelopes / deers
antelope/deer >
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-u>-wa
pAMkheru bicchu
pAMkheruwa birds bicchuwa pothiy minnIy gay dhay lugay scorpions books cats cows mid-wives wives
-i >-y
pothi minni
-V.Cl>-y
Some nouns like /pan/ leaf, /ghAr/ house, /pAg/ foot, /mInAkh/ man etc. do not take any suffix to indicate the plurality. Instead, plurality is indicated by the preceeding attributes and the context. Another significant pluraliser is /-E/ which occurs also in the stems of Personal pronouns as well as in the Demonstrative pronouns. Singular O a wO wa mh th this (masculine) this (feminine) he she I you E E wE wE mhE th Plural these these they they we you
4.2.2. PRONOUN Pronoun is a class of word which substitutes noun and as such a pronoun also can take number, gender and case markers like the noun. But the functional difference between a noun and a pronoun is that the pronoun can not take any determiner and pronoun can be used in all persons whereas a noun always refers to the third person. The Marwari has the following types of pronouns. 1. Personal pronouns 4. Indefinite Pronoun and 2. Demonstrative Pronoun 5. Reflexive Pronoun. 3. Interrogative Pronoun
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1. Personal Pronoun Personal pronouns in Marwari are distinguished for three persons and two numbers (and in the third personal pronoun there is two-tier gender distinction as well). First Person Nominative Agentive Oblique Singular mh (for intrasitive verb) mh (for transitive verb) Plural mhE (for intransitive verb) mh (for transitive verb)
The examples of use of first personal pronominal forms in transitive and intransitive verbs are given below, which are realized by subject-verb agreement both for transitive and intransitive verbs. The verbal forms are First Person Intransitive Singular mh uThe ja I go there I there go mh gwme rew I village-in live I live in village mhE we AthE hi ThAhArsy here itself will stop Transitive mh UNne dekh (h)I see him I him see mh roTi khaw (h) I bread eat I eat bread mh gay kuT we cows beat
Plural
we everyday cows
t (inferior a variant found in Bikaner District) Examples of use of second personal pronominal forms Ordinary th mAnE dekhE (hE) you me see You (sg.) see me 76 the mAnE dekhO(hO) you me see you (pl.) see me
th you
posaL school
jawE (hE) go
thE you
You (pl.) see the child thE you ki what khawola will eat
you what
Honorific
th You
What do you eat? The honorific plural form is same as honorific singular, only the context determines the number. Third Person Singular Proximate Masculine Proximate Feminine Proximate Honorific Remote Masculine Remote Feminine Remote Honiorific Examples Proximate O he O a E wO wa wE he (ordinary) Plural E (ordinary) E (ordinary)
she (ordinary)
he/she (honorific) E they (honorific) he (ordinary) wE they wE wE they they Plural E mhara beta my sons hE are
they
daughter is
daughter are
She is my daughter
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E he
mhra
guruji teachers
hE are
they my
they fence over jump They jump over the fence wE posaL jawE
there stands
Remote honorific singular and plural forms are same as the remote ordina ry plural forms. The above indirect forms are the personal pronominals with which the case inflections are not added. The case inflections are added with the oblique bases of the pronominal forms. Below are given the oblique forms of the pronouns. Direct First Person (Singular) (Plural) Second person (Singular) (Plural) (honorific) Third person (Singular) mh / mh mhE/ mh th thE th O / a (m.) wO / wa (f.) (Plural) e wE Oblique mhA- , mA-, mhamhthA-, TAthathINUN INUN-
The case markers are added with these oblique forms in the following ways: mhAnE/mAnE to me mharO thanE/tAne thnE tharO UNrO UNnE my to you to you your his / her to him/her mhnE mhrO thanE thnE thrO UNrO UNnE to us our to you to you your their to them
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2. Demonstrative Pronoun The demonstrative pronoun in Marwari distinguishes for two-tier spatial distance like i) Proximate demonstrative pronoun that refers to the objects nearer to the speaker and ii) Remote demonstrative pronoun that refers to the objects away from the speaker. Marwari demonstrative pronoun is distinguished by two-tier numbers singular and plural. Below are exemplified the demonstrative pronouns in Marwari. Singular Proximate Masculine O this (masculine) O moTyar this man andhO hE blind is Plural E E these (masculine) hE
dO ghAr
E these
tin three
ghoRa
hE
horses are
this a
these two
carts are
This is a cart Remote Masculine wO that wO mharO kam koni that my work not
Remote Feminine
wE wE those
those two
That is a cat
3. Interrogative Pronoun The Interrogative pronouns are person and object specific in Marwari. Below are presented the interrogative types with examples. 1. kuN who wO he kuN who kuN hE Who is he?
who is jaNE knows awela Who will come with me? Who knows
who will come nam hE is What do you want? What is your name?
3.
kimE which
pothi hE
kimE thrO
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Out of the above forms /kuN/ is inflected by case markers and the case markers are added with the oblique form of /kuN/ which is /kIN-/. Thus kuN> kINa this th you pothi book kINnE whom + -ri kINrO whose kINri whose + -nE kINnE = dewela To whom will you give this book kINnE whom (accusative of kuN)
To whom you spoke whose whose Whose horse is this? (genitive of kuN)
4. Indefinite Pronoun The pronouns which denote some non-definite person or thing instead of denoting definite person or thing are Indefinite pronouns. In Marwari the Indefinite pronouns and their uses in sentences are as follows thoRO some UNnE thoRO dhAn cawE to him some money wants He wants some money thoRa some thoRa nAwa thoRa juna some new some old hE are
Some are new some are old koi anybody koi bhi O kam kAr sAkE can
work do
Anybody can do this work dusrO another dusrO another TabAr nE boy to bulawO call
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5. Reflexive Pronoun In Marwari the Reflexive pronouns are formed with /ap/ own / self which are inflected for plural number and those are presented below ap ap own /self we ourselves ap we AthE here ghANa bArAs rey liya many yea rs lived
We have lived here for quite many years apNE to ourselves apNE apNO aLO duji ThoR we apNO our own aprE self our nest somewhere else bANawNO caije have to build
We ourselves have to build our nest somewhere else kagli aprE dhANi nE to kewO told
The crow-hen told to the husband of herself The Reflexive pronominal /ap/ is replaced by /khud/ self in the singular number and the same is realised in all the three persons as noted below mh th wO 4.2.3. CASE Like other languages, in Marwari also the semantic relations between a noun phrase or subject and a predicate is expressed by the grammatical category of case. In Marwari the case relations are expressed in three ways i) by the absence of marker pAMkheru uDE the bird flies gae cArE the cow grazes khud khud khud I myself only Your yourself only He himself only
pAMkheru and gae are realized as nominative case ii) by the addition of case marker mharO beTO ghArE hE My son is in the house mha-rO is realized as genitive case thE TabArnE dekhO You see the child TabAr-nE is realized as accusative case
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kuttO mharE pachE ayO The dog came behind me wO rkhrE nicE sowE He sleeps under the tree
Accordingly the cases realised in Marwari are the following. 1. Nominative 7. Ablative 2. Agentive 8. Genitive 3. Benefactive 9. Locative 4. Accusative 5. Instrumental 6.Dative
1. Nominative Nominative case is used with the subject of the sentence which is either a noun or a pronoun. In the first personal pronominal pronouns the nominative is marked or unmarked according to the transitive and intransitive character of the verb. In case of nouns the nominative case is unmarked. Nominative case in nouns TabAr heThE pAR pAMkheru rkh gay dudh gyo the child falls down The bird sits on the tree The cows give milk
mathE beThE
dewE
Here /TabAr/ child , /pAMkheru/ bird, /gaya/ cows are nominative forms and the case marker is unmarked. Nominative case in pronoun In case of intransitive verb the first personal nominative is unmarked. But it is marked in transitive verb Intransitive mh AthE ja I go here Transitive mh uNnE dekh mh gay kuT I see them We beat the cows
The first personal singular pronominal form /mh/ is changed into /mh/ and first personal plural pronominal form /mhE/ is changed into /mh/ in nominative case in case of transitive verbs.
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The second and third person pronominal forms are unmarked in nominative case. Intransitive th UThE jawE You (sg & non.hon.) go there wO UThE jawE hE He goes there Transitive th TabAr dekhE You (sg & non.hon.) see the child wE khet jawE They go to the field
2.
Agentive case Agentive is marked by /-ne/ case marker and occurs with transitive verb in perfective
aspect. It is also called ergative construction when the agreement of the verb is with the object. Examples ram nE ek pen khArid kAriyO sita nE dO ambO khayi ram bought a pen sita ate two mangoes
3.
Benefactive case This case denotes the being in whose interest the action, indicated by the verb, is done.
This case is expressed by /saru/, /wastE/ mh I mhari lUgairi my wife wastE for nuwa geNa new ornaments layO have brought
I have brought new ornaments for mywife mh mh I mharO mharO my beTE or beTE rE son saru dukhi h
I feel sorry for my son mh I iNrE it wastE for sAgli every kani where dekhlyO looked
4.
Accusative Case This case denotes the direct object of the transitive verbs. In case of human nouns and
pronouns the case is marked by /-nE/ while inanimate and non-human nouns are unmarked. 84
wO he
dekhE sees
TabAriya children mh I
Here /-nE/ as accusative marker has been suffixed respectively with TabAr-, mh > mA-, lUgai. But in the sentences below the objects like gay, TippAN and git appear without any marker. mh we wO he mh I gay cows ek a ek a kuT beat TippAN note git song likhIyo has written gae rAyo hE I am singing a song hE He has written a note We beat the cows
am singing
5.
Instrumental case This case is used to denote instrument with which the action is performed. The marker /-s/
is used with the agent. mharE pens my pen with likh write
We came by this road wE she kINIs mAjurnE panc ripiya dirawE five hE
somebody-by labourers-to
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6.
Dative Case The indirect object of the transitive verb is expressed by the dative case. The dative case
marker is also /-nE/. The context only determines whether /-nE/ is dative or accusative. mh I uNnE to him ek a pothi book dey rAyO h am giving
I am giving a book to him mhara my bapu father mAnE me pisa money bhejIyo has sent
My father has sent me money wO he mAnE me panc five ripiya rupees dewE gives
He gives me five rupees Here /UNnE/ and /mAnE/ stem) + dative /-nE/ . 7. Ablative case The movement of the subject or the object from one place to another either at the spatial plane or at the temporal plane is expressed by the ablative case. It denotes the source. This case is also expressed by /-s-/ rkh tree wO he posaL s from pan leaves ayO jhArE fall hE Where has he come from? The leaves fall from the tree being the indirect object are formed with base (derived from
school - from
come
8. Genitive case This case expresses the meaning of belonging to or possession of something by the subject of the sentence. The genitive case markers are /-rO/ /-ra/ /-ri/. When the possessing object is masculine singular the marker is /-rO/, for example.mharO beTO my son my son /beTO/ is masculine and Singular
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If the following possessing noun is honorific then the genitive marker is /-ra/ instead of /-rO/, for example mhra mhra pitaji mAsTarji my father my teacher
When the possessing object is masculine plural and honorific then also the genitive marker is /-ra/ tharO pAg your foot = /tharO/ is genitive or ordinary second person masculine singular and /pAg/ is masculine singular; thara pAg your feet = /thara/ is genitive second person masculine plural and in the present context /pAg/ is masculine plural; thra pAg your feet = /thra/ is genitive of second person honorific (singular as well as plural) mhara chora my sons = plural of mharO chorO my son plural of tharO TabAr plural of UNrO beTO plural of UNrO beTO your son his son his (honorific) son
thara TabArIiya your sons = UNara beTa UNra beTa his sons =
his(hon.) sons=
When the possessing nouns are feminine then the genitive marker is /-ri/ lUgairi lUgairi thari thari chabRi chabRIya pothi pothIy the basket of a woman the baskets of a woman your book your books
9.
Locative Case The location of the subject or object is expressed by the locative case marker is /-mE/ or
We live in the village hE is My son is in the house The children come to the garden
This case denotes association with somebody. The sociative marker is /sagE/ , /sathE/ which are used after inflected nominal or pronominal form. mh I thrE you sagE/ sathE kams with to work jala / jali will go (m./f.)
I will go with you to work mharE me sagE with kuN who awela will come
Who will come with me? [Note The genitive marker rO, -ra, -ri is modified into rE when a sociative case marker/ post-position follows it. Thus, mharE sagE etc.]
10.
Vocative case The vocative case is expressed in the following way in Marwari. he he rama bhaela Oh, God! Oh, Friend! or Oh Lord Ram!
In Marwari Post Position has also a role in expressing case relations. Post positions always occur after the noun or noun-phrase. They are used postpositionally of a case-inflected nominal/pronominal form and the preceeding case marker essentially is genitive. The postpositions though appear independently in the sentence but they are not free forms and as a result they are neither inflected for gender and number nor the definite article is added to the post positions. 88
The following are some of the post-positions in Marwari. mathE up kuttO minni mathE bhukhE dog wO he cat - at bakhAr hill barks mathE gyo up - went He went up the hill The dog barks at the cat
ayO came
The dog came behind me sam in front of th you mharE me sam ky ubo hE
in front of why
doyou stand
Why do you stand in front of me? heThE under jAmi earth mhrE pAgarE our feet heThE hE under is
The earth is under our feet nicE under pothi book mhrE Tebul our table nicE hE
below is
The book is below our table jy jeDO like wO he mharE me jy like dikhE looks
He looks like me kani side /besides mharE kani my side jAga seat lelO take
Take seat by my side sage/sathe with / alongwith wO mharE he me sagE / sathE alongwith ayO came
He came alongwith me
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Some other post-positions available in Marwari, are given below. pachE bicaLE ti mE barE kAnE or bikani after between for inside out of near through towards etc.
4.2.5. ADJECTIVE An adjective is a word which modifies a noun. In Marwari the adjective precedes the qualifying noun. achO good dhoLO white chorO boy ghoRO horse white-horse good-boy achi good chori good-girl girl
In Marwari adjectives are declined for gender and number. The gender and number of the adjective is in concordance with that of the following noun. The gender bas ed adjectival suffixes are o for masculine and i for feminine. Examples achO chorO dubLO ghoRO good boy weak horse achi chori good girl
The number-wise adjectival suffixes are a for masculine plural and i for feminine dhoLa ghoRa white horses hAra panra green leaves moTi pothIy cokhi chorIy big books beautiful girls
Here, /dhoLa/ , /hAra/ are the plural forms of adjectives /dhoLO/, /hArO/ respectively. Besides the above adjectival formation there are two grammatical classes of adjectives in Marwari, namely 1. Predicative Adjectives and 2. Derived adjectives which are discussed below. 90
1.Predicative adjective Adjectives in Marwari are found as used predicatively occurring before the verb substantives. In predicative use the adjectives follow the nouns in the sentences. Examples Non-predicative use patLi chori the lean girl moTi pothi the big book > > > > > Predicative use a chori a pothi patLi hE moTi hE This girl is lean This book is big The child is tall Clothes are old That house is new
lAmbo TabAr the tall child juna kApRa old clothes new house
nuwo ghAr
O ghAr nuwo hE
In the predicative use the adjectives form part of the verb phrase. 2. Derived Adjectives In Marwari some adjectives are found to have derived from verb and hence these may be termed as derived adjectives. The formation is the following: Verb Base + Past Participle form + -R- + Gender Examples pARIyoRO pARIyoRa pAkIyoRO pAkIyoRa chApIyoRi chApIyoRi phAl phAL ambo amba pothi pothiy fallen fruit fallen fruits the ripe mango the ripe mangoes printed book printed books
The forms
pARIyoRO
(singular) /
pARiyoRa
(plural),
pAkIyoRO(singular)
pAkIyoRa (Plural), chApIyoRi (feminine) respectively are derived from the respective verb roots pAR- to fall , pAk- to ripe, chAp- to printwhich have taken the adjective forming suffix IyoR -i (feminine) and number markers like O (singular), -a (plural).
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Further, semantically the Marwari adjectives can be categorized into three, namely. i) Qualitative, ii) Quantitative and iii) Demonstrative adjective. Qualitative adjective The adjectives which attribute a quality to the nouns are called qualitative adjectives. The examples are hArO buDhO pan minAkh green leaf old man clever child white horses the dark cloud the green leaves the big children the high hill the drenched child the wet cloth the small eggs the small egg bADi gaDDi cAtri chori pAtLi pothi lAmbi chori aLsi chorIy lAMgri lUgai khali taji chabRi mAchli big cart wise girl thin book tall girl lazy girls the lame woman empty basket fresh fish greedy cat greedy man old lady
cAtrO /cAtAr TabAr dhoLa kaLa hAra moTa cO alO gilO nanha nanhO ghoRa badAL panra TabAriya bakhAr TabAr kApRO iNDa iNDO
buDhi lUgai
Some qualitative adjectives do not decline for gender and number. For example sAkhAt hard , khali empty , niras despaired , ghAnghor deep / dark etc. Accordingly, the Adjectives in Marwari are realisesd as Variables and Non -Variables. Quantitative adjective The adjectives which refer to the quantity of the nouns with which they occur are called Quantitative adjectives. In Marwari the use of Quantitative adjectives are as follows
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i) When the numerical unit is followed by the relevant attributed nouns. Masculine ek dO tin ii) kuttO one dog kutta kutta two dogs three dogs ek dO tin Feminine minni minnIy minnIy one cat two cats three cats
When the quantity is in indefinite unit followed by the attributed nouns: Singular thoRO dhAN some money thoRO phAL some fruit Plural thoRa cawAL thoRa kApRa some rice some clothes
The numerals cardinals ordinals fractional multiplicatives are also the quantitative adjectives dealt separately in the following section: iii) Another category is expressed by the words of counts, measurements and commonality when /-tt/, /-sO/ etc. are added to pronominal bases for the adjective referring quantity. kittO how much / how many kittO kittO jittO isO jisO this much / that much this much that much jittO isO jisO keLa cawAL dhAn kOm kOm how many bananas how much rice that much money this much work that much work all people
sAgLa all
sAgLa mInAkh
1. Demonstrative adjective The forms which demonstrate the nouns are called Demonstrative adjectives which are realised in following way in Marwari.
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O a E wE
This house is mine This book is yours These clothes are old These five houses belong to him(honorific)
UNra hE
In the above examples /ghAr/ , /pothi/ , /kApRa/, /panc ghAr / are demonstrated by /O/ , /a/ , /E/ , /wE/ respectively and for this purpose here they function as Demonstrative adjectives only. 4.2.6. NUMERALS All the numerals belong to adjective class. In Marwari the numerals follow decimal system of counting. The numerals are the following 1. Cardinals 2. Ordinals 3. Fractionals 4. Multiplication Cardinal numerals The following are the cardinal numerals in Marwari ek panc aTh one five / eight dO two tin chE dAs three six ten cyar/car four sat seven
From eleven to eighteen the numerals are formed by adding /-yara/, /-ra/, /-da/, /-ara/ to the allomorphs of /ek/ , /dO/, /tin/ which are respectively /Ik-~Ig-/, /ba-/, /te-/, /cO-/, /pAn-/ etc. Accordingly, Igyara eleven ; bara twelve ; tera thirteen; cOda fourteen ; pAndra fifteen ; soLa sixteen ; sAtera seventeen ; aTThara eighteen.
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The formation like nineteen, twenty-nine, thirty-nine and so on are made by adding /is/ (the allomorph of dAs ten) with /un-/~ /Un/ (the allomorph of nine ) and thus unnis nineteen, Untis twenty-nine, UncalIs thirty-nine etc. From 21, 31 onwards the numerals are formed by adding / is/ (the allomorph of /dAs/ ten) with the allomorphs of /ek/, /dO/, /tin/ respectively as below. ikkis one + twenty twenty one bais two + twenty twenty-two
twenty three
twenty four
thirty one
thirty two
[The list is quite exhaustive] From eleven onwards upto ninety it is found that the allomorphs of ten, twenty, thirty, forty, fifty, sixty, seventy, eighty, ninety which are respectively -ra, -ttAr, -asi , is, -tis, -wAn, -sATT,
-nAbbE are added with the oblique bases of cardinals from one to nine which
are ik- / ig- , ba- , te- , cO- , pan- / pc, so- / chA- / chE / sAt- / sat-, sAt-, sat- / s- , aTTh, un- respectively. Thus, the forms are Ikkis Iktis Ikcalis IkawAn IkattAr Ikasi IkkanwE/IkanAbbE twenty one thirty one forty one fifty one seventy one eighty one ninety one
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Ordinals In the numerals from one to four the allomorphs are /pel-/ one, /du-/two, / ti -/ three , /co- / four are added with the ordinal suffixes o, -jo, -jo, -tho respectively which are further declined in feminine gender marked by -i , -ji , -thi respectively, Thus, pElo tijO ~ ~ pEli tiji first third dujO ~ duji (f.) cOthi(f.) second fourth
cOthO ~
From fifth onwards the ordinal suffix w is added after the cardinals, for example, pcwO chATha/chAua satw aThw Fractionals The basic fractions are given below out of which /adha/ half has allomorph /saRi/ which is used with the cardinal numerals from three onwards 1 1 2 3 4 5 6 = = = = = = = = = = soa adha pon pura DeRh Dhai saRi saRi saRi saRi tin cyar pc/ saRi pc chE [which is declined in feminine as adhi] fifth sixth seventh eighth pcwi chAThi satw aThw
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Multiplicatives The Multiplicatives are found in Marwari in the forms like the following dUgNO cOgNO chEgUNO two times four times six times
4.2.7. CLASSIFIERS The unit which classifies the quantitative counting of the noun may be treated as classifier. The cardinal numerical unit serves the purpose of classifiers in Marwari. For example ek panc TabAr ghAr one boy five houses dO dAs TabAriya ghoRa two boys ten horses
and so on.
4.3. VERB MORPHOLOGY This section deals with the structure of Finite and Non-finite verbal formations along with the categories of verbs in Marwari. 4.3.1. Definition of verbs in Marwari Verb is a form class that marks tense aspect modal personal markers distinguished by number and gender. The structure of the verb classes are realized in the following patterns in Marwari: verb stem + tense ( + aspect) + personal marker+ number marker + copula.
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Pattern-I S-1 ghoRO doRE (hE) The horse runs [doR-+-E + hE]
S-2
ghoRO doR
S-3
ghoRo doRyO hE
[doR-+-yO+hE]
Structure is (Vb.) Stem + First Person Singular Present Marker + First Personal Singular Copula
S-2
mhE
wAThE/UThE
jaw
we go there [ = ja-+-w+h]
Structure is (Vb.) Stem + First Person Plural Present Marker + First Personal Plural Copula
S-3
mh
likh
I write
[ = likh-+- + h]
S-4
mhE
likh
We write
[= likh- + - + h]
Structure is verb stem -+- first personal Singular marker + - aspect / tense marker + masculine personal marker
S-2
mh
jawli (Feminine)
I will go there
Structure is verb stem -+- first personal Singular marker +- aspect/tense marker + feminine personal marker
S-3
wO
kam
kArela (Masculine)
He will do
Structure is verb stem -+- third personal Singular marker + aspect / tense marker+masculine personal marker
S-4
wa
kam
kAreli (Feminine)
She will do
Structure is verb stem -+- third personal Singular marker +- aspect/tense marker + - feminine personal marker
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Pattern- IV S-1 S-2 S-3 S-4 wO wa ek ek pothi pADhE (hE) pothi pADhE (hE) pothi pothi pADhi pADhela He reads a book She reads a book He reads a book He will read the book
UnNE ek wO ek
The personal markers occurs at the end of form and copula appears separately whe re it is necessary. If there are other markers like aspect, causative etc. they occur between verb stem and copula. 4.3.2. Classification of Verb The Marwari verb stems can be classified into simple and compound verbs. Simple Verb A simple verb is composed of monomorphemic single root with or without a suffix. The verb is conjugated with aspect - gender number personal markers. The conjugational pattern of vowel ending and consonant ending verb roots are given below . kha(No) kha eat mh I kha eat h I eat
khayO ate (1st person) khaE eats (3rd person) rakh (No)keep rakhE keeps(3rd person)
I ate
He eats
wO he
rakhE hE keep-s
rakhela
will keep
wO pothi he book
[The details of the finite verb formation is presented in Finite verb section.] 99
Compound Verb A Compound verb consists of more than one root and may include one or more suffixes. Compound Verb with root /kAr-/ hakO kAr (NO) ulTi kAr (NO) roLO kAr (NO) dtiy kAr (NO) to shout to vomit to quarrel to quarrel Compound verb with root /mar-/ goLi mar (NO) to shoot jhrATiya mar (NO) to scratch
Further, different compound verbs are formed with verb roots like /huwo-/ , /paR-/, /dewO-/ etc. as a second member of the Compound Verbs. Based on morphological and syntactic function the verb stems can be further divided into three sub-classes. These are 1. Intransitive, 2. Transitive, 3. Causative, 4. Transitive Intransitive and 5. Auxiliary.
Intransitive The verbs which do not take any object. Example of Intransitive verbs are phir(NO) dOR(NO) bETh(NO) walk run sit aw(NO) jaw(NO) tir(NO) come go swim
The examples of Intransitive verbal formation are kuttO TabAr dORE posaL hE jawE The dog runs The child goes to school etc.
Transitive - The verbs which take an object. The examples of transitive verbs are kha(NO) dekh(NO) kuT(NO) eat see hit/beat dewo(NO) likh(NO) mel (NO) give write put
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The examples of Transitive verbal formation are wO mh wO wa cawAL TabAr pothi ek khawE dekhyO pADhE TippAN likh reyi he eats rice I saw the child He reads a book hE She is writing a note
Causative Verb Causative verbs are those which have two agents of which one causes the other to do. The vowels of the verb bases are changed with which waw/-aw are added The examples of causative verbs are Vowel ending verb kha- > khA-+w-aw = khAwaw (NO) cause to eat su> so-+- waw = sowaw (NO) cause to sleep Consonant ending verb dekh- > dikh-+-a = dikhaw (NO)to show likh- > likh -+-a = likhaw (NO) to cause to write The examples of Causative structure are mh th TabAr nE UNnE khAwaw (h) I feed the child You (hon.) teach her
pADhawE
In case of some irregular verbs like /dewO-/ to give, /lewO-/ to take etc. the causative formation is like the following dewO- > diraw(NO) mh uNs ek to make to give pothi dirawE reyO h
She is making some one give rupees to worker Transitive Intransitive A transitive intransitive verb is one which is transitive or intrtansitive simultaneously, that is, by the addition of a transitive/intransitive suffix when the transitive - intransitive verbs are formed. Examples are
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an intransitive verb which means self burn My mouth has been burnt a transitive verb She is burning fuel of wood an intransitive verb The cattle moves into the field a transitive verb. Bend the body
ghum (NO)
Dhor khetmE
ghumE
Auxiliary Verb: The verb base /hu(wO)/ being conjugated in tense-person-gender-number is realized as the principal auxiliary verb. The details of Verbal sub-classes have been dealt after Finite and Non-Finite verb formation sections. 4.3.3. Finite Verb Having the verb root as the base both Finite and Non-finite verbal formations are realised in Marwari. The components of finite verb are 1. Tense 2. Aspect and 3. Mood which are discussed below.
Tense Hockett defines the tense as a grammatical category showing different locations of an event in time (Hockett, 1970, pp-167). And according to Lyons The essential characteristic of the category of tense is that it relates the time of action, event or state of affairs referred to in the sentence to the time of utterance (Lyons, 1968, pp-305). Accordingly, verbs in Marwari are morphologically marked for having three way opposition of tense as 1. Present 2. Past and 3. Future. Following are the personwise tense formations in Marwari.
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Present Tense - It indicates the action that takes place when the utterance is uttered. Accordingly, the present tense is formed in the following way. First Person verb stem -+- + h mh khet ja h I field go mh / mh pothi pADh h I book read [/mh/ , generally, is used in first person for intransitive i) verb ] ii) verb stem -+ - / -w + h mhE we khet field jaw go pothi book pADh h read We read the book h for plural We go to the field for singular I go to the field I read the book verb and /mh/ is used for transitive
mh / mhE we
[/mhE/ is the 1st personal plural form for intransitive and generally /mh/ is the first personal plural form for transitive verb] Second Person i) Verb stem -+- w / - + h th th khet jaw (h) for singular You go to the field You read a book
ii) Verb stem -+- wO / -O + hO th / thE you(hon.) you (Pl.) th / thE you (hon)/you (pl.) khet jawO hO
Third Person Third person verb stem + -wE/ -E+ hE both for singular and plural wO he khet field jawE (hE) go(pr.) He goes to field
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wE they wO he wE they
khet
jawE (hE)
field go(pr.) pothi pADhE (hE) book pothi book reads(pr.) pADhE (hE) read(pr.) They read book He reads book
Past Tense Past tense refers to an event which happened before the time of utterance. The formation of past tense in different persons is the following First person singular - verb stem -+-y / -iy- (past marker) + -O (1st personal singular marker) mh I mh / mh I khet field gAyO went I wrote the letter I went to the field
First person plural - verb stem -+-y / -iy- (past marker) + -a (1st person plural marker) mhE we khet gAya We went to field
mh / mhE we
Second person singular - verb stem y- (Past marker) + -O th th gAyO likhIyO You went You wrote
Second Person plural / honorific - verb stem - +-y- (past marker) + -a th / thE you(hon.)/(pl.) Third person singular masculine feminine wO he khet field khet field gAya went You (hon)/(pl) went to field
verb stem -+-y-+ o verb stem -+-y-+ i wa she khet gAyi She went to field
field went
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Third person plural - verb stem -+-y + -o wE wE khet gAyO They went to field They wrote letter
ciTThi likhiyO
Future Tense Future tense indicates the time preceeding the time of utterance. The future tense marker is -l-. The personwise future tense formation is the following
First person singular verb stem -+- / -w - ( future base marker) + -l- (future tense marker) + -a (masculine personal marker) / -i (feminine personal marker) mh I mh I mh I mh I First person plural verb stem-+-w- / -mhE / mh we mh we pothi (future base marker)+ -l- (future tense marker) +-a (person marker) khet jawla We will go to the field khet jawla I will go to the field
field will go (f.) pothi pADhla book will read(m.) I will read the book I will read the book
Second person singular verb stem- +we- / -eth you th you (future base marker)+ -l- (future marker ) + -a (person marker) khet field jawela will go You will read the book You will go to the field
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Second person plural / honorific verb stem-+ - wO- / -O- (future base marker) + -l- (future marker) + -a (personal marker) thE / th you (pl./hon.) thE / th khet jawola You will go to the field
field will go pothi pADhola will read You will read thre book
Third person singular - The formation is same as the second person singular. The subject, either in nominal or phonominal form, determines the distinction between third person and singular. Third person plural/honorific Like the singular form the third person plural / honorific singular and plural are expressed in the same way as in second person singular/honorific. The subject will indiate the occurrence for third person and second person.
Aspect Aspect is not related to the time of utterance as Hockett defines that Aspect is a grammatical category of verb which has nothing to do with the location of an event in time but with its temporal distribution or contour. (Hockett, 1970, pp-167). Accordingly, aspect is related with duration, perfection, habituality etc. Marwari has 3 aspects namely 1. Durative 2. Perfective and 3. Habitual which are found to occur in different tenses.
1. Durative or Imperfective Aspect It describes an action which is regarded as continuous in the past or present or future tenses. The durative aspect marker is derived from the subsidiarty verb root rewO which is inflected according to tense and person and gender and which is placed in between the verb stem and copula. Thus the structure of the finite verb with durative aspect is -- verb durative + copula Present durative The structure of the present duratibve in different persons is First person singular - verb stem - + reyo(<reh-) + h . mh/mh I khet field jaE reyO h going am Examples I am going to the field stem +
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mh I
pothi book
h am
I am reading book
First person plural - verb stem - + reya(<rah-) + h. mh / mhe we mh / mhE we khet field jaE reya going h are h a re
Second person ordinary singular verb stem - + reyo + h. th you th you khet field pothi book jae reyO going h are
Second person ordinary plural / honorific - verb stem - + reya + ho thE / th you (pl./hon.) ord(pl) (hon) thE / th you (pl./hon.) pADh reya reading hO are (masculine) (feminine) He is going to the field You are reading jaE reya going hO are You are going
Third person singular verb stem - + reyO + hE verb stem - + reyi + hE wO he wa she wO he wa she khet field khet field jaE reyO going jaE reyi going hE is hE is hE is hE is
He is reading book
Third person plural / honorific - verb stem - + reya (<rewo-) + hE wE they khet field jaE reya going hE are They are going to the field
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wE they
hE are
Past Durative -
First person Singular - verb stem - + reyO (<rew-) + hO mh / mh I mh / mh I First person Plural khet field jaE reyO going hO was hO was I was reading book I was going to field
- + reya (<rew-) + ha jae reya going ha were ha were We were reading book We were going to field
mhE / mh we mh we
Second person singular - Verbal Formation is same as in first person. th th khet jaE reyO hO hO You were going to field You were reading book
But in second person singular past durative feminine concord is also found; for example th th khet jaE reyi hi hi You (fem) were going to field You(fem) were reading book
So for the singular personal aspect wise formation the structure is verb stem - + reyi + hi (Past tense 2 nd personal sg. feminine marker) Second personal plural / hornorific - The structure is same as first personal plural i.e. verb stem - + reya (<rew-) + ha thE / th you(pl./hon.) thE / th khet field jaE reya going ha were ha were you (pl) were reading book You (pl) were going to field
you(pl./hon.) book
Third person singular is also same as First and Second person singular. Similarly, third personal plural is also same as First and second personal plural.
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Future Durative - The structure of finite verb with future durative aspect is the following First person singular - verb stem - + reyO + howla / howli (masc.) mh / mh I mh / mh I khet field jaE reyO going (fem.) howla will be howli will be I will be going to the field I will be going to the field
First person plural - verb stem - + reya(<rew-) + howla mh we mh we khet field pothi book jaE reya going howla will be We will be reading book We will be going to field
verb stem - + reyo(<rew-) + huwela huwela will be huwela will be You will be reading book You will be going to field
Second person plural/honorific - verb stem - + reya (<rew-) + howola thE khet jaE reya howola You(pl.)/(hon.)will be going to field
you field going will be (pl./hon.) thE pothi pADh reya howola you(pl./hon.) book reading will be
Third person singular - verb stem - + reyo (<rew-) + huwela (masc.) verb stem - + reyi (<rew-) + huwela (fem.) wO he wa she wa he khet field khet field pothi book jaE reyO going jaE reyi going pADh reyi studying huwela will be huwela will be huwela will be He will be reading book She will be going to field He will be going to field
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wa she
huwela will be
Third person plural / honorific wE they wE they khet field jaE reya going
verb stem - + reya(<rew-) + howela howela will be howela will be They will be reading book They will be going to field
Perfective Aspect It describes an action either completed in the past or to be completed in the past or to be completed. In the present it expresses the completion of an action which is just finished. In the past it expresses the action which is already done. The action to the completed in near future is expressed in future perfect. The aspect marker is principal verb stem - + auxiliary verb root /lewO/ which is inflected for all the tenses persons number gender. Thus First person Singular Present mh / mh I khaE liy (h) eaten have Plural mh / mhE khaE liy we eaten have
written have
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Second person Singular Present th khaE liyO thE Plural / honorific khaE liya
[Note If the object is feminine then the present and past perfect formation in case of transitive verb roots also concord with feminine. mh th wO Third person Present wO He wO He khaE liyO has likh has eaten liyO written wE khaE liyO eaten liya written pothi pADh li pothi pADh li pothi pADh li I have/had written You have / had written He has/had written
They have
Past
same as above
Future
wO
khaE liyO
huwela
wE
khaE liya
howela
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Habitual aspect It describes an action which happens/happened or will happen habitually or regularly. In finite verb the habitual aspect in present and future is same as discussed under the present tense and future tense formation. The difference is observed in case of past habitual only and the structure of person wise past habitual is as follows Singular First person mh khawtO hO Plural mh khawta ha
I used to read
We used to read
Second person
th
khawtO hO
thE
khawta ha
Third person
wO
khawtO hO
wE
khawta ha
Thus the structure of the past habitual is Verb root Verb root -+- tO + -+- ta + hO for singular ha for plural.
Only the subject preceeding the verbal form will distinguish the occurrence of person.
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Mood The mode or manner of a speaker (subject) about the occurrence of a particular event is expressed by mood which distinguishes a statement, a command, a question, a doubt etc. The following modal categories are realised in Marwari as per the available data. 1. Indicative 5. Compulsive 2. Imperative 6. Optative 3. Interrogative 7. Conditional 4. Potential 8. Negative.
The structure of the modal formation under each category is discussed below.
Indicative Mood Simple declarative sentences express the Indicative mood for which no separate marker or particle is added. For example mh TabAr nE rkh dekh (h) mathE bEThE (hE) heThE aegyO / agyO I see the child The bird sits on the tree He came down the hill
pAMkheru wO
bakhArs
Imperative Mood This modal category is indicated by the expression of a command, request. The
imperative marker is wo for vowel ending verb root and o for consonantal ending verb root. For example wAThE / UThE jawO go there posaL awO bhaine bulawO come to school call your brother a pothi pADhO Read this book hOLE bolO Tci speak slowly
In the above set of sentences in left side wo has been realised as imperative mood marker for ja go, a come, bula call respectively. And in the right the modal marker is o for the verb roots pADh read, bol speak, beTh sit respectively.
Interrogative Mood The interrogative mood is realised by a question in sentence. The question words like /ki/ what , /kAThE/where, /kANO/when etc. are used before the verb form and express the interrogation in the sentence. For example
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th
kAThE nam
rewE hE
where do you live? what is your name? when do you (hon.sg.) get up? etc.
tharO ki thE
kANO uThO hO
Potential Mood The potential action is expressed in potential mood and the verb stem sAk- inflected in person number tense expresses this potentiality in the sentences. For Example mh wO wE aE sAk mar I may come sAkE He may kill the bird They may ask
Compulsive Mood The compulsion on the part of the subject is expressed in compulsive mood. The words like /caije/ , /ij/ /pARela/ express the compulsion in the sentence, for examplemhAnE UNnE TabArnE awANO pothi pADhNO caijE I ought to come likhniij He ought to write a book pARela The child had to read
Here /caije/ , /ij/ , /pARela/ expressed the compulsion of the sentences respectively and the preceeding verb of the compulsive marker is formed as verb base -+- NO for masculine object and verb base -+- ni for feminine object.
Optative mood The optative mood expresses a desire, wish, permission or request in a sentence which is expressed in following way in Marwari. wE sAgLanE awAN dO
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Conditional mood When the completion of one verbal action is conditioned by another verb that particular manner of expression is called as Conditional modal category. In this mood two verbal actions are involved simultaneously. The particle or set of particles that establishes the conditionality between the two verbal action is jE . tO if .. then . For example
jE mh If I
kalE
mh
then tomorrow I
jE if
th you
wAkhAtsar in time
ayO come
tO then
jE if
wO he
doRai difficulty
mE in
huwela
tO
th you
mhAnE to me
tar
kArela
will be then
will wire
Further conditionality is expressed exclusively by the single particle /pAN/ but also. Examples mhAnE kalE I yesterday awANO hO could have come pAN but mandgi rE ill health of karAN n ayO
I would have come yesterday but due to my ill health I did not come. thE you UThE there ha were pAN but thE you cup quiet reya kept
You (pl.) were there, yet you kept quiet wa she UThE hi pAN but begi gi
there was
soon went
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Negative Mood In Marwari the negative mood is expressed by the negative words like /n/ , /koni/, /n/, /mAt/ which precede the verb. The examples of negative modal formation in Marwari are given below th O wO n k n pADh reyO kamrO n O risto n n kAriyO hE hO hE you were not reading It is of no use Not that one but this We are not related He has not done the work
mharE ki wO kam
In the above sentences / n/ indicates the negation of the statement . /koni/also expresses the negation of the statement like mh INnE kAThei koni dekhyO I found it nowhere
The negation of imperative is expressed as the following jhuTh mAt Itta hka bega mAt bolO mAt bolO suwO Do not tell lies Do not go to bed so soon Do not speak loudly
Further, the negation is sometimes expressed by / n / n th jaNO Ar n mh Neither you know nor I I should not have done the work
4.3.4 Non-FiniteVerb The verbal forms which do not express the finiteness of a verbal action is a non finite verb. In Marwari the non-finite verbal forms are the following
Infinitive The infinitive in Marwari is formed by adding /-wAN/ after vowel ending verb root and /-AN/ after consonantal ending verb root which is followed by the post position /saru/ or suffix /ri wastE/ to indicate the meaning like for doing, for going etc. The examples are buTobalAN richpalAN saru saru for destroying for protecting for killing lawAN khawAn saru saru for taking for eating for protecting
marAN ri wastE
rukhalAN ri wastE
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Another infinitive marker is NO (to indicate the form like to see , to do) which is added after the verb root. The examples are mh we mh I jawNO to go awNO to come pArsAn kAr like caw want I want to come We like to go
Sometime /-s/ is also added after the verb root to indicate infinite verb. For example mh I thrE you sathE with kams to work cAlla/cAlli will go Thus, kams to work
Verbal Noun The Marwari verbal nouns are derived by the addition of the noun forming suffix /- NO/ with the verb root, for example, i) for consonantal ending verb khod-+- NO khol- + -NO rAm- + -NO kh c- + -NO toR- + -NO = = = = = khodNO kholNO rAmNO khcNO toRNO digging opening playing pulling breaking
ii)
for vowel ending verb UThawO- + -NO gawO- + -NO lawO- + -NO awO- + -NO = = = = UThawNO gawNO lawNO awNO picking singing bringing coming
Gerund The gerundial forms in Marwari is formed in the same way as the verbal noun is formed. Participle The participials in Marwari are formed in following two ways. 117
i) By adding /-Ar/ with the verb stem to express the English forms like saying flying doing etc. for example kewO > ke -+- Ar jawO > ja -+- Ar uD choD = = keAr jaAr uDAr choDAr saying / having said going / having gone flying / having flown leaving / having left
ii) By adding auxiliary form /hui/ after the derived adjective to express the participial forms like being sad, for example Darpher nijora hui hui (nE) (nE) being afraid in terror being helpless
where / Darpher/ and /nijora/ are the adjectival forms with whom /hui/ auxiliary (derived from verb root /huwo-/) is added.
4.3.5.
Causative Verb The causativity of the verb is expressed in Marwari by adding /-waw-/ with vowel ending
verb root and /-aw-/ after consonantal ending verb root. The nucleus vowels /a/, /e/, /u/ in the vowel ending verb root are changed into /A/, /i/, /o/ respectively when /-waw-/ is added for causative purpose. The causative verb bases in case of vowel ending root in Marwari are khawO to eat gawO to see > khA -+- waw -+- O = >gA -+- waw -+- O = khAwawO to make to eat gAwawO to make to sing
The causative verbs in case of consonantal ending verb root are pADhO to read > pADh- + -aw + -O dekh to see > dikh - + -aw + -O = pADhawO to cause to read = dikhawO to show
With the causative verb bases like khAwawO, gAwawO, pADhawO, dikhawO etc. the number gender tense personal markers are added for causative verbs. In case of irregular verb roots like /dewO/ give, /lewO/ take the causative bases are formed like dewO to give > dirawO lewO to take > lirawO purpose of causation. to cause to give to cause to take etc. where one /r-/ inserts for the
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I am making her sing a song mh I kINIsi thAnE pAisa money dirawE reyO making to give h am
by someone you
I am making someone give you money wa she kINIsi mAjurnE panc five ripiya rupees dirawE hE is making to give etc.
by someone to-workers
4.3.6. Auxiliary Verb An auxiliary verb is generally referred to as the set of verbs, subordinate to the main lexical verb, which helps to make distinction in mood, aspect, tense, voice etc. Accordingly, in Marwari the main auxiliary verb is /hu(wO)/. And the class of auxiliaries derived from this verb base is distinguished grammatically from as they can be used with subject inversion conditioned by varying tense aspect mood etc. The examples of auxiliaries are: Person First Person Singular Plural Second Person Singular Singular (hon.) Plural Third Person Singular Plural hE hE ha ha huwela howela hE hO hO hO ha ha huwela howola howola h h hO ha howla/howli howla Present Past Future
The modal auxiliaries or subsidiary verbs being added with the main lexical (action) verb help in bringing out higher construction specially in the periphrastic construction.
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Below are given a list of modal auxiliaries or subsidiary verbs which also receive inflections according to person number gender tense inversion. pARsAkcah(discussed under Compulsive mood) (discussed under Potential mood) (discussed under Compulsive mood)
4.3.7. Negative Verb The Negative words in Marwari though uninflected for gender number person tense but are treated as a separate class of verbs since they are added to either finite verb in a particular tense or to a particular verb stem. Negetive verb class is realized mostly by four particles. According to frequency of occurrence they are /n/ , /n/ , /mAt/ , /koni/ . Expressing the negation the application of these words in both finite and non-finite construction are the following. / n / 1. 2. 3. 4. 5. 6. 7. wO O mh O n k kale paNi O kamrO n hE n awla / awli hE Not that one but this It is of no use I shall not come tomorrow This water is not drinkable She should not bake the bread His brother is not so clever We are not related
piwAN jO n n sekNi
UNnE roTi
caijE
From the above examples it is found that / n / helps the main lexical verb, occurring before it, to construct the negative verb. But, exception is observed in the sentence No.1 where without any supporting lexical verb /n/ expresses the sense of negation, and specially negation of identity. /mAt/ itta bega mAt suwO mAt jaijO barE mAt jawO Do not go to bed so soon Do not go before I come Do not go beyond time Do not speak loudly
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/koni/ O O mh mharO khawAN jO kam koni koni It is not my work This is not eatable I found it nowhere
I could not find my net so I did not go to -day In the above examples /koni/ negates the sentences with intense emphasis. And like /n/ the negative word /koni/ also can perform the function of negation in the sentences without the help of substantive verb which appears in sentence No.1 & 2. / n/ /n thE / th jaNO Ar n mh Neither you (honorific/ordinary) do know nor do I 4.3.8. Compound Verb Compound verb is a combination of two constituents. The first constituent generally belongs to a noun, an adjective, an adverb or a verb category and the second constituent is a verb. In Marwari the compound verbs are formed with the following auxiliary verb roots. kArbe to do, dewOpaR- to fall, ja- to go, leja- to take, marto beat, huwO- to
gender person tense markers. Examples with kAr km kArNO to work to quarrel to clean to vomit to comb to vomit to fall to call to shout to shoot to scratch to scratch = = noun + verb noun + verb
kAMgi kArNO with pARpachO pARNO nice helO haka with margoLi pARNO pARNO pARNO marNO
lejaahuwo-
mol jAm
leNO jawNO
to lie/ to take rest= noun + verb to stand up = to wet to repay to lend to swing to cover verb + verb
= adjective + verb = adverb + verb = noun + verb = noun + verb = verb +verb
with
kaT-
to cut rope = noun + verb to cut meet = noun + verb to beat a drum= noun + verb to blow horn= to clap to bind to dip = = = noun + verb noun + verb noun + verb noun + verb noun + verb
with
bAja-
Dhol
bAjaNO
with
ghus-
mE
ghusNO
= adverb + verb
4.3.9. Passive Formation The passive formation is realized in following structures in Marwari roTi bread roTi wres him-by wres khaijE is being eaten n not khaijE is being eaten The work will be done by me The bread is not being eating by him The bread is being eaten by him
bread him-by kam work kam work mharE s me-by mharE s me-by
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Money is given to the poor by the government This work cannot be done by anybody
government money
n kAriya ja sAkE
this work anybody-by else not done can be O kam kois bhi n kAriyO ja sAktO This work could not be done by anybody done could be This work will not be done by anybody.
From the above examples it is found that the structure of passive formation in Marwari is verb root -+- iyo / -i + third personal finite form of the subsidiary verb root Or verb root -+- i + -je (masculine) / -ji (feminine)
Further, in the sentence the nominal/pronominal form is inflected for instrumental case e.g. mharE s, ws by him etc. And the object of the active sentence is transferred to subject and subject is changed to object. wE pothi pADhE He (hon.) reads book (Active sentence)
subject object verb reduced to pothi ws subject object pADhi ji verb The book is read by him (Passive Sentence)
Since pothi book is a feminine subject so the verb is also inflected accordingly in the feminine. 4.3.10. Transitivity In Marwari the formation of the transitive verb roots from the intransitive ones is realized by addition of the transitivity suffixes /-aw/ , /-a/ with the intransitive verb bases and the transitivity process is completed when that transitive verb root is inflected according to number gender person tense in finite formation of the verb. Examples, Intransitive uD-NO to fly Transitive uD aw NO fly
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chorO cil uDawE the child flies the kite ghum-a-NO DIL nE ghumawO Bend the body sAj -a- NO to decorate bend
sArAp bALkhawtO calE/ghumE The snake moves zig-zag sAj NO mh sAjh reyi h I am dressing myself hiLO - NO to float to dress
thAnE ghAr sAjawni caije You have to decorate your rom hiLolaw NO TabAr naw hiLolawe The child floats boat float
Morphologically adverbs are indeclinables and syntactically adverbs are the modifiers of verbs. Accordingly, the Marwari adverbs are classified into 3 categories, namely, 1. Adverb of place 2. Adverb of Manner 3. Adverb of time In each category there are ordinary as well as interrogative adverbs also. Adverbs of place nicE / heThE pichE barE kani UThE / wAThE kAnE agO bicaLE jAThE kAThE Adverbs of manner kiy iyan beg/tej / tejtej somehow thus fast down behind out / out of toward there near far between where where (Interrogative)
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hoLE / hoLE hoLE cokha haka kikAr / kya Adverbs of time AbE / AbkE jAR pAchE pher pache sAda kAdO / kAda kAda aj tARkE / kalE kalE / kAl jAd kAd [The list is quite exhaustive.]
(Interrogative)
now then afterwards again after always some times today tomorrow yesterday when when (Interrogative)
4.5.
PARTICLE/ CLITIC Like adverb the particles also are indeclinables since they have only one form and are
incapable of showing distinctions as to number, person, gender, tense etc. The Marwari particles are the following Emphatic particles The emphatic particle conveys an emphasis (=emp.) to the word and this particle can be used with all types of words such as nouns with all cases, pronouns, adjectives and adverbs. i wO he mh I kAThe i koni He is nowhere
bhi
koi
bhi
kam
kAr do
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Conjunctive particle The conjunctive particle is one which is added with word or a group of words to give the meaning and which in Marwari is /Ar/ and / or, (IN) wastE so / for Ar AThE ek kutto Ar here a dog and ek a minni He cat is Here is a cat and a dog
IN wastE
n not
gyO did go
I could not find my net so I did not go today Conditional particle This particles like /jE..tO/ if.then , /pAN/ yet/but are added with the conditional construction in verb. jEtO - jE wa if UThE rewE tO she there is uThE k then etraj n huwela will be
there any
objection no
If she is there, there will be no objection pAN - mhAnE I thE jawNO hO pAN had to go but gAyO koni did go not cup reya You(pl) were there, yet kept quiet I had to go but I did not go
you(pl.) there were yet you(pl.) kept quite Interrogative particle The particle which helps in interrogation is Interrogative particle. Examples kuN ka kAThE kkAr Additive particle The particle which expresses the additional attribute like all is additive particle. To express the meaning of all the particle in Marwari is /sAgLa/ and feminine counterpart /sAgLi/. thE sAgLa miLAr UNnE kuTO you all together beat him who what where how kiN kya kAd ky which how when why
126
Negative particle Statement negative /n/ mh kalE mh k n n awli keyO I shall not come to-morrow I said nothing
Substantive/Copula negative /koni/ O mharO kam koni mhE iNnE kAThei koni dekhya Imperative negative /mAt/ haka mAt y mAt
Other particles are like: Affirmative particle Quotative particle 4.6. Echo word / Reduplication /i/ jARtaNi of course/ yes until , jARti till
Echo word and reduplication are available in Marwari mainly in adjectival and adverbial use as per the collected data. Adjectival Echo word ghANa sara DAr pher achO khoTO many afraid all kind mixed of good-bad dubLO pAtlO / dubLi pAtli thin Adverbial Echo word jhATpAT dAbadAb lAbalAb DAr pher quickly fast/quick fast/quick fearfully
Reduplication dhirE dhirE reMgtO reMgtO larE larE kAda kAda slowly by crawling behind sometimes
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5. SYNTAX Syntax being the study of the rules governing the order of combining the words to form sentences in a language is opposite to morphology which is the study of word structure. The syntax of Marwari is discussed below.
5.1 ORDER OF WORDS IN SENTENCES The Marwari is a subject-object-verb language where a sentence consists of a noun phrase (which functions as the subject)and a predicate phrase. Without predicate there can be no sentence. Sometimes predicate itself stands for a sentence specially in case of imperative modal structure like: barE jawO Go out Come to school Sit down on the floor
In the above sentences the subject being the second person does not appear in the sentence. But generally the order of words in sentence is as mentioned, Subject Object Verb. Examples mh TabArnE I Tabriya children (th) to child thAnnE me thoRosO dekh (h) see dekhE (he) see paNi water lawO bring Bring some water The children see me I see the child
(You-sub) some
In the above sentence /mh/ , /Tabriya/ , /th/ respectively comprise noun phrase and /TabArnE dekhu/ , /thanE dekhO/ , /paNi lawO / respectively comprise predicate phrase. Thus a sentence consists of phrases namely, noun and predicate - . And a phrase is a group of words which stands for partial meaning.
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5.1.1
Noun phrase A noun phrase may consist of a noun alone or noun preceded by one or more
attributes. achO moTi dhoLO chorO pothi ghoRO good boy big book white horse
If a numeral classifies a noun it ocuurs before the adjective dO dO cokha gw phora gw two good village two bad villages
If a plural marker is to be added to the noun it is added with the adjective as well as noun. dhoLO ghoRO white horse moTO TabAr the big child dhoLa moTa ghoRa TabAriya white horses the big children
Only with the feminine nouns the adjective remains same for singular and plural. moTi pothi big book choTi chabri small basket moTi pothiy big books small baskets
choTi chabriy
[Some nouns do not take any plural marker to form the plural counterpart e.g. do panc gw ghAr two village five houses cf. noun section ]
5.1.2
Predicate Phrase A predicate phrase consists of a noun phrase and a verb phrase. A predicate phrase may
consist of a verb which is its nucleus and/or a noun preceded by a negative marker and an attributive like adverb and followed elements. These elements can be tense marker, mood marker, aspect marker and auxiliaries like may, must etc. wO he wO he wO he a ek a ek a ek pothi book pothi book pothi book pADhE (he) He reads a book reads pADhtO read(pt.) pADhela will read He will read a book` He read a book
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roTi
kha
(h)
I eat a bread
bread eat AthinE here AthinE here kOm awE come awO come n kArla / kArli wil do He ran quickly They are eating They may ask you must go I will not do work You (pl) come here You (sg.) come here
Thus the structure of the predicate verb is + Noun + Negative + Adverb + verb + Aspect + mood + tens e
5.2
TYPES OF SENTENCES Sentence is an independent linguistic form which is not included in any larger linguistic
form by virture of any grammatical construction (Bloomfield, 1963, p-170). According to the function the Marwari sentences can be classified into the following types of sentences 1. Statement Sentence 2. Question Sentence 3. Imperative Sentence 4. Compulsive Sentence 5. Purposive Sentence 6. Potential Sentence 7. Conditional Sentence 10. Negative Sentence. Statement Sentence The sentence which asserts a statement like the following E mhra pitaji hE father is m hE She is my mother He is my father
mother is pan/pAn leaves jhArE fall The leaves fall from the tree
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Interrogative Sentence - The sentence which indicates a question like tharO your kuN ki nam hE What is your name?
who knows wO he th you kAd when mharE me ayO came sam ky ubo hE Why do you stand in front of me? When did he come?
Imperative Sentence The sentence through which a request, a command, an advice is indicated. Examples, a this hoLE pothi pADhO book bolO read Speak slowly Read this book
slowly speak thoRosO some cokha neat paNi lawO wate akAr words bring likhO write Write the words nearly Bring some water
Purposive Sentence The sentence which expresses a purpose like the following: mh we sAmdAr sea mathE/mE to mAchli fish pAkARAnsar catching-for jaw go
We go to the sea to catch fish IN hAtyarE sArAprO snake lAgawANi to find out pARsi will have bTobalAN destroying saru for mhAnE me
I will have to find out means for destroying this deadly snake.
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Potential Sentence When the potentiality is expressed in a sentence it can be called potential sentence. Examples, O wE koi hui puch bhi sAkE sAkE O kOm kAr sAkE It may happen They may ask Anybody can do this work
Conditional sentence When two actions are conditioned by each other in a single sentence, it can be called conditional sentence. Examples, jE if ghoRa rE pkha wing huwti tO had then wE they uRtE would have flown
horses of
If horses had wing they would have flown jE if wO he kARi hard menAt kAri tO works sAphAl huwela
If he works hard he will succeed jE if gaDDi moRi train late ayi tO mhnE UNnE pAkAR we it catch sAk may
comes then
Passive sentence - The sentence where the main action is expressed in passive may be called passive sentence. ghoRas horse-by Ek a wO Examples, doRijE running done UNs him-by gayo jaE sung roTi bread likhiji is written reyO hE That song is being sung A note is written by him Running is done by the horse
132
Causative Sentence When the subject causes some agent to do the action the sentence functions as causative sentence. Examples, mh I UNs her-by ek a git gAaw
I make the boy eat the sweet wa she kINisu someone mAjurnE to workers panc five ripiya rupees dirawE hE is making to give
Negative sentence The sentence which expresses the negation may be cassed as negative sentence. aj to-day UNnE she mh I roTi bread pAr beyond n not n not awli / awla will come (f./m.) sekNi bake barE mAt caijE should jawO go Do not go beyond time She should not bake the bread I will not come to-day
wAkhAt s time-in
outside not
5.3
PATTERNS OF SENTENCES According to the structure the Marwari sentences can be classified in following
patterns: 1. Simple sentence 2. Complex sentence 3. Compound sentence. The examples under different categories are presented below
133
5.3.1
Simple sentence A simple sentence is one which has only one subject and one
predicate. Sometimes in the sentence only the predicate appears and subject remains understood here. suO rukrE mathE hE parrot tree -of on is Subject Predicate mharO bhai awela my brother will come Subject Predicate UNnE ek kAhaNi / bat suNawO Predicate (= Subject you) is understood here. 5.3.2 The parrot is on the tree
Complex Sentence A Complex sentence consists of one main clause and one or more
subordinate clause. 1. wa kalE UThE huwti pAN wa mandi pARgi she yesterday there would have been but she fell sick Subordinate clause Main clause She would have been there yesterday but she fell sick jE wo mharE sathE reyO tO achO reyO if he me with were then it would have been better Subordinate clause Main clause If he were with me, it would have been better jE wO dorai mE huwela tO mh thAnE tar kAr dewla if he difficulty in will be then I to you will wire Subordinate clause Main clause If he is in difficulty I will wire you Compound Sentence A compund sentence is one which is made up of two or more
2.
3.
5.3.3
main clauses. k mAchliy moTi hE Ar k choTi hE some fish big are and some small are Main clause Main clause Some fish are big and some are small wO su reyO hE Ar pADh reyO hE he lying down is and reading is Main clause Main clause He is lying down and is reading. 134
CONCLUSION In the forgone discussion the detailed grammatical structure of Marwari has been presented with illustration based on collected data from field. According to the presentation the Marwari shares the features of Indo-Aryan language family 4. Phonological Voicing Aspiration 5. Morphological Declension and Conjugation with inflectional affixation Compound formation Person-Number-Gender Concord in Finite Verb 6. Syntactical SOV Pattern etc. etc.
Further, Marwari distinguishes itself lexically and grammatically as well as in its rich and varied literary diction which leaves the scope of treating Marwari as the Standard variety of Rajasthani grouped with Hindi language in Indian Census.
-o-
135
BIBLIOGRAPHY
2. Bloomfield, L. , 1963 -
3. Chatterji, S.K. , 1969 (Reprint) - Indo-Aryan and Hindi, Firma K.L. Mukhopadhyay, . Calcutta. 4. Chatterji, S.K.,1949 Rjasththni BhS, Sahitya Sansthan, Rajasthan Vidyapith, Udaipur 5. Grierson, G.A. 1968 - (Reprint) Linguistic Survey of India, Vol.1 Pt-1 & Vol.IX Part II Motilal Banarasi Dass, Delhi. 6. Hockett, C.F. 1970 A Course in Modern Linguistics, Indian edition, Macmillan, New York. 7. Lyons, John 1968 Introduction to Theoretical Linguistics, Cambridge University Press. 8. Mahapatra, B.P., & et al. 1989 Written Languages of the World A Survey of the Degree and Modes of Use, Vol.1. India (Book 1.Constitutional Languages). Office of the Registrar general, India, New Delhi 9. Maheswari, Hiralal, 1969 Rajasthni BhSh Aur Sahitya (V.S. 1500-1650), Adhunik Pustak Bhawan, Calcutta.
Grammatical
Sketches
of
Indian
Languages
with
Languages with Comparative Vocabulary and Texts, Registrar General, India, New Delhi. 11. Maheswari, Hiralal 1980 12. Nida, Eugene A. 1963 13. Robins, R.H. 1968 History of Rjasthni Literature, Sahitya Akademi, Delhi. Morphology, University of Michigon Press, (2 nd edition) General Linguistics An Introductory Survey, Longmans, London.
136
Sanksipta
Rjasthni
VykaraN,
Sadul
Rajasthani
Research Institute, Bikaner. 15. Tessitori, L.P. April 1914 to July 1916 Notes on the Grammar of Old Western Rjasthni with special reference to Apabhramsa and GujaraTi and MarwaRi. Indian Antiquary, Calcutta. 16. Verma, Siddheswar 1978 Bihari, Hindi and Rajasthani- a Linguistic Analysis, Punjabi University.
REFERENCES
Census of India, 2001, Series I Primary Census Abstract Census of India, 2001, Series I , Language Table C-16 Census of India, 2001, Bilingualism and Trilingualism Table C-17 Census of India 1991, Series - I , Paper 2 of 1992 Census of India 1991 , Series I Part IV B(i)(a) -C Series Table C-7 Census of India, 1961, Vol-1 Part II C (ii) Vol-1 Part-II C (vi) Census of India, 1961, Vol.XIV , Part-II C(i)
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MARWARI TEXT
[ kaglE kagli kaLindAr nE kiy mariyO ] How the crow-hen killed the Black Snake 1. ek bARri
a baniyan tree
Ar ek kagli .
and a crow-hen
Among the spreading branches of a banyan tree lived a crow and his wife, the crowhen 2. aLE mE ha
nest in where
In the nest were four little eggs which the parents guarded with care. 3. rkhrE tANe ri thothmE
tree trunk-of
Darta.
feared
In a hollow of that tree-trunk lived a black snake whom the crows feared greatly. 4. jAd kAdei kagli INDa dewti , kalindAr reMtO reMtO aLE nE pugjawtO Ar
whenever crow-hen eggs laid the black snake crawling up nest to reached and
Every time the crow hen laid her eggs the snake crawled up to the nest and are them up. 5. jE AbkE (AbkaLE) bhi kaLindAr mhara INDa giTgyO tO mh O rkhroO
if this time also black anake my eggs eats up then I that tree
choR dewla.
leave will
If the black snake eats up my eggs this time also, I refuse to live in this tree any longer. 6. apnE apNO aLO dujiThoR bAnawNO caijEwe our nest somewhere else to build have to
kagli
we must build our nest somewhere else said the mother bird to her husband.
138
7.
ap AThE
we here
ghANa
a long time
koni not
kaglO bolyO.
crow said
I cant bear to desert my home and go to live elsewhere said the crow. 9. jAd
while
wE bAntAL kArta ha
they talking were
while they were talking, they heard a hissing sound just below them. 10. wE sAmAjh gya kE a
they knew that this
awaj kri hi .
sound what is
They knew what the sound meant. 11. wE INDa rukhalAN ri cesTa mE nijora huine beTh gya .
they eggs protecting for try-in helpless being sat
They sat helplessly in their nest trying to protect their eggs. 12. kaLindAr reMtO ucO Ar aLE rE neRO punchyO pher ek l Thi phkarO
black snake crept higher and nest of near reached again a loud hiss
jhApTyO
tried to strike
j ka DAr pher
who afraid
huinE uDgya .
being flew away
The black snake crept higher and closer to the nest. Then with a loud hiss he tried to strike at the birds who flew away in terror. 13. ek ek kArnE kaLindAr INDa
one one by black snake eggs
giT gyO .
swallowed
One by one, the black snake swallowed the eggs. 14. AN mANa mait pacha aLE mE aya , a sawA L jaNta thAk
sadly parents back nest to came this well
kE aLO khali
nest empty
ladhla .
would find
The parents came back sadly to their nest, knowing well that they would find it empty. 15. kaglO bolyO IN hAtyarE sArAprO bTobalAN saru mhAnE jugAt lAgawANi
crow said this murderous snake-to destroying for I way find out
139
pARsi .
have to
The crow said I must find a way to destroy this murderous snake. 16. niras
depaired
jerilO hE.
deadly is
How can you ever fight him? His sting is so deadly said his wife in despair. 17. kaglO bolyO - t phikAr i na kAr, mhari kagli
crow said you worry(emp.) not do my
wife(dear)
hE jikO isa
is who
Dont you worry, my dear, Ive got a friend who is cunning enough to destroy the most poisonous of snakes said the crow and off he flew to another tree under which lived his dear friend, the jackal. 18. jAd syaLiyE INDa khawANri bat suNi tO bolyO - mhara mintAr (mit)
when the jackal eggs eating-of story heard then told my friend !
jika hayadaya baera Ar lobhi huwE , UnarO Ant sAdei khoTO huwE .
who cruel (heartless) and greedy become there end always bad is/becomes
when the jackal heard how the snake always ate up the eggs, he said My friend, those who are cruel and greedy always meet with a bad end. 19. t Dar mAt . UNnE marAn ri
you fear do not him destroying-for
jugAt mh
plan I
pelis i
already (emp.)
soc rakhi .
have thought of
have no fear. Ive already thought of a plan to destro y him. 20. pher tO
then tell
bAtawO bhaela , ka
brother/friend what
sArApnE
snake to
marAN ri
killing of
140
sAgLi jugAt
all plan
kaglE rE s yaLiyE
crow-to jackal
kan mE keyi .
whispered
Then the jackal, fearing he might be overheard, whispered to his friend what he should do to destroy the snake. 22. kaglO pachO kagli kAnE gAyO Ar sAgLi jugAt bAtai kam tO
crow back crow-hen near went and all plan told
jokhAm
The crow flew back to his wife and told her about the plan. It is rather risky , said the crow well have to be very careful . 23. himtaLu kagli boli -INDari richpaLsaru mh/h k pach n rakhli .
bravely crow-hen told eggs-of saving-for I any means not will spare(unturned)
Ill do anything to save my eggs - said the mother bird bravely. 24. jhATpAT wE rajarE mAhAL
quickly they kings palace
kani uDya .
towards flew off
So off they flew towards the palace of the king of the country. 25. jiN rkh
which tree
mathE
over
hO .
not was
The palace was not far from the tree in which they lived. 26. wE mAhALrE bAgicE mE ek baDE sArowAr kAnE
they plalace-of garden in one big pond
gAya
jiNmE
where
towards approached
They approached a big pond in the palace garden where they saw the royal ladies having a bath. 27. w soneri skL , motyra har
they golden chain
tALawrE kInarE
pearl-of necklace and other ornaments wearing off the pond at the edge
mel rakhya ha .
laid down
They had laid their golden chains, pearl necklaces and other jewellery on the edge of the pond. 28. kagli heThE utri , soneri ek skAL cc mE
golden one chain beak-in
uThai
Ar uN peR kani
towards
141
The mother bird flew down, picked up a gold chain in her beak and started flying slowly towards the tree in which she lived. 29. jAd mAhAl rE cokidar kagli nE skAL liya uRti dekhi t O wE
when palace-of guards bird-to chain taking flying saw then they
lakRi
wooden
When the palace guards saw the bird flying off with the gold chain, they toop up their clubs and chased the bird. 30. wE dekhyO kE
they saw
kagli
They saw the bird drop the chain into the hollow of a tree. 31. cOkidar mes ekjANO skAL
guards among one chain
lawAN
getting
khatAr r kh mathE
for tree over
cADhyO .
climbed up
One of the guards climbed up the tree to get the chain. 32. skAL lewAn saru jyi aprO hath tANeri
chain taking for as his own hand
As he put his hand inside the hole to get the chain, he saw a black snake, curled up there. 33. cOkidar laThi ri ek i
guard end stick-of
coT mE
Ar
and
IN bat
thus
sArAprO
snake-of
khAtmO huyO .
happened
With one hard stroke of his club he killed it and that was the end of the black snake. 34. ta pAchE kaglO Ar
afterwards little crow
kagli
reya
lived
Ar b rE
and later
choTa choTa ghANasara TabAr huya . The crow and the crow-hen lived in that three happily afterwards and had many little baby crows ---------------------------- X---------------------
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