Kanjari language
{{Short description|Tribal language of Pakistan}}
{{Infobox language
|name=Kanjari
|altname=
|nativename=कंजरी
|states=Pakistan
|region=
|ethnicity=
|speakers={{sigfig|206,000|2}}
|date=2011
|ref=e25
|familycolor=Indo-European
|fam2=Indo-Iranian
|fam3=Indo-Aryan
|fam4=(unclassified)
|iso3=kft
|glotto=kanj1259
|glottorefname=Kanjari
}}
Kanjari (also known as Kangar Bhat, Kangri, Kuchbandhi or "the Gypsy language"{{cite book |last1=Mhaiske |first1=Vinod M. |last2=Patil |first2=Vinayak K. |last3=Narkhede |first3=S. S. |title=Forest Tribology And Anthropology |date=2016 |isbn=9789386102089 |page=185}}) is an unclassified Indic tribal language of Pakistan and India, associated with the Kanjar tribe. Kanjari is spoken in Punjab in Pakistan and in Bihar, Madhya Pradesh, Uttar Pradesh and Rajasthan in India. It may be one of the Punjabi languages.{{cite book |last1=Frawley |first1=William J. |title=International Encyclopedia of Linguistics |date=2003 |publisher=Oxford University Press |isbn=0199771782 |page=267 |edition=2}} UNESCO classifies Kanjari as an endangered language. Some may use the word to describe Karina.{{cite web |title=Kanjari |url=https://en.wal.unesco.org/languages/kanjari |website=World Atlas of Languages |publisher=UNESCO |access-date=3 January 2023}}
Syntax
George Abraham Grierson noted several grammatical features for Kanjari in the first Linguistic Survey of India:{{cite book |last1=Grierson |first1=George Abraham |title=Linguistic survey of India |date=1903–1928 |publisher=Office of the Superintendent of Government Printing |location=Calcutta |pages=96–101 |url=https://dsal.uchicago.edu/books/lsi/lsi.php?volume=11&pages=225#page/1/mode/1up |access-date=3 January 2023}}
- The final "ō" of adjectives is usually kept before an inflected noun, which suggests that adjectives are not inflected and that gender is weak. For example, tēro naukrī ("thy service").
- Some pronouns are similar to Rajasthani languages, such as the demonstrative pronouns jō and jī. However, other pronouns are similar to the Dravidian languages, such as ūr ("he") compared to Tamil īr and Gondi ōr.
- Overall, verb conjugations and words "broadly agree" with the patterns of Eastern Rajasthani languages, but some characteristics point to a "certain Dravidian element" being present in Kanjari.