Nihali language
{{Short description|Language isolate spoken in India}}
{{About|a language isolate spoken in central India, known as Nihali or Nahali|the unrelated Indo-Aryan language also called Nahali|Kalto language}}
{{Infobox language
| name = Nihali
| nativename = {{lang|mr|निहाली}}
| ethnicity = 5,000 Nihali
| speakers = 2,500
| date = 2016
| familycolor = Isolate
| family = Language isolate
| region = Jalgaon Jamod, Buldhana district, Maharashtra (on the border with Madhya Pradesh)
| iso3 = nll
| glotto = niha1238
| glottorefname = Nihali
| map = Nihali locator.svg
| mapcaption = Historically Nihali-speaking area spanning the border between Maharashtra to the south and Madhya Pradesh to the north
| states = India
| map2 = Lang Status 20-CR.svg
| mapcaption2 = {{center|{{small|Nihali is classified as Critically Endangered by the UNESCO Atlas of the World's Languages in Danger}}}}
}}
Nihali, also known as Nahali, is an endangered language isolate that is spoken in west-central India by approximately 2,500 people as of 2016.{{Cite web|url=http://www.endangeredlanguages.com/lang/nll|title=Did you know Nihali is threatened?|website=Endangered Languages|access-date=2016-05-04}} The name of the language derives from nahal, meaning "tiger".{{Cite book|title=The Nihali language: grammar, texts and vocabulary|last=Nagaraja|first=K.S.|publisher=Manasagangotri, Mysore: Central Institute of Indian Languages.|year=2014|isbn=978-81-7343-144-9|pages=1}}
Nihali has not been definitively proven to be related to any other surrounding language families of South Asia, such as Munda, Indo-Aryan, and Dravidian languages, nor to other language isolates like Burushaski and Kusunda.
Linguistic situation
Nihali tribal area is just south of the Tapti River spanning the border between Maharashtra and Madhya Pradesh around Buldhana district and Burhanpur district. However, only the villages in the Buldhana district: Jamod, Sonbardi, Kuvardev, Chalthana, Ambavara, Wasali, and Cicari, have kept the usage of the Nihali language today. There are dialectal differences between the Jamod-Sonbardi and the Kuvardev-Chalthana varieties.{{Cite book|title=The Nihali language: grammar, texts and vocabulary|last=Nagaraja|first=K.S.|publisher=Manasagangotri, Mysore: Central Institute of Indian Languages.|year=2014|isbn=978-81-7343-144-9|pages=3}} Historically, Nihali had been spoken around the village of Tembi in Burhanpur district as well.{{Citation | title=Nahali: a comparative study| issue=5, Pt 25 |journal=Mededeelingen der Koninklijke Nederlandsche Akademie van Wetenschappen, Afd. Letterkunde | author=Franciscus Bernardus Jacobus Kuiper | publisher=N.V. Noord-Hollandsche Uitg. Mij., 1962 | url=https://books.google.com/books?id=Nwh_QgAACAAJ}}
Today there are no longer any monolingual speakers of the language, as Nihali speakers are likely to speak varieties of Korku, Marathi, or Hindi among others.{{Cite book|title=The Nihali language: grammar, texts and vocabulary|last=Nagaraja|first=K.S.|publisher=Manasagangotri, Mysore: Central Institute of Indian Languages.|year=2014|isbn=978-81-7343-144-9|pages=3}}
History
The early history of Nihali is unclear, as there are no direct attestations of the Nihali language prior to the modern era. One theory suggests that the Nihali people might trace back to the ancient community of Nahalka, an offshoot of the Nishada tribe mentioned in the Mahabharata and the Padma Purana.{{Cite book|title=The Nihali language: grammar, texts and vocabulary|last=Nagaraja|first=K.S.|publisher=Manasagangotri, Mysore: Central Institute of Indian Languages.|year=2014|isbn=978-81-7343-144-9|pages=1}}
Franciscus Kuiper was the first to suggest that Nihali may be unrelated to any other Indian language, with the non-Korku, non-Dravidian core vocabulary being the remnant of an earlier population in India. However, he did not rule out that it may be a Munda language, like Korku. Kuiper suggested that Nihali may differ from neighbouring languages, such as Korku, mostly in its function as an anti-language. Kuiper's assertions stem, in part, from the fact that many oppressed groups within India have used secret languages to prevent outsiders from understanding them.
For centuries, most Nihalis have often worked as agricultural labourers, for speakers of languages other than their own. In particular, Nihali labourers have often worked for members of the Korku people, and are often bilingual in the Korku language. Because of this history, Nihali is sometimes used only to prevent non-Nihali speaking outsiders from understanding them.{{Cite book|title=The Nihali Language|last=Nagaraja|first=K.S|publisher=Central Institute of Indian Languages|year=2014|isbn=978-81-7343-144-9|location=Manasagangotri, Mysore-570 006|pages=250}} Some commonalities between Nihali and Gondi vocabulary also suggest that the Nihali people may have historically lived with the Gondi people or another Dravidian-speaking peoples in the area, before reaching the present settlements.{{Cite book|title=The Nihali language: grammar, texts and vocabulary|last=Nagaraja|first=K.S.|publisher=Manasagangotri, Mysore: Central Institute of Indian Languages.|year=2014|isbn=978-81-7343-144-9|pages=154}}
The Nihali live similarly to the Kalto people. That and the fact that the Kalto language has often been called Nahali led to confusion of the two languages. Some Korku-speakers refuse to acknowledge the Nihali as a distinct community, and describe the emergence of the Nihalis as resulting from a disruption of Korku civil society.{{Cite book|title=The Munda Languages|last=Anderson|first=Gregory|publisher=Routledge|year=2008|isbn=978-0-415-32890-6|location=New York, New York|pages=772}}
Linguist Norman Zide describes the recent history of the language as follows:
"Nihali's borrowings are far more massive than in such textbook examples of heavy outside acquisition as Albanian." In this respect, says Zide, modern Nihali seems comparable to hybridised dialects of Romani spoken in Western Europe. Zide claims that this is a result of a historical process that began with a massacre of Nihalis in the early 19th century, organised by one of the rulers of the area, supposedly in response to "marauding". Zide alleges that, afterwards, the Nihalis "decimated in size", have "functioned largely as raiders and thieves ... who [have] disposed of ... stolen goods" through "outside associates". Zide adds that Nihali society has "long been multilingual, and uses Nihali as a more or less secret language which is not ordinarily revealed to outsiders" and that early researchers "attempting to learn the language were, apparently, deliberately rebuffed or misled".Norman Zide, "Munda and non-Munda Austroasiatic languages". In Current Trends in Linguistics 5: Linguistics in South Asia, p 438
Phonology
class="wikitable" style="text-align: center;"
|+Vowel phonemes of Nihali |
rowspan="2" |
! colspan="2" |Front ! colspan="2" |Back |
---|
short
!long !short !long |
Close
|{{IPA link|i}} |{{IPA link|iː}} |{{IPA link|u}} |{{IPA link|uː}} |
Mid
|{{IPA link|e}} |{{IPA link|eː}} |{{IPA link|o}} |{{IPA link|oː}} |
Open
| |{{IPA link|a}} |{{IPA link|aː}} | |
Lengthening of vowels is phonemic. The vowels [e] and [o] have lower varieties at the end of morphemes.
Nasalization is rare and tends to occur in borrowed words.
class="wikitable" style="text-align: center;"
|+ Consonant phonemes of Nihali |
colspan="2" |
! Labial ! Palatal ! Velar |
---|
colspan="2" | Nasal
| {{IPA link|m}} | {{IPA link|n}} | {{IPA link|ɳ}} | {{IPA link|ɲ}} | |
rowspan="4" | Plosive/ Affricate | {{IPA link|p}} | {{IPA link|t̪|t}} | {{IPA link|ʈ}} | {{IPA link|tʃ}} | {{IPA link|k}} |
aspirated
| {{IPA link|pʰ}} | {{IPA link|tʰ}} | {{IPA link|ʈʰ}} | {{IPA link|tʃʰ}} | {{IPA link|kʰ}} |
voiced
| {{IPA link|b}} | {{IPA link|d̪|d}} | {{IPA link|ɖ}} | {{IPA link|dʒ}} | {{IPA link|ɡ}} |
breathy
| {{IPA link|bʱ}} | {{IPA link|dʱ}} | {{IPA link|ɖʱ}} | {{IPA link|dʒʱ}} | {{IPA link|ɡʱ}} |
colspan="2" | Fricative
| |{{IPA link|s}} |{{IPA link|ʂ}} |{{IPA link|ʃ}} |{{IPA link|h}} |
colspan="2" | Rhotic
| | {{IPA link|r}} | {{IPA link|ɽ}} | | |
colspan="2" | Approximant
| {{IPA link|ʋ}} | {{IPA link|l}} | | {{IPA link|j}} | |
There are 33 consonants. Unaspirated stops are more frequent than aspirated stops.
Lexicon
The language has a very large number of words adopted from neighboring languages, with 60–70% apparently taken from the Munda Korku language, from Dravidian languages (ṭoːl "skin"; coːpo "salt"), and from Indo-Aryan languages. However, much of its core vocabulary, such as corṭo "blood" and kalen "egg", cannot be related to them nor any other languages. Less than 25% of the language's ancestral vocabulary seems to be in use.{{Cite book|title=The Nihali Language|last=Nagaraja|first=K.S.|publisher=Central Institute of Indian Languages|year=2014|isbn=978-81-7343-144-9|location=Manasagangotri, Mysore-570 006, India|pages=7}}
Below are some Nihali basic vocabulary words without clear external parallels (in Korku, Hindi, Marathi, Dravidian, etc.) listed in the appendix of Nagaraja (2014).
;Body parts
class="wikitable sortable"
| head | peːñ |
hair (head) | kuguso |
eye | jikit |
ear | cigam |
nose | coːn |
tooth | menge |
mouth | kaggo |
hand | bakko |
shoulder | ṭ/tagli |
intestines | koṭor |
navel | bumli |
liver | gadri |
blood | corṭo |
bone | paːkṭo |
;Animals and plants
class="wikitable"
| bird | poe, pyu |
egg | kalen |
snake | koːgo |
fish | caːn |
louse | keːpe |
mosquito | kaːn |
fly (insect) | eḍ(u)go |
tree | aːḍḍo |
;Natural phenomena
class="wikitable"
| water | joppo |
rain | maːnḍo |
stone | caːgo, caːrgo |
;Material culture, kinship
class="wikitable"
| road, path | ḍãːy |
house | aːwaːr |
name | jumu |
;Verbs
In Nihali, many verbs are suffixed with -be.
class="wikitable"
| eat | ṭyeː-, tyeː- |
drink | ḍelen- |
bite | haru- |
blow | bigi-, bhigi- |
die | betto-, beṭṭo- |
kill | paḍa- |
laugh | haːgo- |
cry, weep | aːpa- |
go | eːr-, eṛe- |
come | paːṭo, pya |
give | beː- |
see | ara- |
hear | cakni- |
Pronouns and demonstratives
The personal pronouns in Nihali are:{{Cite book|title=The Nihali Language|last=Nagaraja|first=K.S.|publisher=Central Institute of Indian Languages|year=2014|isbn=978-81-7343-144-9|pages=34}}
class="wikitable"
! !! singular !! dual !! plural |
1st person
| jo || tye:ko || ingi |
---|
2nd person
| ne || na:ko || la |
3rd person
| eṭey || hiṭkel || eṭla < eṭey + la |
The table below compares the demonstrative paradigm between Nihali and Korku, the surrounding Munda language.{{Cite book|title=The Nihali Language|last=Nagaraja|first=K.S.|publisher=Central Institute of Indian Languages|year=2014|isbn=978-81-7343-144-9|pages=139}}
class="wikitable"
! !! Nihali !! Korku |
'what'
| nan || co:(ch) |
---|
'who'
| nani || je |
'why'
| naway, nawa:san || co:- ~ co:ch |
‘when’
| meran ~ miran || co:-la |
‘where’
| mingay || ṭone ~ ṭongan 'at where' |
‘how much’
| m(i)yan || co-ṭo |
‘how’
| naw-ki || co-phar |
‘whose’
| nan-in || je-konṭe ‘whose child’ |
‘which (book)’
| nu-san || (pustak) ṭone-bukko ‘which (book)’ |
Morphosyntax
Nihali morphosyntax is much simpler than that of Korku and other Munda languages, and is unrelated to that of Munda languages.{{Cite book|title=The Nihali Language|last=Nagaraja|first=K.S.|publisher=Central Institute of Indian Languages|year=2014|isbn=978-81-7343-144-9|pages=144}} Word order is SOV.
Sample sentences{{Cite book|title=The Nihali language: grammar, texts and vocabulary|last=Nagaraja|first=K.S.|publisher=Manasagangotri, Mysore: Central Institute of Indian Languages.|year=2014|isbn=978-81-7343-144-9|pages=40}}{{Cite book|title=The Nihali language: grammar, texts and vocabulary|last=Nagaraja|first=K.S.|publisher=Manasagangotri, Mysore: Central Institute of Indian Languages.|year=2014|isbn=978-81-7343-144-9|pages=47}}
{{Interlinear|nani hi palso-ki duːdo delenkamay|who this child-to milk gave|"Who gave milk to this child?"}}
{{Interlinear|kyamp jo minga-ka-bi beṭhe eːr|tomorrow I anywhere neg go|"I will not go anywhere tomorrow."}}
See also
- Nihali Swadesh list (207 most basic words)
- Nihali word list (1,694 words)
- Burushaski language
- Kusunda language
References
{{Reflist}}
;Bibliography:
- {{Cite book |title=The Nihali Language (Grammar, Texts and Vocabulary) |first=K. S. |last=Nagaraja |publisher=Central Institute of Indian Languages |location=Mysore |date=2014 |isbn=9788173431449}}
External links
- [https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=jAHLfx4fFmA Audio sample of Nihali language]
{{Language families}}
{{Eurasian languages}}
{{Languages of South Asia}}
{{Authority control}}
Category:Language isolates of Asia