fbpx
Wikipedia

Dogri language

Dogri (Name Dogra Akkhar: 𑠖𑠵𑠌𑠤𑠮; Devanagari: डोगरी; Nastaliq: ڈوگری; IPA: [ɖoːɡɾiː]) is an Indo-Aryan language primarily spoken in the Jammu region of Jammu and Kashmir, India, with smaller groups of speakers in adjoining regions of western Himachal Pradesh, northern Punjab,[3] and north-eastern Pakistani Punjab.[4] It is the ethnic language of the Dogras, and was spoken in the historical region of Greater Duggar. Currently in Districts : Kathua, Jammu, Samba, Udhampur, and Reasi,[1] These district residents also speak kashmiri, Hindi, Urdu and Punjabi. Dogri is a member of the Western Pahari group of languages.[5] Unusually for an Indo-European language, Dogri is tonal,[6] a trait it shares with other Western Pahari languages and Punjabi. It has several varieties, all with greater than 80% lexical similarity (within Jammu and Kashmir).[7]

Dogri
𑠖𑠵𑠌𑠤𑠮, डोगरी, ڈوگری
The word "Dogri" in Name Dogra Akkhar, Devanagari, and the Arabic Nastaliq scripts.
Native toIndia, Pakistan
RegionJammu region, Western Himachal Pradesh, Punjab
EthnicityDogras
Native speakers
1.6 million in India (2011 census)[1]
Name Dogra Akkhar
Devanagari
Perso-Arabic (Nastaʼlīq)
Mahajani (historically)
Official status
Official language in
 India
Language codes
ISO 639-2doi
ISO 639-3doi – inclusive code
Individual codes:
dgo – Dogri proper
xnr – Kangri
Glottologindo1311

Dogri is spoken by 2.6 million people in India (as of the 2011 census).[1] It has been among the country's 22 scheduled languages since 2003. It is also one of the 5 official languages of the union territory of Jammu and Kashmir.

Script

Dogri was originally written in the old Dogra Akkhar script – a modified version of Takri.[8] A modified version of this script was created by the order of Maharaja Ranbir Singh of Jammu and Kashmir, which was then called Name Dogra Akkhar.[9] Official documents were written in this new script; however it never caught on among the general Dogri-speaking populace. Currently, Devanagari is the officially recognised script for Dogri in India and virtually all Dogri literature is published in it.

 
Lilavati (a mathematics treatise originally written in Sanskrit) in Dogri language & Name Dogra Akkhar script.
 
Dogra Script Specimen

Phonology

Consonants

  • Gemination occurs in all consonants except the consonants /ɾ ɳ ɽ ʃ/.
  • Retroflex consonants /ɽ ɳ/ rarely occur in word initial position.
  • /f z x ɣ/ only occur from Perso-Arabic loan words. /f/ is also heard as an allophone of //.
  • /ɾ/ can also marginally be heard as trilled [r] in some speech.
  • In some words, /s/ can become more weakly pronounced, or even eliminated and replaced by a glottal fricative sound [h].
  • A palatal nasal sound [ɲ] typically occurs when a dental nasal precedes a post-alveolar affricate consonant, rarely occurring in words word-initially or medially.
  • A velar nasal sound [ŋ] typically occurs when a dental nasal precedes a velar plosive consonant, and rarely occurs word-initially or medially.[10]

Vowels

  • There are nasalized variations of the following vowels /ĩ ũ ẽ õ ɛ̃ ɔ̃ ã/.[11]
  • Vowel sounds are often nasalized when occurring before a word-medial or word-final /n/, except when /n/ occurs before a word-final vowel.
  • /ʊ/ can have a marginal upgliding allophone [ʊᵛ] when occurring before a /a/ vowel sound.
  • A word-final // is realized as a back sound [ɑː] and may also drift toward a centralized [äː] sound.[10]

Some common words

Name Dogra Akkhar Devanagari Perso-Arabic IPA English translation
𑠪𑠬𑠷 हां ہاں [ã̀ː] Yes
𑠝𑠳𑠃𑠷 नेईं نےئیں [neːĩː] No
𑠪𑠭𑠤𑠋 हिरख ہرکھ [ɪ̀ɾkʰ] Love
𑠊𑠝𑠹𑠝𑠴 कन्नै کنّے [kənːɛː] With
𑠊𑠳𑠪𑠹 केह् کیہ [kéː] What
𑠊𑠮 की کی [kiː] Why
𑠌𑠬𑠩 गास گاس [gaːs] Sky
𑠠'𑠤𑠬 ब'रा ب'را [bə́ɾaː] Years

Tone rules

These are rules of writing tones in Dogri using Devanagari Script. They are as follows:-

  • Just like Punjabi, Dogri also uses the letters घ (gʱə), झ (d͡ʒʱə), ढ (ɖʱə), ध (d̪ʱə), भ (bʱə) and ढ़ (ɽʱə) for tonal uses. When at the beginning of the word, it has a high-falling tone; i.e.:- घ (kə̂), झ (t͡ʃə̂), ढ (ʈə̂), ध (t̪ə̂), भ (pə̂) and ढ़ (ɽə̂). When in the middle and final position of the word, the preceding vowel has a low-rising tone; i.e.:- अघ (ə̌ɡ), अझ (ə̌d͡ʒ), अढ (ə̌ɖ), अध (ə̌d̪), अभ (ə̌b) and अढ़ (ə̌ɽ). Examples:- घड़ी (kə̂ɽiː)- clock, and बध (bə̌d̪).
  • Unlike Punjabi, there is no ह (ɦə) sound and it has a high-falling tone in all positions; i.e.:- हत्थ (ə̂t̪ːʰə)- hand.
  • To indicate a low-rising tone in the middle of words, Dogri uses ह् (ह with a halant) to indicate it when the preceding vowel is long; i.e.:- आ (aː), ई (iː), ऊ (uː), ए (eː), ऐ (ɛː), ओ (oː) and औ (ɔː). Example:- साह्ब (sǎːb)- sahab. When the preceding vowel is short, i.e., - अ (ə), इ (ɪ) and उ (ʊ); a combining apostrophe (ʼ) is used. Example:- लʼत्त (lə̌tː)- leg.
  • The characters mentioned in the first point can also be used to indicate high-falling tone in the middle of the words when between a short vowel and a long vowel.

Some examples are shown below.

Name Dogra Akkhar Devanagari Perso-Arabic IPA Tone English translation
𑠌𑠥𑠹𑠥 गल्ल گلّ [gəlːə] Equal Thing
𑠌ʼ𑠥𑠹𑠥 गʼल्ल گʼلّ [gə̌lːə] Rising Cheek
𑠊𑠤 कर کر [kəɾ] Equal Do
𑠍𑠤 घर گھر [kə̂ɾ] Falling Home

Historical references

In the year 1317, Amir Khusro, the famous Urdu and Persian poet, referred to Duger (Dogri) while describing the languages and dialects of India as follows: "Sindhi-o-Lahori-o-Kashmiri-o-Duger."[12][13]

Theories on name origin

Intellectuals in the court of Maharaja Ranbir Singh of Jammu and Kashmir described Duggar as a distorted form of the word Dwigarta, which means 'two troughs', a possible reference to the Mansar and Surinsar lakes.[14]

The linguist George Grierson connected the term Duggar with the Rajasthani word Doonger which means 'hill', and Dogra with Donger.[14] This opinion has lacked support because of the inconsistency of the ostensible changes from Rajasthani to Dogri (essentially the question of how Doonger became Duggar while Donger became Dogra), and has been contradicted by some scholars.[15]

Yet another proposal stems from the word Durgara, the name of a kingdom mentioned in an eleventh century copper-plate inscription in the Bhuri Singh Museum in Chamba, Himachal Pradesh.[citation needed] The word Durgara means 'invincible' in several Northern Indo-Aryan languages, and could be an allusion to the ruggedness of the terrain of Duggar and the historically militarised and autonomous Dogra societies.[citation needed]

In 1976, the experts attending the Language Session of the All India Oriental Conference held in Dharwad, Karnataka, could not reach consensus on the Dwigarta and Durgara hypotheses, but did manage agreement on a Doonger-Duggar connection. In a subsequent All India Oriental Conference held at Jaipur in 1982, the linguists agreed that the culture, language and history of Rajasthan and Duggar share some similarities. It was also suggested that the words Duggar and Dogra are common in some parts of Rajasthan. Specifically, it was asserted that areas with many forts are called Duggar, and their inhabitants are accordingly known as Dogras. The land of Duggar also has many forts, which may support the above opinion.

An article by Dharam Chand Prashant in the literary magazine Shiraza Dogri suggested that "the opinion that the word Duggar is a form of the word Duggarh sounds appropriate."[16]

Recent history

Dogri folk song sung during the interview of a Dhramshala citizen

In modern times, a notable Dogri translation (in the New Dogra script) of the Sanskrit classic mathematical opus Lilavati, by the noted mathematician Bhaskaracharya (b. 1114 AD), was published by the Vidya Vilas Press, Jammu in 1873.[17] As Sanskrit literacy remained confined to a few, the late Maharaja Ranbir Singh had the Lilavati translated into Dogri by Jyotshi Bisheshwar, then principal of Jammu Pathshala.[18]

Dogri has an established tradition of poetry, fiction and dramatic works. Recent poets range from the 18th-century Dogri poet Kavi Dattu (1725–1780) in Raja Ranjit Dev's court to Professor Ram Nath Shastri and Mrs. Padma Sachdev. Kavi Dattu is highly regarded for his Barah Massa (Twelve Months), Kamal Netra (Lotus Eyes), Bhup Bijog and Bir Bilas.[19] Shiraza Dogri is a Dogri literary periodical issued by the Jammu and Kashmir Academy of Art, Culture and Languages, which is a notable publisher of modern Dogri literary work, another being the Dogri Sanstha. Popular recent songs include Pala Shapaiya Dogariya, Manne di Mauj and Shhori Deya. The noted Pakistani singer Malika Pukhraj had roots in Duggar,[20] and her renditions of several Dogri songs continue to be popular in the region. Some devotional songs (bhajans) composed by Karan Singh have gained increasing popularity over time, including Kaun Kareyaan Teri Aarti.

Dogri programming features regularly on Radio Kashmir (a division of All India Radio), and Doordarshan (Indian state television) broadcasts in Jammu and Kashmir. However, Dogri does not have a dedicated state television channel yet, unlike Kashmiri (which has the Doordarshan Koshur channel, available on cable and satellite television throughout India).[citation needed]

Official recognition of the language has been gradual, but progressive. On 2 August 1969, the General Council of the Sahitya Academy, Delhi recognized Dogri as an "independent modern literary language" of India, based on the unanimous recommendation of a panel of linguists.[21] Dogri is one of the official languages of the Indian union territory of Jammu and Kashmir. On 22 December 2003, in a major milestone for the official status of the language, Dogri was recognized as a national language of India in the Indian constitution.[22][23]

In 2005, a collection of over 100 works of prose and poetry in Dogri published over the last 50 years was made accessible online at the Central Institute of Indian Languages (CIIL), Mysore. This included works of eminent writer Dhinu Bhai Panth, Professor Madan Mohan Sharma, B.P. Sathai and Ram Nath Shastri.[24]

Sample text

The following text is from Article 1 of the Universal Declaration of Human Rights.

Dogri (Name Dogra Akkhar script) 𑠩𑠬𑠤𑠳 𑠢𑠝𑠯𑠊𑠹𑠋 𑠢𑠴𑠪𑠹𑠢𑠬 𑠙𑠳 𑠀𑠜𑠭𑠊𑠬𑠤𑠳𑠷 𑠛𑠳 𑠠𑠭𑠧𑠳 𑠏 𑠑𑠝𑠢𑠴 𑠚𑠢𑠬𑠷 𑠩𑠯𑠙𑠴𑠷𑠙𑠤 𑠙𑠳 𑠠𑠤𑠵𑠠𑠤 𑠝। 𑠄'𑠝𑠳𑠷𑠌𑠮 𑠠𑠯𑠛𑠹𑠜𑠭 𑠙𑠳 𑠑𑠢𑠮𑠤𑠴 𑠛𑠮 𑠛𑠳𑠝 𑠚𑠹𑠪𑠵𑠃 𑠇 𑠙𑠳 𑠄'𑠝𑠳𑠷𑠌𑠮 𑠁𑠞𑠰𑠷-𑠠𑠭𑠏𑠹𑠏𑠳𑠷 𑠡𑠬𑠃𑠏𑠬𑠤𑠳 𑠛𑠳 𑠡𑠬𑠦𑠴 𑠊𑠝𑠹𑠝𑠴 𑠠𑠹𑠣𑠪𑠬𑠤 𑠊𑠤𑠝𑠬 𑠥𑠵𑠫𑠛𑠬 𑠇।
Dogri (Devanagari script) सारे मनुक्ख मैह्‌‍मा ते अधिकारें दे बिशे च जनमै थमां सुतैंतर ते बरोबर न। उ'नेंगी बुद्धि ते जमीरै दी देन थ्होई ऐ ते उ'नेंगी आपूं-बिच्चें भाईचारे दे भावै कन्नै ब्यहार करना लोड़दा ऐ।
Dogri (Perso-Arabic script) سارے منکّھ میہما تے ادھکاریں دے بشے چ جنمے تھماں ستیںتر تے بروبر ن۔ ا'نیںگی بدّھ تے جمیرے دی دین تھہوئی اے تے ا'نیںگی آپوں-بچّیں بھائیچارے دے بھاوے کنّے بیہار کرنا لوڑدا اے۔
Dogri transliteration (ISO 15919) Sārē manukkha maihmā tē adhikārēṁ dē biśē ca janamai thamāṁ sutaintar tē barōbar na. U'nēṁgī buddhi tē jamīrai dī dēn thhōī ai tē u'nēṁgī āpūṁ-biccēṁ bhāīcārē dē bhāvai kannai byahār karanā lōṛadā ai.
Dogri IPA [saːɾeː mənʊkːʰə mɛ́ːmaː t̪eː əd̪ɪ̀kaːɾẽː d̪eː bɪʃeː ʧə ʤənəmɛː t̪ʰəmãː sut̪ɛːnt̪əɾ t̪eː bəɾoːbəɾ nə ‖ ʊ́nẽːgiː bʊ́d̪ːɪ t̪eː dʒəmiːɾɛː d̪iː d̪eːn t̪ʰòːiː ɛː t̪eː ʊ́nẽːgiː aːpũːbɪʧːẽː pàːiːʧaːɾeː d̪eː pàːvɛː kənːɛː bjəàːɾ kəɾənaː loːɽəd̪aː ɛː ‖]
English translation All human beings are born free and equal in dignity and rights. They are endowed with reason and conscience and should act towards one another in a spirit of brotherhood.

See also

References

  1. ^ a b c Office of the Registrar General & Census Commissioner, India. "C-16: Population by mother tongue, India – 2011". Retrieved 16 November 2022.
  2. ^ "The Jammu and Kashmir Official Languages Bill, 2020". prsindia. 23 September 2020. Retrieved 23 September 2020.
  3. ^ "Dogri". Ethnologue. Retrieved 15 July 2022.
  4. ^ Cultural Forum. India (Republic) Ministry of Scientific Research and Cultural Affairs. 1970. p. 24.
  5. ^ Masica, Colin P. (1993). The Indo-Aryan Languages. Cambridge University Press. p. 427. ISBN 978-0-521-29944-2.
  6. ^ Ghai, Ved Kumari (1991). Studies in Phonetics and Phonology: With Special Reference to Dogri. Ariana Publishing House. ISBN 978-81-85347-20-2. non-Dogri speakers, also trained phoneticians, tend to hear the difference as one of length only, perceiving the second syllable as stressed
  7. ^ Brightbill, Jeremy D.; Turner, Scott B. (2007). "A Sociolinguistic Survey of the Dogri Language, Jammu and Kashmir" (PDF). SIL International. Retrieved 11 March 2016.
  8. ^ Pandey, Anshuman (4 November 2015). "L2/15-234R: Proposal to encode the Dogra script in Unicode" (PDF).
  9. ^ "NammeDograAkkhar" (PDF).
  10. ^ a b Bahri, Ujjal Singh (2001). Dogri: Phonology and Grammatical Sketch. Series in Indian Languages and Linguistics, 24: New Delhi: Bahri Publications.{{cite book}}: CS1 maint: location (link)
  11. ^ "Dogri". lisindia.ciil.org. Retrieved 9 December 2021.
  12. ^ Shastri, Ram Nath (1981). Dogri Prose Writing before Independence (Translated). Dogri Research Centre, Jammu University.
  13. ^ Datta, Amaresh (1987). Encyclopaedia of Indian Literature. Sahitya Akademi. ISBN 9780836422832.
  14. ^ a b Pathik, Jyoteeshwar (1980). Cultural Heritage of the Dogras. Light & Life Publishers.
  15. ^ Bahri, Ujjal Singh (2001). Dogri: Phonology and Grammatical Sketch. Bahri Publications.
  16. ^ Prashant, Dharam Chand (April–May 1991). "Duggar Shabad di Vayakha". Shiraza Dogri.
  17. ^ Bhāskarācārya (1873). Līlāvatī (Dogri translation). Jammu: Vidya Vilas.
  18. ^ Sharma, B. P. Century-Old Printed Dogri Literature. Jammu & Kashmir State Research Biannual.
  19. ^ Jerath, Ashok (1988). Dogra Legends of Art & Culture. Indus Publishing. p. 236. ISBN 978-81-7387-082-8.
  20. ^ Joseph, Suad; Najmabadi, Afsaneh (2003). Encyclopedia of Women & Islamic Cultures. Leiden: Brill. p. 75. ISBN 978-90-04-12821-7.
  21. ^ Rao, S. (2004). Five Decades; the National Academy of Letters, India: a Short History of Sahitya Akademi. Sahitya Akademi. ISBN 9788126020607.
  22. ^ . Daily Excelsior. Jammu and Kashmir. 23 December 2003. Archived from the original on 2 December 2008. Retrieved 31 October 2008. Dogri among other three languages has been included in the Eighth Schedule of the Constitution when Lok Sabha unanimously approved an amendment in the Constitution
  23. ^ Tsui, Amy (2007). Language Policy, Culture, and Identity in Asian Contexts. Routledge. ISBN 978-0-8058-5694-1.
  24. ^ "Finally, a boost: Dogri literature now a click away". Indian Express. 19 May 2005. Retrieved 26 February 2013.

Bibliography

  • Gopal Haldar (2000). Languages of India. New Delhi: National Book Trust

External links

  • , article by Ved Kumari Ghai
  • , for more on Dogri language, literature and writers
  • , "One Hundredth Amendment," news report on the recognition of Dogri as a national language.
  • , Alami Pahari Adabi Sangat (Global Pahari Cultural Association)
  • Ancientscripts.com, The Takri script.
  • , paper on tonality and intonation in Punjabi.

dogri, language, confused, with, dogrib, language, canada, dogri, name, dogra, akkhar, 𑠖, 𑠌𑠤, devanagari, गर, nastaliq, ڈوگری, ɖoːɡɾiː, indo, aryan, language, primarily, spoken, jammu, region, jammu, kashmir, india, with, smaller, groups, speakers, adjoining, . Not to be confused with the Dogrib language of Canada Dogri Name Dogra Akkhar 𑠖 𑠌𑠤 Devanagari ड गर Nastaliq ڈوگری IPA ɖoːɡɾiː is an Indo Aryan language primarily spoken in the Jammu region of Jammu and Kashmir India with smaller groups of speakers in adjoining regions of western Himachal Pradesh northern Punjab 3 and north eastern Pakistani Punjab 4 It is the ethnic language of the Dogras and was spoken in the historical region of Greater Duggar Currently in Districts Kathua Jammu Samba Udhampur and Reasi 1 These district residents also speak kashmiri Hindi Urdu and Punjabi Dogri is a member of the Western Pahari group of languages 5 Unusually for an Indo European language Dogri is tonal 6 a trait it shares with other Western Pahari languages and Punjabi It has several varieties all with greater than 80 lexical similarity within Jammu and Kashmir 7 Dogri𑠖 𑠌𑠤 ड गर ڈوگریThe word Dogri in Name Dogra Akkhar Devanagari and the Arabic Nastaliq scripts Native toIndia PakistanRegionJammu region Western Himachal Pradesh PunjabEthnicityDograsNative speakers1 6 million in India 2011 census 1 Language familyIndo European Indo IranianIndo AryanNorthernWestern PahariDogriWriting systemName Dogra AkkharDevanagariPerso Arabic Nastaʼliq Mahajani historically Official statusOfficial language in IndiaJammu and Kashmir 2 Language codesISO 639 2 span class plainlinks doi span ISO 639 3 a href https iso639 3 sil org code doi class extiw title iso639 3 doi doi a inclusive codeIndividual codes a href https iso639 3 sil org code dgo class extiw title iso639 3 dgo dgo a Dogri proper a href https iso639 3 sil org code xnr class extiw title iso639 3 xnr xnr a KangriGlottologindo1311Part of a series onConstitutionally recognised languages of IndiaCategory22 Official Languages of the Indian RepublicAssamese Bengali Bodo Dogri Gujarati Hindi Kannada Kashmiri Konkani Maithili Malayalam Marathi Meitei Manipuri Nepali Odia Punjabi Sanskrit Santali Sindhi Tamil Telugu UrduRelatedEighth Schedule to the Constitution of India Official Languages Commission Classical Languages of India List of languages by number of native speakers in India Asia portal India portal Language portal Politics portalThis article contains Indic text Without proper rendering support you may see question marks or boxes misplaced vowels or missing conjuncts instead of Indic text Dogri is spoken by 2 6 million people in India as of the 2011 census 1 It has been among the country s 22 scheduled languages since 2003 It is also one of the 5 official languages of the union territory of Jammu and Kashmir Wiktionary has a category on Dogri language Contents 1 Script 2 Phonology 2 1 Consonants 2 2 Vowels 3 Some common words 4 Tone rules 5 Historical references 6 Theories on name origin 7 Recent history 8 Sample text 9 See also 10 References 11 Bibliography 12 External linksScript EditDogri was originally written in the old Dogra Akkhar script a modified version of Takri 8 A modified version of this script was created by the order of Maharaja Ranbir Singh of Jammu and Kashmir which was then called Name Dogra Akkhar 9 Official documents were written in this new script however it never caught on among the general Dogri speaking populace Currently Devanagari is the officially recognised script for Dogri in India and virtually all Dogri literature is published in it Lilavati a mathematics treatise originally written in Sanskrit in Dogri language amp Name Dogra Akkhar script Dogra Script SpecimenPhonology EditConsonants Edit Labial Dental Alveolar Retroflex Post alv Palatal Velar GlottalNasal m n ɳ ɲ ŋPlosive Affricate voiceless p t ʈ tʃ kaspirated pʰ t ʰ ʈʰ tʃʰ kʰvoiced b d ɖ dʒ ɡFricative voiceless f s ʃ x voiced z ɣ ɦTap ɾ ɽApproximant ʋ l jGemination occurs in all consonants except the consonants ɾ ɳ ɽ ʃ Retroflex consonants ɽ ɳ rarely occur in word initial position f z x ɣ only occur from Perso Arabic loan words f is also heard as an allophone of pʰ ɾ can also marginally be heard as trilled r in some speech In some words s can become more weakly pronounced or even eliminated and replaced by a glottal fricative sound h A palatal nasal sound ɲ typically occurs when a dental nasal precedes a post alveolar affricate consonant rarely occurring in words word initially or medially A velar nasal sound ŋ typically occurs when a dental nasal precedes a velar plosive consonant and rarely occurs word initially or medially 10 Vowels Edit Front Central BackClose iː uːNear close ɪ ʊClose mid eː e oːOpen mid ɛː ɔːOpen aːThere are nasalized variations of the following vowels ĩ ũ ẽ o ɛ ɔ a 11 Vowel sounds are often nasalized when occurring before a word medial or word final n except when n occurs before a word final vowel ʊ can have a marginal upgliding allophone ʊᵛ when occurring before a a vowel sound A word final aː is realized as a back sound ɑː and may also drift toward a centralized aː sound 10 Some common words EditName Dogra Akkhar Devanagari Perso Arabic IPA English translation𑠪 ह ہاں a ː Yes𑠝 𑠃 न ई نےئیں neːĩː No𑠪 𑠤𑠋 ह रख ہرکھ ɪ ɾkʰ Love𑠊𑠝 𑠝 कन न کن ے kenːɛː With𑠊 𑠪 क ह کیہ keː What𑠊 क کی kiː Why𑠌 𑠩 ग स گاس gaːs Sky𑠠 𑠤 ब र ب را be ɾaː YearsTone rules EditThese are rules of writing tones in Dogri using Devanagari Script They are as follows Just like Punjabi Dogri also uses the letters घ gʱe झ d ʒʱe ढ ɖʱe ध d ʱe भ bʱe and ढ ɽʱe for tonal uses When at the beginning of the word it has a high falling tone i e घ ke झ t ʃe ढ ʈe ध t e भ pe and ढ ɽe When in the middle and final position of the word the preceding vowel has a low rising tone i e अघ e ɡ अझ e d ʒ अढ e ɖ अध e d अभ e b and अढ e ɽ Examples घड ke ɽiː clock and बध be d Unlike Punjabi there is no ह ɦe sound and it has a high falling tone in all positions i e हत थ e t ːʰe hand To indicate a low rising tone in the middle of words Dogri uses ह ह with a halant to indicate it when the preceding vowel is long i e आ aː ई iː ऊ uː ए eː ऐ ɛː ओ oː and औ ɔː Example स ह ब sǎːb sahab When the preceding vowel is short i e अ e इ ɪ and उ ʊ a combining apostrophe ʼ is used Example लʼत त le tː leg The characters mentioned in the first point can also be used to indicate high falling tone in the middle of the words when between a short vowel and a long vowel Some examples are shown below Name Dogra Akkhar Devanagari Perso Arabic IPA Tone English translation𑠌𑠥 𑠥 गल ल گل gelːe Equal Thing𑠌ʼ𑠥 𑠥 गʼल ल گʼل ge lːe Rising Cheek𑠊𑠤 कर کر keɾ Equal Do𑠍𑠤 घर گھر ke ɾ Falling HomeHistorical references EditIn the year 1317 Amir Khusro the famous Urdu and Persian poet referred to Duger Dogri while describing the languages and dialects of India as follows Sindhi o Lahori o Kashmiri o Duger 12 13 Theories on name origin EditIntellectuals in the court of Maharaja Ranbir Singh of Jammu and Kashmir described Duggar as a distorted form of the word Dwigarta which means two troughs a possible reference to the Mansar and Surinsar lakes 14 The linguist George Grierson connected the term Duggar with the Rajasthani word Doonger which means hill and Dogra with Donger 14 This opinion has lacked support because of the inconsistency of the ostensible changes from Rajasthani to Dogri essentially the question of how Doonger became Duggar while Donger became Dogra and has been contradicted by some scholars 15 Yet another proposal stems from the word Durgara the name of a kingdom mentioned in an eleventh century copper plate inscription in the Bhuri Singh Museum in Chamba Himachal Pradesh citation needed The word Durgara means invincible in several Northern Indo Aryan languages and could be an allusion to the ruggedness of the terrain of Duggar and the historically militarised and autonomous Dogra societies citation needed In 1976 the experts attending the Language Session of the All India Oriental Conference held in Dharwad Karnataka could not reach consensus on the Dwigarta and Durgara hypotheses but did manage agreement on a Doonger Duggar connection In a subsequent All India Oriental Conference held at Jaipur in 1982 the linguists agreed that the culture language and history of Rajasthan and Duggar share some similarities It was also suggested that the words Duggar and Dogra are common in some parts of Rajasthan Specifically it was asserted that areas with many forts are called Duggar and their inhabitants are accordingly known as Dogras The land of Duggar also has many forts which may support the above opinion An article by Dharam Chand Prashant in the literary magazine Shiraza Dogri suggested that the opinion that the word Duggar is a form of the word Duggarh sounds appropriate 16 Recent history Edit source track Dogri folk song sung during the interview of a Dhramshala citizen In modern times a notable Dogri translation in the New Dogra script of the Sanskrit classic mathematical opus Lilavati by the noted mathematician Bhaskaracharya b 1114 AD was published by the Vidya Vilas Press Jammu in 1873 17 As Sanskrit literacy remained confined to a few the late Maharaja Ranbir Singh had the Lilavati translated into Dogri by Jyotshi Bisheshwar then principal of Jammu Pathshala 18 Dogri has an established tradition of poetry fiction and dramatic works Recent poets range from the 18th century Dogri poet Kavi Dattu 1725 1780 in Raja Ranjit Dev s court to Professor Ram Nath Shastri and Mrs Padma Sachdev Kavi Dattu is highly regarded for his Barah Massa Twelve Months Kamal Netra Lotus Eyes Bhup Bijog and Bir Bilas 19 Shiraza Dogri is a Dogri literary periodical issued by the Jammu and Kashmir Academy of Art Culture and Languages which is a notable publisher of modern Dogri literary work another being the Dogri Sanstha Popular recent songs include Pala Shapaiya Dogariya Manne di Mauj and Shhori Deya The noted Pakistani singer Malika Pukhraj had roots in Duggar 20 and her renditions of several Dogri songs continue to be popular in the region Some devotional songs bhajans composed by Karan Singh have gained increasing popularity over time including Kaun Kareyaan Teri Aarti Dogri programming features regularly on Radio Kashmir a division of All India Radio and Doordarshan Indian state television broadcasts in Jammu and Kashmir However Dogri does not have a dedicated state television channel yet unlike Kashmiri which has the Doordarshan Koshur channel available on cable and satellite television throughout India citation needed Official recognition of the language has been gradual but progressive On 2 August 1969 the General Council of the Sahitya Academy Delhi recognized Dogri as an independent modern literary language of India based on the unanimous recommendation of a panel of linguists 21 Dogri is one of the official languages of the Indian union territory of Jammu and Kashmir On 22 December 2003 in a major milestone for the official status of the language Dogri was recognized as a national language of India in the Indian constitution 22 23 In 2005 a collection of over 100 works of prose and poetry in Dogri published over the last 50 years was made accessible online at the Central Institute of Indian Languages CIIL Mysore This included works of eminent writer Dhinu Bhai Panth Professor Madan Mohan Sharma B P Sathai and Ram Nath Shastri 24 Sample text EditThe following text is from Article 1 of the Universal Declaration of Human Rights Dogri Name Dogra Akkhar script 𑠩 𑠤 𑠢𑠝 𑠊 𑠋 𑠢 𑠪 𑠢 𑠙 𑠀𑠜 𑠊 𑠤 𑠛 𑠠 𑠧 𑠏 𑠑𑠝𑠢 𑠚𑠢 𑠩 𑠙 𑠙𑠤 𑠙 𑠠𑠤 𑠠𑠤 𑠝 𑠄 𑠝 𑠌 𑠠 𑠛 𑠜 𑠙 𑠑𑠢 𑠤 𑠛 𑠛 𑠝 𑠚 𑠪 𑠃 𑠇 𑠙 𑠄 𑠝 𑠌 𑠁𑠞 𑠠 𑠏 𑠏 𑠡 𑠃𑠏 𑠤 𑠛 𑠡 𑠦 𑠊𑠝 𑠝 𑠠 𑠣𑠪 𑠤 𑠊𑠤𑠝 𑠥 𑠫𑠛 𑠇 Dogri Devanagari script स र मन क ख म ह म त अध क र द ब श च जनम थम स त तर त बर बर न उ न ग ब द ध त जम र द द न थ ह ई ऐ त उ न ग आप ब च च भ ईच र द भ व कन न ब यह र करन ल ड द ऐ Dogri Perso Arabic script سارے منک ھ میہما تے ادھکاریں دے بشے چ جنمے تھماں ستیںتر تے بروبر ن ا نیںگی بد ھ تے جمیرے دی دین تھہوئی اے تے ا نیںگی آپوں بچ یں بھائیچارے دے بھاوے کن ے بیہار کرنا لوڑدا اے Dogri transliteration ISO 15919 Sare manukkha maihma te adhikareṁ de bise ca janamai thamaṁ sutaintar te barōbar na U neṁgi buddhi te jamirai di den thhōi ai te u neṁgi apuṁ bicceṁ bhaicare de bhavai kannai byahar karana lōṛada ai Dogri IPA saːɾeː menʊkːʰe mɛ ːmaː t eː ed ɪ kaːɾẽː d eː bɪʃeː ʧe ʤenemɛː t ʰemaː sut ɛːnt eɾ t eː beɾoːbeɾ ne ʊ nẽːgiː bʊ d ːɪ t eː dʒemiːɾɛː d iː d eːn t ʰoːiː ɛː t eː ʊ nẽːgiː aːpũːbɪʧːẽː paːiːʧaːɾeː d eː paːvɛː kenːɛː bjeaːɾ keɾenaː loːɽed aː ɛː English translation All human beings are born free and equal in dignity and rights They are endowed with reason and conscience and should act towards one another in a spirit of brotherhood See also EditName Dogra Akkhar Western Pahari languages Dogras Duggar List of Sahitya Akademi Award winners for Dogri Dogri cinema Languages of IndiaReferences Edit a b c Office of the Registrar General amp Census Commissioner India C 16 Population by mother tongue India 2011 Retrieved 16 November 2022 The Jammu and Kashmir Official Languages Bill 2020 prsindia 23 September 2020 Retrieved 23 September 2020 Dogri Ethnologue Retrieved 15 July 2022 Cultural Forum India Republic Ministry of Scientific Research and Cultural Affairs 1970 p 24 Masica Colin P 1993 The Indo Aryan Languages Cambridge University Press p 427 ISBN 978 0 521 29944 2 Ghai Ved Kumari 1991 Studies in Phonetics and Phonology With Special Reference to Dogri Ariana Publishing House ISBN 978 81 85347 20 2 non Dogri speakers also trained phoneticians tend to hear the difference as one of length only perceiving the second syllable as stressed Brightbill Jeremy D Turner Scott B 2007 A Sociolinguistic Survey of the Dogri Language Jammu and Kashmir PDF SIL International Retrieved 11 March 2016 Pandey Anshuman 4 November 2015 L2 15 234R Proposal to encode the Dogra script in Unicode PDF NammeDograAkkhar PDF a b Bahri Ujjal Singh 2001 Dogri Phonology and Grammatical Sketch Series in Indian Languages and Linguistics 24 New Delhi Bahri Publications a href Template Cite book html title Template Cite book cite book a CS1 maint location link Dogri lisindia ciil org Retrieved 9 December 2021 Shastri Ram Nath 1981 Dogri Prose Writing before Independence Translated Dogri Research Centre Jammu University Datta Amaresh 1987 Encyclopaedia of Indian Literature Sahitya Akademi ISBN 9780836422832 a b Pathik Jyoteeshwar 1980 Cultural Heritage of the Dogras Light amp Life Publishers Bahri Ujjal Singh 2001 Dogri Phonology and Grammatical Sketch Bahri Publications Prashant Dharam Chand April May 1991 Duggar Shabad di Vayakha Shiraza Dogri Bhaskaracarya 1873 Lilavati Dogri translation Jammu Vidya Vilas Sharma B P Century Old Printed Dogri Literature Jammu amp Kashmir State Research Biannual Jerath Ashok 1988 Dogra Legends of Art amp Culture Indus Publishing p 236 ISBN 978 81 7387 082 8 Joseph Suad Najmabadi Afsaneh 2003 Encyclopedia of Women amp Islamic Cultures Leiden Brill p 75 ISBN 978 90 04 12821 7 Rao S 2004 Five Decades the National Academy of Letters India a Short History of Sahitya Akademi Sahitya Akademi ISBN 9788126020607 Lok Sabha passes bill recognising Dogri 3 other languages Daily Excelsior Jammu and Kashmir 23 December 2003 Archived from the original on 2 December 2008 Retrieved 31 October 2008 Dogri among other three languages has been included in the Eighth Schedule of the Constitution when Lok Sabha unanimously approved an amendment in the Constitution Tsui Amy 2007 Language Policy Culture and Identity in Asian Contexts Routledge ISBN 978 0 8058 5694 1 Finally a boost Dogri literature now a click away Indian Express 19 May 2005 Retrieved 26 February 2013 Bibliography EditGopal Haldar 2000 Languages of India New Delhi National Book TrustExternal links Edit Dogri language test of Wikipedia at Wikimedia Incubator Wikivoyage has a phrasebook for Dogri The Dogri Language article by Ved Kumari Ghai Duggar Times com for more on Dogri language literature and writers Dailyexcelsior com One Hundredth Amendment news report on the recognition of Dogri as a national language Modifications to Devanagri to represent Dogri tones Pahari org Alami Pahari Adabi Sangat Global Pahari Cultural Association Ancientscripts com The Takri script Crulp org paper on tonality and intonation in Punjabi Dogri computing resources at TDIL Devanagari Script Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Dogri language amp oldid 1154626888, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

article

, read, download, free, free download, mp3, video, mp4, 3gp, jpg, jpeg, gif, png, picture, music, song, movie, book, game, games.