Hinduism: Details about 'Gujarati Language'

Index / Hinduism / Bhaubeej / Gujarati Language /

Navigation

Home
One level up
Back
Index of contents
Links
Hinduism-Shop

Useful Links


Hinduism Portal
History Hindu deities Denominations Mythology Reincarnation Karma
Nirvana Dharma Ayurveda Scriptures Festivals By country
Gujarati (ગુજરાતી Gujarātī)
Spoken in:India, Uganda, Tanzania, Kenya, Pakistan, USA, UK, Australia, Fiji, Canada
Total speakers:46 million 
Ranking:22
Language family: Indo-European
 Indo-Iranian
  Indo-Aryan
   Western Indo-Aryan
    Gujarati 
Official status
Official language of:Gujarat
Regulated by:Language Academy
Language codes
ISO 639-1:gu
ISO 639-2:guj
ISO/DIS 639-3: 
This page contains Indic text. Without rendering support you may see irregular vowel positioning and a lack of conjuncts. More..

Gujarati (ગુજરાતી Gujarātī; also sometimes Gujrati) is one of the 22 official language and 14 regional languages spoken in India. It is a language native to the state of Gujarat in western India. There are about 46 million speakers of Gujarati worldwide, making it the 23rd most spoken language in the world. Of these, roughly 45.5 million reside in India, 150,000 in Uganda, 250,000 in Tanzania, 50,000 in Kenya and roughly 100,000 in Pakistan. Gujarati is the chief language of India's Gujarat state, as well as the adjacent union territories of Daman and Diu and Dadra and Nagar Haveli. A considerable population of Gujarati speakers exists in North America and the United Kingdom as well. In the United Kingdom, Leicester (Midlands) and Wembley (North London) are two areas popular with Gujaratis. And in America,



states such as New Jersey, New York, California, and Texas are quite popular with Gujaratis. Gujarati was the mother-tongue of both Mohandas K. Gandhi, the "father of India" and Quaid-e Azam Mohammed Ali Jinnah, the "father of Pakistan".

Contents

History

The history of the language can be traced back to 12th c. CE. A formal grammar of the precursor of this language was written by Jain monk and eminent scholar Hemachandra-charya in the reign of Rajput king Siddharaj Jayasinh of Anhilwara (Patan). This was called Apabhransa grammar, signifying a language which is a corrupted form of languages like Sanskrit and Ardha-magadhi. The earliest literature in the language survives in oral tradition and can be traced to two stalwarts, the Krishna devotee and great egalitarian Narsinh Mehta (later a source of inspiration to Mahatma Gandhi) dated to be in the 17th century. The story of Narsinh Mehta himself was composed as a long narrative ballad by Premananda, accorded the title "maha-kavi" or great poet by modern historians of the language. His date is perhaps late 17th century. Other than this a large number of poets flourished during what is now characterised as the bhakti or devotional movement in Hinduism, a movement of the masses to liberate the religion from entrenched priesthood.

Premananda was a "vyakhyan-kar", a traveling story



teller, who narrated his subject in song form and then perhaps elaborated on the lines in prose. His style was so fluent that the long poems running into hundreds of lines were memorised by the people and are still sung during the morning routines. In this sense the oral tradition of the much more ancient Vedas was clearly continuing in India till late. Premananda's famous poetry-stories deal with epic themes couched in stories of mythical kings, and the puranas. He also wrote a drama based on Narasinh Mehta's life capturing his simplicity and his disregard for worldly divisions of caste and class.

Modern exploration into Gujarat and its language is credited to British administrator Alexander Kinloch Forbes. During the nineteenth century he explored much of the previous thousand years of the history of the land and compiled a large number of manuscripts. The learned body devoted to Gujarati language is named after him, Farbas Gujarati Sabha with headquarters in Mumbai.

Geographic distribution

Official Status

It is officially recognized in the state of Gujarat, India.

Dialects

As with most languages, there are regional dialects which differ, some have many Arabic and Persian terms, while others, such as the southern dialects, take more from Portuguese and English, while others take more from Hindi. It is not a single language, and was only created 4 to 5 centuries ago. It combines many languages, as mentioned above.

Some of them are listed below along with subdivisions.

  • Standard Gujarati
    • Saurashtra Standard
    • Nagari
    • Bombay Gujarati
    • Patnuli
    • Ahmedabad city
  • Gamadia
    • Gramya
    • Surati
    • Anawla
    • Brathela
    • Eastern Broach Gujarati
    • Charotari
    • Patidari
    • Vadodari
    • Ahmedabad Gamadia
    • Patani
  • Parsi
  • Kathiyawadi
    • Jhalawadi
    • Sorathi
    • Holadi
    • Gohilwadi
    • Bhavnagari
  • Kharwa
  • Kakari
  • Tarimuki
    • Ghisadi
  • East African Gujrati

Derived languages

Kutchi

Vocabulary

The Gujarati spoken today takes vocabulary and even structure in some cases fromPersian due to the more than five centuries of the rule of Sultans, as well as from the many Persians who were welcomed and settled in Gujarat. Most people in the region have at least minor descendance from them.

The other elements of the language draw quitea lot on the native tribes of the specific region, as listed aboveunder Dialects.

Also due to centuries of trade with European countries such as Portugal and England, many words in Gujarati are naturally the same as Portuguese and English.

Writing system

It is written in Gujarati script, an abugida very similar to Devanagari (the script used for Sanskrit, Marathi and Hindi), but without the line at the top of the letters and a few other differences.

See also

Gujarati Gujarati Gujarati Idioma guyaratí Gujarâtîgu:ગુજરાતી ભાષા गुजराती Bahasa Gujarati Lingua gujarati გუჯარათული ენა Gujarati グジャラート語 Gujarati Język gudźarati Гуджарати Gujarati


Visitors who viewed this also viewed:

Hinduism: Centum
Hinduism: Evil Spirit
Hinduism: Mahavishnu
New Age: Soul Travel
Buddhism: Consciousness Only
Christianity: Christian Denomination


 


Click here for our Hinduism-Shop





This article is licensed under the GNU Free Documentation License. It uses material from the Wikipedia article "Gujarati_language". A list of the wikipedia authors can be found here.