Negombo Tamil dialect


Negombo Tamil dialect or Negombo Fishermen’s Tamil is a Sri Lankan Tamil language dialect used by the fishers of Negombo, Sri Lanka. This is just one of the many dialects used by the remnant population of formerly Tamil speaking people of the western Puttalam District and Gampaha District of Sri Lanka. Those who still identify them as ethnic Tamils are known as Negombo Tamils or as Puttalam Tamils. Although most residents of these districts identify them as ethnic Sinhalese some are bilingual in both the languages.

Morphology

The specific dialect known as Negombo Fisherman’s Tamil spoken by the Karava or Karaiyar caste fishers of Negombo. NFT has many distinctive traits, some of which may have arisen as a consequence of contact with Sinhala. It is also proposed that it may have undergone considerable morphosyntactic convergence with spoken or colloquial Sinhala, as a consequence of contact with it.
For example, NFT has mostly lost Tamil verb agreement morphology for person and number. Colloquial Sinhala has a single verb form for all persons, singular and plural. Most Tamil dialects, by contrast, retain in both the spoken and the written languages a well-developed system of person and number verb agreement morphology. Thus in NFT we have, with Jaffna Tamil dialect which a major dialect of the Sri Lankan Tamils ethnic group for comparison:
I Colombo go
I Colombo going
I Colombo go
NFT has also developed a number of other grammatical traits under the probable influence of Sinhala, including a postposed indefinite article, an indefinitizing postclitic –sari, and case assignments for defective verbs that follow the Sinhala, rather than Tamil, patterns of agreement.

Unique dialect

NFT probably originated in India, but has subsequently adopted, and is still adopting, Sri Lankan Tamil traits. The dialect is spoken by perhaps as many as 50,000 people, is thus a very distinctive dialect. With Karnataka based Saraswat Konkani, Tamil Nadu based Saurashtri, Sri Lankan Creole Portuguese and the Urdu, Marathi, and Kannada dialects of Kupwar, NFT grammar is the outcome of pervasive structural realignment as a result of stable bilingualism.