Saurashtra language
Saurashtra is an Indo-Aryan language spoken primarily by the Saurashtrians of South India who migrated from the Lata region of present-day Gujarat over a millennium ago.
Saurashtra, an offshoot of Sauraseni Prakrit, once spoken in the Saurashtra region of Gujarat, is now chiefly spoken in various places of Tamil Nadu and are mostly concentrated in Madurai, Thanjavur and Salem Districts.
The language has its own script of the same name, but is also written in the Tamil, Telugu, and Devanagari scripts. The Saurashtra script is of Brahmic origin, although its exact derivation is not known. Unlike most of the surrounding Dravidian languages, Saurashtra is Indo-European.There is some debate amongst speakers of the Saurashtra language as to which script is best suited to the language. Census of India places the language under Gujarati. Official figures show the number of speakers as 247,702.
Classification
Saurashtra belongs to the western branch of the Indo-Aryan languages, a dominant language family of the Indian subcontinent. It is part of the greater Indo-European language family. It is also classified as being part of a Gujaratic languages that, alongside Saurashtra includes the languages like Gujarati.Etymology
is a Sanskrit term meaning flame or dawn of Surya and the people worshiping Surya or Saura are called as Saurashtrians, the speakers of Saurashtra were once sun worshipers and have built sun temples dedicated to the Hindu deity Surya.As per one school of thought, “Saurashtra” means 100 nations, but as per another school of thought, this is a fractured speech of “Su-Rashtra” and its Prakrit name Sorath, which literally means "good country". Many Sanskrit words are coined from the Prakrit language of Sauraseni or Shauraseni language now called as Saurashtra.
History
The oldest available inscriptions in Saurashtra are found in Mandasaur, which is a city in the Malwa region. The language is the modern living and active form of ancient Sauraseni Prakrit. However, it also shows some similarities with Maharashtri Prakrit, the ancestor of Marathi and Konkani.Saurashtra was once commonly spoken in the coastal areas of Mahi and Tapti rivers, which extends throughout the Malwa region of Madhya Pradesh and Saurashtra region of southern Gujarat. It was also spoken by the people living along Konkan region, which extends throughout the western coasts of Maharashtra, Goa and Karnataka.
Saurashtra is a amalgamation of various present day Indo-Aryan languages like Marathi, Konkani, Gujarati and the older dialects of Rajasthani and Sindhi. However, the current spoken form of Saurashtra is mixed with the Dravidian languages like Kannada, Telugu and Tamil and it might have originated in 16th or early 17th century.
Geographical distribution
Speakers of the Saurashtra language, known as Saurashtrians, maintain a predominant presence in Madurai, Thanjavur, Salem, Dindigul, Tiruchirappalli, Tirunelveli, Kanchipuram, Ramanathapuram, Kanyakumari, Chennai, Tiruvannamalai and Vellore Districts of Tamil Nadu. They are also present in significant numbers in Tirupati of Andhra Pradesh and Karnataka. Though official figures are hard to come by, it is believed that the Saurashtra population is anywhere between one-fifth and one-fourth of the city's total population.Dialects
In the course of migration, Saurashtrians moved in groups and settled in different regions of South India and that caused a slight dialect variation between each group and is noticeable by a Saurashtrian speaker when interacting with another group. Saurashtra language has two dialects, which are broadly similar, with slight variations.The two dialects are:
- Northern Saurashtra
- Southern Saurashtra
Phonology
The phoneme inventory of Saurashtra is similar to that of many other Indo-Aryan languages, especially that of the Konkani language. An chart of all contrastive sounds in Saurashtra is provided below.Front | Central | Back | |
High | |||
Mid | |||
Low |
Writing system
Saurashtra script
Saurashtra for most of the part had been an oral language lacking any script of its own. Around the 17th – 18th century some attempted to write it in Telugu script. Around 19th century a script was invented. There were attempts to revitalize the script in the latter half of the 19th century, ignoring most of the complex conjunct characters.The Saurashtra script is an abugida, that is, each letter represents a consonant+vowel syllable. There are thirty-four such letters. An unmarked letter represents a syllable with the inherent vowel ; letters can be marked with one of eleven vowel diacritics to represent a syllable with a different vowel. Vowel diacritics are attached to the top right corner of a base letter or written alongside it. There are also twelve letters for writing independent vowels. The four vocalic liquid letters r, ru, l and lu behave in the same way as vowels, so are often included in the vowel class.
Early Saurashtra texts use a number of complex conjunct forms for writing consonant clusters. However, when the script was restructured in the 1880s these were abandoned in favour of a virama diacritic, which silences the inherent vowel of the first consonant in a cluster.
The script uses a letter called upakshara, a dependent consonant sign which attaches nasals and liquids to aspirate them. That is, the letter m with upakshara attached represents . An aspirated nasal or liquid which is followed by a vowel other than is written with the vowel diacritic attached to the upakshara, not to the base letter. Some analyses of the script classify aspirated nasal and liquids as a separate set of single discrete letters divided into two parts.
There is a script-specific set of numbers 0-9, some of which closely resemble Devanagari digits. The widely-attested Indic punctuation marks danda and double danda are used to mark the end of a sentence or clause. Latin comma, full stop and question mark symbols are also used.
The letter order of Saurashtra script is similar to other Brahmic scripts. The letters are vowels, consonants, and the compound letters which are formed essentially by adding a vowel sound to a consonant.
Vowels
Consonants
Compound letters
Numerals
Devanagari script
Recently, Saurashtrians adopted Devanagari Script for writing. The alphabet chart containing vowels, consonants and the compound letters in Devanagari script are as follows:Limitations
Firstly, Devanagari script is not developed by the Saurashtrians. Secondly, even if Devanagari script is adopted to write Saurashtra language, it will look like a bleak literature and would not be developed further, as it cannot be used among the people currently living in a State not of their own and it would not include the Dravidian features of the language.Loanwords
The language itself is more similar to modern day Gujarati and Marathi as both originated from Prakrit. However, in the course of migration to South India, the language was influenced by Dravidian Languages such as Telugu and Kannada and accumulated words from those language in its vocabulary as loanwords.English | Saurashtra loanword | Donor-language word |
"Rasam" | Pilchar | Charu |
Read/ Study | Cheduvi | Chaduvu |
Mirror | Adhham | Adhham |
Pressed rice | Adkul | Atukulu |
Rangoli | Muggu | Muggulu |
Cloth | Bottal | Battalu |
Gulp/ Deglutition | Mingi | Miṅgaḍamu |
Jump | Dhungi/Dhumki | Dumuku |
Scratch | Giktha | Gīkuḍu |
Vehicle | Bondi/Bandi | Bandi |
Children | Pillan | Pillalu |
Way | Vaat | Vaat |
Punch | Guddhu | Guddhu |
Sprinkles | Chinkul | Chinukulu |
Drop | Bottu | Bottu |
Work | Kaam | Kaam |
Monkey | Kothi | Kothi |
Milk | Dhoodh | Dūdha |
Water | Pani | Pāṇī |
Cow | Gaaye/Goru | Gaaye |
Who | Kon | Kōṇ |
:wikt:out|Out | Bharad | Bahāra |
:wikt:come|Come | Aav | Āvō |
:wikt:do|Do | Ker | Karā |
:wikt:Go|Go | Jha | Jā'ō |
Home | Gher | Ghar |
Rice | Bath | Bhāt |
No | Nokko | Noko |
Sour | Ambad | Amlo |
Magazines
In recent times, the rising awareness about Saurashtra language among the young generation has led to the publication of magazines. The following are the list of magazines currently published-- Bhashabhimani
- Sourashtratime e-journal
- Zeeg
- Sourashtra Mithran
- Sourashtra Samachar
Literature
Other important literary works in Saurashtra are:
- Bhagavad Gita 1953 AD - written by T.R.Padmanabhaiyer
- Tirukkural 1980 AD - translated by Sankhu Ram
- Mahabharata 2013 AD - written by Kasin Anantham
- Silappatikaram 2018 AD - translated by S.D.Gnaneswaran
The Sahitya Akademi Award is given to authors writing in the Saurashtra language since 2007. A former Sanskrit Professor of Sourashtra College in Madurai, T.R. Damodaran won the award for his book Jiva Sabda Kosam, a compilation of 1,333 Saurashtra words with English and Tamil meanings. However, Saroja Sundararajan, was also awarded for Yogendran Monnum Singaru Latun, a rendition of works of Adi Sankara’s Soundaryalahiri, Kanagadhara stotra and Mahishasuramarthini stotra, Natana Gopala Nayagi Swami’s ‘Mooschi Deshad,’ ‘Subramanian Mahatmiyam’ and songs of Sai Baba.