Chamling language
Chamling is one of the Kiranti languages spoken by the Kiranti of Nepal, Bhutan and India. Alternate renderings and names include Chamling, Chamlinge Rai and Rodong.[1] It is closely related to the Bantawa (some Bantawa-speaking communities call their language "Camling") and Puma languages of the Kiranti language family in eastern Nepal, and it belongs to the broader Sino-Tibetan language family.[4] Chamling has SOV word order.
Chamling | |
---|---|
Rodong | |
चाम्लिङ | |
Native to | Nepal, India, Bhutan |
Native speakers | 77,000 in Nepal (2011)[1] |
Sino-Tibetan
| |
Devanagari[2] | |
Language codes | |
ISO 639-3 | rab |
Glottolog | caml1239 |
ELP | Camling [3] |
History
The Chamling language is one of the languages of the ancient Kiranti culture, which existed well before vedic period 3500-5000 in South Asia.[5] Important versions of the Mundhum — the main religious text forming the religious foundation of the Kirant Mundhum religion and the cultural heritage of the various Kirati people — are composed in Camling; such versions are distinctive to the Camling-speaking tribes and a guide to their distinctive religious practices and cultural identity.[6]
Distribution
The Chamling language is used by small communities in eastern Sagarmatha Zone, in central Khotang District, Bhojpur District and scattered areas in northern Udayapur District and a few more districts of eastern Nepal, the southeastern neighbour Indian state of Sikkim, the hill city of Darjeeling in the Indian state of West Bengal and the kingdom of Bhutan.[4]
Demographics
Despite its geographic prevalence, the actual number of Chamling speakers is estimated to be 10,000, spread across small tribes and villages.[4] Many members of the Chamling ethnic and tribal communities are no longer fluent in the Chamling language, which is taught only in remote areas in the Udayapur District.[4] Like Bantawa, Chamling is an endangered language. Many people in these areas speak a variety of Chamling that is mixed with the Nepali language, which is the official language of Nepal.[4] Most Chamling-speaking people are Hindus or practitioners of Kiranti Mundhum.
Phonology and voice
- Phonology
Consonants
Bilabial | Labio- dental |
Dental/ Alveolar |
Velar | Glottal | |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
Stop (voiceless) | p | t | |||
Nasal | m | n | (ɳ) | ||
Fricative | f | ʃ | ɦ | ||
Vowels
front | central | back | |
---|---|---|---|
high | i | u | |
mid | e | o | |
low | a |
- Voice
- Phuima = pluck
- Toma = see, experience
- Ityu = brought from above
- Dhotyu-cyu' = assembled them
- Bhuima = pound
- Doma = close
- Idyu = gave him
- Dhodyu-cyu = stabbed them[7]
Bound Morphemes
chamling | example word | morphological rule | |
---|---|---|---|
plural suffix | /-ci/ | "challa-ci" = my brothers | N —> N + plural /-ci/ |
"his" | /m-/ | "m-tõ" = his ha1. ir | N —> /m/ + N |
"my" | /a-/ | "a-nicho" = my sibling | N —> /a/ + N |
"your" | /kap-/ | "kap-tõ" = your hair | N —> /kap/ + N |
Chamling uses many bound morphemes, many of which denote possession or the change of possession of something.
Phrase Structure Rules
NP —> (D) N
VP —> (NP) (A) (Adv) V (Adv)
CP —> C S
S —> NP {VP, NP, CP}
examples:
Chamling | "anga a-khim hinge" |
---|---|
interlinear gloss | my my house be |
parts of speech | D N V |
English | "I have a house" |
This is 3. an example of a sentence that is formed by an NP and a VP. The NP contains a determiner and a noun, and the VP contains a verb.
Chamling | "a-challa-ci oda paina" |
---|---|
interlinear gloss | my brothers here not |
parts of speech | N V Adverb |
English | "my brothers are not here" |
This is an example of a sentence that is formed by a NP and a VP. The NP contains a noun and a VP contains a verb and an adverb.
Chamling | "khamo nung de?" |
---|---|
interlinear gloss | your name what |
parts of speech | D N N |
English | "what is your name?" |
This is an example of two NP's forming a sentence. One NP contains "khamo nung" ("your name") and the second NP contains "de" ("what").
See also
References
- Chamling at Ethnologue (18th ed., 2015)
- "Chamling". Ethnologue. Retrieved 20 September 2020.
- Endangered Languages Project data for Camling.
- Ethnologue report on Camling
- Cemjoṅga, Īmāna Siṃha (2003). History and Culture of the Kirat People. Kirat Yakthung Chumlung. ISBN 99933-809-1-1.
- Monika Bock, Aparna Rao. Culture, Creation, and Procreation: Concepts of Kinship in South Asian Practice. Page 65. 2000, Berghahn Books.
- Phonology - The Rosetta Project Archived 23 April 2008 at the Wayback Machine
- Ebert, Karen (1997). Camling (Chamling). Mulnchen: LINCOM Europa.