Telugu language

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Telugu (తెలుగు)
Spoken in: India
Region: Andhra Pradesh and neighboring states
Total speakers: 70 million native, 80 million total
Ranking: 13-17 (native); in a near tie with Korean, Vietnamese, Marathi, Tamil
Genetic classification: Dravidian

 South-central
  Telugu
   Telugu

Official status
Official language of: India
Regulated by:  ?
Language codes
ISO 639-1te
ISO 639-2tel
SILTCW
See also: LanguageList of languages

Telugu (తెలుగు) belongs to the family of Dravidian languages and is the official language of the state of Andhra Pradesh, India. It is also one among the 23 official national languages of India. 19th century Englishmen called it the Italian of the East as all words in Telugu end with a vowel sound. It is also the second most widely spoken language in India, next only to Hindi.

Contents

History

The origins of Telugu are not very clear. Telugu words appear in the Maharashtri Prakrit anthology of poems (the Gathasaptashathi) collected by the first century BC Satavahana King Hala. Telugu speakers were probably the older peoples inhabiting the land between Krishna and Godavari.

The first clear historical inscriptions in Telugu appear about the 7th century and known literature starts with Nannaya writing the Telugu Mahabharata in the 11th century. There has been prolific literature ever since, but the golden age is considered by many to be the 16th century, under the patronage of the Vijayanagar Emperor Krishna Deva Raya.

The western portion of the Telugu speaking lands came under the influence of Mughal rulers during and after the 14th century, and most recently by the Nizams of Hyderabad. Ancient Sanskrit, Persian and Urdu influences show most in the Telugu dialect from these regions. In 1956, 10 Nizam districts and four districts of Rayalaseema were merged to the so-called Northern Circar districts forming the modern telugu vernacular state of Andhra Pradesh.

Classification

Telugu is a member of the Dravidian family of languages (list). Some other languages in this family are:

  1. Tamil
  2. Kannada
  3. Malayalam
  4. Tulu
  5. Kodava

The Chenchu language, Savara language, and Waddar language are tongues closely related to Telugu.

For a detailing of the features of the family of languages to which Telugu belongs, see Dravidian languages.

Geographic distribution

Telugu is mainly spoken in the state of Andhra Pradesh and a bit in the neighboring states of Tamil Nadu, Karnataka, Maharastra, Orissa and Chhattisgarh in India, but it is also spoken in Bahrain, Fiji, Malaysia, Mauritius and the United Arab Emirates where there are large Telugu speaking expatriates. Telugu speaking Andhras have become a large and successful Indian community in the USA [1].

Official status

Telugu is one of the official languages of India. It is the official language of the state of Andhra Pradesh

Dialects

The dialects of Telugu identified by Ethnologue are Berad, Dasari, Dommara, Golari, Kamathi, Komtao, Konda-Reddi, Salewari, Telangana, Telugu, Vadaga, Vadari, Srikakula, Vishakapatnam, East Godavari, Rayalseema, Nellore and Guntur. In Tamil Nadu the Telugu dialect is classified into Salem, Coimbatore, Chennai Telugu dialects. It is also widely spoken in Virudhunagar, Tuticorin, Madurai and Thanjavur districts.

Derived languages

The dialect spoken in the area between Vijayawada (Krishna) and Rajahmundry (East Godavari) <Rajamahendri in ancient times> where the first Telugu scholar Nannaya Bhattaraka first wrote the script and other important works is considered the standard dialect. Nannaya has given Telugu a character and the form of language.

Sounds

Vowels

అ ఆ ఇ ఈ ఉ ఊ ఋ ౠ ఌ ౡ ఎ ఏ ఐ ఒ ఓ ఔ అ౦ అః

Consonants

క ఖ గ ఘ ఙ
చ ఛ జ ఝ ఞ
ట ఠ డ ఢ ణ
త థ ద ధ న
ప ఫ బ భ మ
య ర ల వ శ ష స హ ళ ఱ

Phonology

Historical sound changes

Grammar

In Telugu, Karta(కర్త) (nominative case or the doer), Karma(కర్మ)(object of the verb) and Kriya(క్రియ) (action or the verb) follow a sequence. This is one of the several reasons why Linguists classify Telugu as a Dravidian Language--this pattern found in other Dravidian languages but not in Sanskrit. Telugu also has the Vibhakthi(విభక్తి) (or preposition) tradition.

Telugu - Ramudu bantini kottadu రాముడు బంతిని కొట్టాడు
Literally - రాముడు (Rama) బంతి (ball) కొట్టు(hit)
Reformatting it - Rama hit the ball

Telugu is often considered an agglutinative language, where certain syllables are added to the end of a noun in order to denote its case:

|- |Instrumental: || Ramunito |రామునితో |(తో; to) |- |Dative: || Ramuniki |రామునికి |(కి; ki) |- |Ablative: || Ramudininchi |రాముడినించి |(నించి; ninchi) |- |Genitive: || Ramuni |రాముని |(ని; ni) |} These agglutinations apply to all nouns generally in the singular and plural.

However, in the analysis above, many additional cases were missed. The cases below are found in few Indo-European languages but are common in Finno-Ugric languages.

Location

Case Usage English Example Telugu Example
Adessive case adjacent location near/at/by the house ఇంటిపక్క
Inessive case inside something inside the house ఇంట్లో
Locative case location at/on/in the house ఇంటిదగ్గర
Superessive case on the surface on (top of) the house ఇంటిపై

Motion

Case Usage English Example Telugu Example
Allative case movement to (the adjacency of) something to the house ఇంటివైపు
Delative case movement from the surface from (the top of) the house ఇంటిపైనుంచి
Egressive case marking the beginning of a movement or time beginning from the house ఇంటినుంచి (ఇంటికెల్లి in some dialects)
Elative case out of something out of the house ఇంటిలోనుంచి (ఇంట్లకెల్లి in some dialects)
Illative case movement into something into the house ఇంటిలోనికి (ఇంట్లోకి)
Prosecutive case across or along along the road రోడ్డుపోంటి
Sublative case movement onto the surface on(to) the house ఇంటిపైకి
Terminative case marking the end of a movement or time as far as the house ఇంటివరకు

Morphosyntactic alignment

Case Usage English Example Telugu Example
Oblique case all-round case; any situation except nominative concerning the house ఇంటిగురించి

Relation

Case Usage English Example Telugu Example
Benefactive case for, for the benefit of, intended for for the house ఇంటికోసం (ఇంటికొఱకు)
Causal case because, because of because of the house ఇంటివలన
Comitative case in company of something with the house ఇంటితో
Possessive case direct possession of something owned by the house ఇంటియొక్క

Inclusive/Exclusive Pronouns

Telugu exhibits one of the quirks of Dravidian languages: the bifurcation of the First Person Plural pronoun (we in English) into inclusive (మనము; manamu) and exclusive (మేము; memu) versions.

Vocabulary

Writing system

Main article: Telugu script

The Telugu (తెలుగు) script is believed to descend from the Brahmi script of the Ashokan era. Merchants took the Easern Chalukyan Script to Southeast Asia where it parented the scripts of Mon, Burmese, Thai, Khmer, C"am, Javanese and Balinese languages. Their similarities to Telugu script can be discerned even today. Its appearance is quite similar to the Kannada script, its closest cousin..

Telugu script is written from left to right and consists of sequences of simple and/or complex characters. The script is largely syllabic in nature - the basic units of writing are syllables. Since the number of possible syllables is very large, syllables are composed of more basic units such as vowels (“achchu” or “swar”) and consonants (“hallu” or “vyanjan”). Consonants in consonant clusters take shapes which are very different from the shapes they take elsewhere. Consonants are presumed to be pure consonants, that is, without any vowel sound in them. However, it is traditional to write and read consonants with an implied 'a' vowel sound. When consonants combine with other vowel signs, the vowel part is indicated orthographically using signs known as vowel “maatras”. The shapes of vowel “maatras” are also very different from the shapes of the corresponding vowels.

The overall pattern consists of 60 symbols, of which 16 are vowels, 3 vowel modifiers, and 41 consonants. Spaces are used between words as word separators.

The sentence ends with either a single (“purna virama”) or a double bar (“deergh virama”).

They also have a set of symbols for numerals, though Arabic numbers are typically used.

Telugu is assigned Unicode codepoints: 0C00-0C7F (3072-3199).

Examples

ఒకటి - one
రెండు - Two
మూడు - Three
అమ్మ - Mother
ఆవు - Cow
ఇల్లు - House
ఈగ - HouseFly

Literature in Telugu

Main article: Telugu literature

The Vijayanagara dynasty produced a very prolific set of poets during the reign of Sri Krishnadevaraya. Tenali Ramakrishna, Dhoorjati and Allasani Peddana were Krishnadevaraya's court poets.

Sri Pothuluri Veerabrahmendra Swami (like his western counterpart Nostradamus) composed "Kalagnanam", the records of the past, present, and future.

The famous Indian literary epic, the Mahabharatha, was translated into telugu over a period of a few centuries by Nannaya, Tikkana and Yerrapragada. Nannaya is also credited to have participated in formalizing Telugu grammar.

A number of famous luminaries in classical Indian music called "Carnatic Music" wrote their works in telugu. Tyagaraja, Annamacharya and Kshetrayya are among a large number of contributors. Modern composers like Mysore Vasudevachari also chose Telugu as their medium of composition.

See also

External links

br:Skritur telougouek ca:Telugu de:Telugu es:Idioma telugú fr:Télougou id:Bahasa Telugu ka:ტელუგუ (ენა) ms:Bahasa Telugu ja:テルグ語 nn:Telugu pl:Język telugu pt:Télugo simple:Telugu fi:Telugu sv:Telugu ta:தெலுங்கு te:తెలుగు zh:泰卢固语