Kannada language
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Kannada (ಕನ್ನಡ) | |
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Spoken in: | Karnataka, India |
Region: | South Asia |
Total speakers: | 45 million |
Ranking: | 33 |
Genetic classification: | Dravidian |
Official status | |
Official language of: | Karnataka, India |
Regulated by: | Kannada Saahithya Parishath |
Language codes | |
ISO 639-1 | kn |
ISO 639-2 | kan |
SIL | KJV |
See also: Language – List of languages |
Kannada - aptly described as 'sirigannada' (known to few as Kanarese) is one of the oldest Dravidian languages and is spoken in its various dialects by roughly 45 million people. It is the state language of Karnataka, one of the four southern states in India.
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The language
The Kannada language has been spoken for about 2500 years, with the Kannada writing system being in use for about the last 1900 years. The initial development of the Kannada language is similar to that of other Dravidian languages, notably Tamil and Telugu. During later centuries, Kannada, along with Telugu, has been highly influenced by Sanskrit vocabulary and literary styles.
Kannada is a highly inflected language with three genders (masculine, feminine, neutral or common) and two numbers (singular, plural). It is inflected for gender, number and tense, among other things.
State_flag_of_karnataka_india.png
There is also a sharp distinction between the spoken and written forms of the language. Spoken Kannada tends to vary from region to region. The written form is more or less constant throughout Karnataka, however. The ethnologue identifies about 20 dialects of Kannada. Notable of them are Kodava (spoken in Coorg district), Kunda (spoken exclusively in Kundapura), Havyaka (spoken mainly by Havyaka Brahmanas of Dakshina Kannada, Uttara Kannada, Shimoga, Sagara, and Udupi districts), Are Bhashe (spoken mainly in Sullia region of Dakshina Kannada), Soliga Kannada, Badaga Kannada, Gulbarga Kannada, Hubli Kannada, etc.
Kannada_on_wikipedia.png
Geographic distribution
Kannada is mainly spoken in Karnataka in India, and to a lesser extent in the neighbouring states. There are significant Kannada speaking populations in the United States and the United Kingdom, and to a lesser extent in Canada.
There is also a large section of the coastal areas speaking a dialect called Tulu. It is perhaps one of the oldest dialects that exist in Karnataka.
The given flag is inverted, it is wrong, the correct one is first yellow and second is red
Official status
Kannada is one of the 22 official languages of India and is the state official language of the state of Karnataka.
Kannada script
Main article: Kannada alphabet
See the Kannada Aksharamaale (alphabets) here
The language has 52 letters and is phonemic. The character set is almost identical to that of other Indian languages. The script itself, derived from brahmi script, is fairly complicated like most other languages of India owing to the occurrence of various combinations of "half-letters", or symbols that attach to various letters in a manner similar to diacritical marks (such as aige, grave, and cédille marks) in Romance languages. The number of written symbols, however, is far more than the 52 characters in the alphabet, owing to the fact that different characters can be combined to form compound characters (ottaksharas). Each written symbol in the Kannada script corresponds with one syllable, as opposed to one phoneme in languages like English.
Transliteration
Several transliteration schemes are used to type Kannada characters using a standard keyboard. These include Baraha (based on ITRANS) and Nudi, the Government of Karnataka's standard for Kannada transliteration...
Few unique things about Kannada
Kannada has a few firsts. The first encyclopedia was written in Kannada. This was later translated to Sanskrit under name Shivatatvaratnakara.
See also
Translations of commonly used phrases
Following are translations of some commonly used phrases.
- kannada : Kannada
- hello: Namaskaara
- good-bye: Vandanegalu
- please: Dayavittu
- thank you: Dhanyavaada
- sorry: Kshamisi
- that one: Adu
- how much?: Eshtu
- yes: Houdu
- no: Illa
- I don't understand: Nanage Arthavaagalilla
- Where's the bathroom?: Shoucha Gruha ellide ? OR Bacchalu mane ellide ?
- generic toast (not used in formal conversations and to elders): (Hey): Lo
- English: Aangla
- Do you speak English?: Tamage Aangla Bhaashe Tilidideyo ?
- Welcome to Karnataka!: Karnatakakke suswaagatha!
External links
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- Ethnolouge report for Kannada (http://www.ethnologue.com/show_language.asp?code=KJV)
- Description of the Kannada language (http://brahmi.sourceforge.net/docs/KannadaComputing.html)
- Official Unicode chart for Kannada (PDF) (http://www.unicode.org/charts/PDF/U0C80.pdf)
- History of Kannada Language and Literature (http://www.kamat.com/kalranga/kar/literature/history1.htm)
- Learn Kannada (with audio) (http://www.cs.toronto.edu/~kulki/kannada/varna.html)
- Learn Kannada (http://www.bangalorebest.com/discoverbangalore/learnkanada/index.asp)
- Basic sentences in Kannada (http://www.udupipages.com/pages/kanada1.html)
- www.vicharamantapa.net, website for Rationalistic Literature (http://www.vicharamantapa.net)
- Romanized to Unicode Kannada transliterator (http://www.iit.edu/~laksvij/language/kannada.html)
de:Kannada fr:Kannara kn:ಕನ್ನಡ nl:Kannada nn:Kannada pl:Język kannadaTemplate:Kannada Language