Sri Lankan Tamil dialects

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The Sri Lankan Tamil dialects or Ceylon Tamil dialects form a group of Tamil dialects used in the modern country of Sri Lanka by Sri Lankan Tamils that is distinct from the dialects of modern Tamil Tamil Nadu and Kerala states of India.

Tamil dialects are differentiated by the phonological changes and sound shifts in their evolution from classical or old Tamil (300 BC - 700 CE). It is broadly categorized into three sub groups; the Jaffna Tamil, the Batticaloa Tamil and the Negombo Tamil dialects. These dialects are also used by ethnic groups other than Tamils such as Sri Lankan Moors, Veddhas and Sinhalese who consider them to be distinct.

Contents

[edit] Characteristics

Percentage of Sri Lankan Tamils  per district based on 2001 or 1981 (cursive) census.
Percentage of Sri Lankan Tamils per district based on 2001 or 1981 (cursive) census.

As Tamil is a diglossic language the differences between the standard written languages across the globe is minimal but the spoken varieties differ considerably. The spoken varieties in Sri Lanka although different from those of Tamil Nadu share some common features between the southern dialects of Tamil Nadu and the northern Sri Lankan Tamil dialect, the language of Jaffna. Sri Lankan Tamil dialects retain many words and grammatical forms that are not in everyday use in India,[1] and use many other words slightly differently.[2] The Sri Lankan Tamil dialects are less influenced by Sanskrit and the western languages, although there are western and Sanskrit loan words in day to day usage.In general Sri lankan Tamil dialects are considered to be more conservative than the continental Tamil dialects.[3]

[edit] Negombo Tamil

The Negombo Tamil dialect used in Negombo area by bilingual fishers who otherwise identify them as Sinhalese has undergone considerable morphosyntactic convergence with spoken or colloquial Sinhala, as a consequence of contact with it.[4][5]It has has also developed a number of other grammatical traits under the probable influence of Sinhala, including a postposed indefinite article, an indefinitizing postclitic –sari (apparently modeled on Sinhala –hari), and case assignments for defective verbs that follow the Sinhala, rather than Tamil, patterns of agreement.[4]


[edit] Batticaloa Tamil

Batticalao Tamil dialect is shared between Tamils, Moors, Veddhas and Portuguese Burghers in the eastern province. The Tamil dialect used by residents of the Trincomalee district has many similarities with the Jaffna Tamil dialect.[6]According to Kamil Zvelebil a linguist, the Batticaloa Tamil dialect is the most literary like of all spoken dialects of Tamil, and it has preserved several very antique features, and has remained more true to the literary norm than any other form of Tamil while developing a few striking innovations. Although Batticaloa Tamil has some very specific features of vocabulary, it is classified with other Sri Lankan Tamil dialects as it is related to them by characteristic traits of its phonology. It also maintains some words that are unique to present day Malayalam a Dravidian language from Kerala that is considered to have begun as a dialect of old Tamil.[7][2]

[edit] Jaffna Tamil

The dialect used in Jaffna is the oldest and most archaic and is claimed to be closest to old Tamil. It is considered to preserve many antique features of old Tamil that predates Tolkappiyam, the grammatical treatise of Tamil. According to F B J Kuiper an Indologist, the Jaffna dialect with voiceless plosives preserves an antique feature of the language because the Jaffna Tamils, long isolated and noted as having retained many archaic Tamil customs long since lost by their continental kindred employ a form of ordinary speech closely approaching the classical Tamil.[6] The Jaffna Tamil dialect is not mutually intelligible with Indian Tamil dialects, though both share a diglossic `H' variety in literary Tamil.[8] It is frequently mistaken for Malayalam by native Indian Tamil speakers.[9] There are number of Prakrit loans words that are unique to the Jaffna Tamil.[10] A sub dialect retained by traditional drummers of Karainagar still retains a number of proto-Dravidian and a few Prakrit words, not found in any other dialects of Tamil. These drummers had historically played an important role as ritual players of drums at funerals and folk temples and as heralds and traditional weavers. They also maintained the family records of their feudal lords and even practiced medicine and astrology in folk traditions [11]

[edit] See also

[edit] References

  1. ^ Thomas Lehmann, "Old Tamil" in Sanford Steever (ed.), The Dravidian Languages Routledge, 1998 at p. 75; E. Annamalai and S. Steever, "Modern Tamil" in ibid. at pp. 100-128.
  2. ^ a b Kamil Zvelebil, "Some features of Ceylon Tamil" Indo-Iranian Journal 9:2 (June 1996) pp. 113-138.
  3. ^ Indrapala, K The Evolution of an ethnic identity: The Tamils of Sri Lanka, p.46
  4. ^ a b Contact-Induced Morphosyntactic Realignment in Negombo Fishermen’s Tamil By Bonta Stevens, South Asian Language Analysis Roundtable XXIII (October 12, 2003) The University of Texas at Austin
  5. ^ Negombo fishermen's Tamil: A case of contact-induced language change from Sri Lanka by Bonta Stevens , Cornell University
  6. ^ a b Kuiper, L.B.J (March 1964). "Note on Old Tamil and Jaffna Tamil". Indo-Iranian Journal 6 (1): 52-64. Springer Netherlands. 
  7. ^ Subramaniam, Folk traditionas and Songs..., p.9-10
  8. ^ Schiffman, Harold (1996-10-30). Language Shift in the Tamil Communities of Malaysia and Singapore: the Paradox of Egalitarian Language Policy. (html). University of Pennsylvania. Retrieved on 2008-04-04.
  9. ^ Indrapala, K The Evolution of an ethnic identity: The Tamils of Sri Lanka, p.45
  10. ^ Indrapala, K The Evolution of an ethnic identity: The Tamils of Sri Lanka, p.389
  11. ^ Ragupathy, Tamil Social Formation in Sri Lanka: A Historical Outline, p.1

[edit] External links