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Contents

   



(Top)
 


1 Classification  





2 Distribution  





3 Tandrange  





4 Vocabulary  



4.1  Numerals  





4.2  Reconstruction of Proto-Dura  







5 See also  





6 References  





7 External links  














Dura language






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From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
 


Dura
Native toNepal
Ethnicity2,160 (2011 census)[1]
Extinctbetween 2008[2] and 2012[1]
with the death of Soma Devi Dura

Language family

Sino-Tibetan

Language codes
ISO 639-3drq

Linguist List

drq.html
Glottologdura1244

Dura is an extinct language of Nepal. It has been classified in the West Bodish branch of Tibetan languages, though more recent work separates it out as an independent branch of Sino-Tibetan.[3] Many of the Dura have switched to speaking Nepali, and the Dura language has sometimes been thought to be extinct. Some of the people who have switched to Nepali for their daily speech still use Dura for prayer.[4]

The Himalayan Languages Project is working on recording additional knowledge of Dura.[5] Around 1,500 words and 250 sentences in Dura have been recorded. The last known speaker of the language was the 82-year-old Soma Devi Dura.[2]

Classification[edit]

Schorer (2016:293)[6] classifies Dura as part of his newly proposed Greater Magaric branch.

Distribution[edit]

The ethnic Dura people mostly live in Lamjung District, with some in neighboring Tanahu DistrictofGandaki Province in central Nepal.[7] They mostly live on farms in the hilly countryside.[7] Different recent census counts have reported the number of Dura people anywhere from 3,397 to 5,676.[7]

Dura villages include:[6]

  • बाँग्रे Bāṅgre
  • बेसी बाँग्रे Besī Bāṅgre
  • बेसी फाँट Besī Phā̃ṫ
  • सिन्दुरे Sindure
  • धुसेनी Dhusenī
  • नस्के Naske (Dura majority)
  • नेटा Neṭā
  • चन्दि गाउँ Candigāũ
  • भाँगु Bhāṅgu
  • मालिङ Māliṅ
  • आरीकोसे Ārīkose
  • ठूलो स्वाँरा Ṭhūlo Svā̃rā (Dura majority)
  • खजे गाउँ Khaje Gāũ
  • तुर्लुङ Turluṅ (Dura majority)
  • तान्द्राङ्कोट Tāndrāṅkoṫ
  • Kunchha
  • Bhorletar
  • Other ethnic groups in the Dura region include the Gurung, Brahmins, Chetrīs, Kāmī, and Damāi.[6]

    Tandrange[edit]

    A closely related language variety called Tandrange (Nepali: Tāndrāṅe; IPA: tandraŋe) is spoken in a few Gurung villages.[6] Tandrange is spoken in the villages of Tāndrāṅ तान्द्राङ, Pokharī Thok पोखरी थोक, and Jītā जीता. However, Tandrange speakers adamantly consider themselves as not related to the stigmatized Dura people.[6]

    Vocabulary[edit]

    Schorer (2016:126-127) provides the following 125-word Swadesh list of Dura.

    No. Gloss Dura
    1. I (1SG) ŋi ~ ŋe
    2. you (2SG) no
    3. we (inclusive) ŋyāro
    4. this ī
    5. that huī
    6. Who? su
    7. What? hāde
    8. not ma-, ta- (prohibitive)
    9. all (of a number) dhāī
    10. many bhāī
    11. one kyau, nām, di-
    12. two jʰim, ŋe-
    13. big kātʰe
    14. long kānu, remo ~ hreŋo
    15. small ācʰirī
    16. woman (adult) misā
    17. man (adult) kalārā, bro
    18. person bro
    19. fish (n) ɖisyā, nāh ~ nāhõ ~ nāhũ ~ nāi
    20. bird; chicken o
    21. dog nākyu ~ nakyu ~ nakī, koka
    22. louse syā
    23. tree kepo ~ kemo
    24. seed (n) ʈisro, hulu
    25. leaf lyoī, lho
    26. root -
    27. bark (of tree) -
    28. skin ke
    29. flesh syo
    30. blood hāyu
    31. bone -
    32. grease, fat duccʰu
    33. egg odī, onī
    34. horn (of bull etc.) soglo, sono
    35. tail -
    36. feather phya
    37. hair (human) kra
    38. head padʰe
    39. ear naya, muni, rānu
    40. eye mi
    41. nose nu
    42. mouth māsi, sũ
    43. tooth sa ~ se
    44. tongue li
    45. nail se
    46. foot sepe
    47. knee -
    48. hand kuru
    49. belly kyu
    50. neck kʰalī, po ~ põ
    51. breasts nāmlo
    52. heart māu
    53. liver ciŋ
    54. to drink kiu-
    55. to eat co-
    56. to bite -
    57. to see do- ~ dõ-, mātā-
    58. to hear tās-, tāu-, tānu-
    59. to know syo-
    60. to sleep tānu-
    61. to die si-
    62. to kill sā-, kāne-, kāde
    63. to swim -
    64. to fly ŋyau, hāsu-
    65. to walk so-
    66. to come hro
    67. to lie -
    68. to sit huni-
    69. to stand decʰe-
    70. to give hyo-
    71. to say cʰi-
    72. sun mamī
    73. moon tālā
    74. star -so (in compound)
    75. water ti ~ ʈi
    76. rain (n) ti ~ ʈi
    77. stone thũ ~ tũ, kāno ~ kānu
    78. sand -
    79. earth, soil kācʰo, cʰuu
    80. cloud -
    81. smoke (n) ma-kʰu
    82. fire mi
    83. ash(es) ma-pʰu
    84. to burn (vi) bani-
    85. path lāutʰyo
    86. mountain lgẽwarapʰa [sic]
    87. red cʰāblī
    88. green -
    89. yellow kẽlo
    90. white bintʰā
    91. black keplo
    92. night yāku
    93. hot -
    94. cold cʰiũ
    95. full ʈʰyāmmay
    96. new kācʰā
    97. good cʰyāu- (v), cʰāblī (also ‘red’)
    98. round burluŋ
    99. dry -
    100. name rāmī
    101. he (3SG) hui
    102. he₂ (3SG) ŋo ~ no
    103. you (2PL) nāro(-nī)
    104. they (3PL) hyāro
    105. three sām
    106. four pim
    107. five kum (<‘hand’)
    108. where? kālā
    109. when? komo
    110. how? kudinī
    111. other agyu, rijā
    112. few ācitī
    113. fruit pokimuni
    114. flower ŋepʰu ~ nepʰu
    115. grass cʰĩ
    116. snake kāuī
    117. worm kʰātalī
    118. rope rasarī
    119. river kloi ~ klou
    120. to warm (vt) tāle-u
    121. old ʈe
    122. straight (not curved) hopay
    123. sharp mhyā- (v)
    124. wet tʰo- (v)
    125. happy kru- (v)

    Numerals[edit]

    Dura numerals are (Schorer 2016:146-147):

    Reconstruction of Proto-Dura[edit]

    Schorer (2016:286-287) reconstructs the following Proto-Dura words.

    See also[edit]

    References[edit]

    1. ^ a b DuraatEthnologue (18th ed., 2015) (subscription required)
  • ^ a b "The last of Nepal's Dura speakers". BBC News. January 15, 2008.
  • ^ Kraayenbrink et al., "Language and Genes of the Greater Himalayan Region", preprint, http://www.le.ac.uk/genetics/maj4/Himalayan_OMLLreport.pdf Archived 2022-10-12 at the Wayback Machine, retrieved September 12, 2007
  • ^ Van Driem, George. Languages of the Himalayas: An Ethnolinguistic Handbook of the Greater Himalayan Region, Brill Academic Publishers 2002 (ISBN 978-9004103900)
  • ^ Programme Description | Himalayan Languages Project Archived 2007-07-29 at the Wayback Machine
  • ^ a b c d e Schorer, Nicolas. 2016. The Dura Language: Grammar and Phylogeny. Leiden: Brill.
  • ^ a b c Nepal Federation of Indigenous Nationalities (NEFIN) - Dura Archived 2007-09-28 at the Wayback Machine
  • External links[edit]


    Retrieved from "https://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=Dura_language&oldid=1231720750"

    Categories: 
    Languages of Nepal
    Magaric languages
    Extinct languages of Asia
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    2010s disestablishments in Nepal
    Languages of Gandaki Province
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