World Languages, asked by aleixofernandes03, 4 months ago

important of water easily in konkani language​

Answers

Answered by Anonymous
5

Answer:

Explanation:

Konkani[note 4] (Kōṅkaṇī) is an Indo-Aryan language spoken by the Konkani people, primarily along the western coastal region (Konkan) of India. It is one of the 22 Scheduled languages mentioned in the 8th schedule of the Indian Constitution[11] and the official language of the Indian state of Goa. The first Konkani inscription is dated 1187 A.D.[12] It is a minority language in Karnataka, Maharashtra, Kerala,[13] Gujarat and Dadra and Nagar Haveli and Daman and Diu.

Konkani

कोंकणी / ಕೊಂಕಣಿ/ Konknni/ കോങ്കണീ/ کونکڼی

Konkani written in Devanagari script.png

"Konkani" in Devanagari script

Pronunciation

[kõkɳi] (in the language itself), [kõkɵɳi] (anglicised)

Native to

India

Region

Konkan (includes Goa and the coastal areas of Karnataka, Maharashtra and some parts of Kerala, Gujarat (Dang district) and Dadra and Nagar Haveli and Daman and Diu)[1][2]

Ethnicity

Konkani people

Native speakers

2.3 million (2011 census)[3]

Language family

Indo-European

Indo-Iranian

Indo-Aryan

Southern Zone

Marathi–Konkani

Konkani

Dialects

Dialect groups: Canara Konkani, Goan Konkani, Maharashtrian Konkani

Individual dialects: Malvani, Mangalorean, Chitpavani, Antruz, Bardeskari, Saxtti, Daldi, Pednekari, Koli and Aagri[4]

Writing system

Past:

Brahmi

Nāgarī

Goykanadi

Modi script

Present: Devanagari (official)[note 1]

Roman[note 2]

Kannada[note 3]

Malayalam[5]

Official status

Official language in

India

Goa[6]

Regulated by

Karnataka Konkani Sahitya Academy and the Government of Goa[7]

Language codes

ISO 639-2

kok

ISO 639-3

kok – inclusive code

Individual codes:

gom – Goan Konkani

knn – Maharashtrian Konkani

Glottolog

goan1235 Goan Konkani[8]

konk1267 Konkani[9]

Geographic Distribution of Native Konkani Speakers.png

Distribution of native Konkani speakers in India

Konkani is a member of the Southern Indo-Aryan language group. It retains elements of Vedic structures and shows similarities with both Western and Eastern Indo-Aryan languages.[14]

There are many fractured Konkani dialects spoken along and beyond the Konkan, from Damaon in the north to Cochin in the South, most of which are only partially mutually intelligible with one another due to a lack of linguistic contact and exchanges with the standard and principle forms of Konkani. Dialects such as Malvani, Chitpavani, East Indian Koli[disambiguation needed] and Aagri in coastal Maharashtra, are also threatened by language assimilation into the linguistic majority of non-Konkani States of India.

Answered by surenderkumar123
0

Answer:

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Explanation:

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