Gujarati language
Adapted from Wikipedia · Adventurer experience
Gujarati is an Indo-Aryan language from the Indian state of Gujarat. People called the Gujarati people mainly speak it. It began from an older form named Old Gujarati.
Today, Gujarati is one of the 22 important languages of India, called scheduled languages. It is the main language in Gujarat and also in Dadra and Nagar Haveli and Daman and Diu.
Gujarati is one of the fastest-growing languages in India, after Hindi and the Kashmiri language. Many people from Gujarat now live in other parts of India, like Mumbai, and in countries such as Pakistan, especially in Karachi. Because of this, Gujarati is spoken in many places around the world. It is common in the United States, especially in New Jersey and New York City, and in Canada. In Europe, it is widely spoken in the UK, especially in London. You can also hear Gujarati in Southeast Africa countries such as Kenya, Tanzania, Uganda, Zambia, and South Africa, as well as in places like Hong Kong, Singapore, Australia, Bahrain, and the United Arab Emirates. It is not to be confused with the Paraguayan Guarani language.
History
Gujarati is a modern language that belongs to a group called Indo-Aryan languages. It came from an older language called Sanskrit. Over time, it changed and split into different forms.
People often divide the history of Gujarati into three main periods:
- Old Gujarati (1200 CE–1500 CE): This was the early form of Gujarati, used by people in places like Gujarat and Rajasthan. It was used in writing as early as the 1100s.
- Middle Gujarati (1500–1800): During this time, Gujarati changed more, developing new sounds and grammar rules.
- Modern Gujarati (1800–present): This is the Gujarati we know today. It lost some sounds at the end of words and added new ways to show plural numbers.
These changes helped shape the Gujarati language into what it is now.
| Middle Indo-Aryan | Gujarati | English | Rule |
|---|---|---|---|
| hattha | hāth | hand | #NIA1 |
| aṭṭha | āṭh | eight | #NIA1 |
| akkhi | ā̃kh | eye | #NIA2 |
| jibbhā | jībh | tongue | #NIA3 |
| gaṇṭhi | gā̃ṭh | knot | #NIA4 |
| cittaāra | citāro | painter | #NIA-6a |
| *khava | kho- | lose | #NIA-6a |
| ghia | ghī | ghee | #NIA-6b |
| caükkiā | cɔk | courtyard, square | #NIA-6b-3 |
| phala | phaḷ | fruit | #SD-1c |
| kappūra | kapūr | camphor | #SD-2 |
Demographics and distribution
About 62 million people speak Gujarati. Most of them, around 60 million, live in India. Small groups live in countries like Tanzania, Kenya, and Pakistan. Some people in North America, especially near New York City and Toronto, also speak Gujarati. In the UK, more than 200,000 people speak Gujarati, many living near London.
Gujarati is one of the official languages of India. It is the main language in the state of Gujarat and is also recognized in other places like Rajasthan, Madhya Pradesh, Maharashtra, and Tamil Nadu.
Dialects
See also: Gujarati languages
Gujarati has many ways of speaking, called dialects. The main one is Standard Gujarati. People use it in news, schools, and government. It is also spoken in some parts of Maharashtra.
Another type is Saurashtra, spoken by people who moved from Gujarat to Southern India long ago. It is very similar to Gujarati.
There is also Amdawadi Gujarati, spoken mainly in Ahmedabad and nearby places. Kathiawari is spoken in the Kathiawar region.
Other types include Parsi, spoken by the Zoroastrian Parsi community, and Lisan ud-Dawat, spoken by Gujarati Muslim Bohra communities. Kutchi is sometimes called a Gujarati dialect but is closer to Sindhi.
Words from places far away, like East Africa, have also joined the language. The Linguistic Survey of India found many different dialects of Gujarati.
Phonology
Main article: Gujarati phonology
The Gujarati language has special sounds called vowels and consonants. These sounds help create words and sentences that are unique to Gujarati.
Writing system
Main articles: Gujarati alphabet and Gujarati braille
The Gujarati language uses a special way of writing called an abugida. This is similar to other writing systems like Nāgarī. It is a version of the Devanāgarī script but without the line on top and with some small changes in the letters. This script is used for both Gujarati and Kutchi languages.
The Gujarati alphabet, called Kakko, has around 47 to 48 letters. Some letters show sounds we make with our breath. For example, the sound "ka" is different from "kha" because we add a little extra breath to say "kha".
Vocabulary
Gujarati words come from three main groups. First, there are words that changed from old Sanskrit words over time. These are words most people use every day. Then there are words taken directly from Sanskrit, used in formal or religious situations. These words keep their Sanskrit style.
Gujarati also borrows words from other languages. Persian and Arabic words entered Gujarati when Muslim rulers, like those from the Delhi Sultanate and Mughal dynasty, controlled parts of India. English adds new words, especially after British colonial rule. Some English words replace older Gujarati words. Gujarati even has a few words from Portuguese, mostly used along the coast.
Some Gujarati words have made their way into English. For example, the word "bungalow" comes from the Gujarati bangalo, meaning a low, thatched house. The word "coolie" comes from Hindi quli, referring to hired laborers. The word "tank" for a pool or reservoir of water also has roots in Gujarati, from tankh.
Main article: Bungalow
Main article: Coolie
Main article: Tank
| Old Indo-Aryan | Gujarati | ||
|---|---|---|---|
| I | ahám | hũ | |
| falls, slips | khasati | khasvũ | to move |
| causes to move | arpáyati | āpvũ | to give |
| attains to, obtains | prāpnoti | pāmvũ | |
| tiger | vyāghrá | vāgh | |
| equal, alike, level | samá | samũ | right, sound |
| all | sárva | sau/sāv | |
| Tatsam | English | Gujarati |
|---|---|---|
| lekhak | writer | lakhnār |
| vijetā | winner | jītnār |
| vikǎsit | developed | vikǎselũ |
| jāgǎraṇ | awakening | jāgvānũ |
| Tatsam | Tadbhav | ||
|---|---|---|---|
| karma | Work—Dharmic religious concept of works or deeds whose divine consequences are experienced in this life or the next. | kām | work [without any religious connotations]. |
| kṣetra | Field—Abstract sense, such as a field of knowledge or activity; khāngī kṣetra → private sector. Physical sense, but of higher or special importance; raṇǎkṣetra → battlefield. | khetar | field [in agricultural sense]. |
| Persian | Indo-Aryan | English |
|---|---|---|
| marăd | martya | man, mortal |
| stān | sthān | place, land |
| ī | īya | (adjectival suffix) |
| band | bandh | closed, fastened |
| shamsheri | aarkshak | policeman |
| Gujarati | Source language |
|---|---|
| ચા, cā, 'tea' | 茶 |
| ટુવાલ, tuvāl | English: towel |
| મિસ્ત્રી, mistrī, 'carpenter' | Portuguese: mestre, 'master' |
| સાબુ, sābu, 'soap' | Portuguese: sabão |
| અનાનસ, anānas, 'pineapple' | Portuguese: ananás |
| પાદરી, pādrī, 'Catholic priest' | Portuguese: padre, 'father' |
Grammar
Main article: Gujarati grammar
Gujarati is a language where words are usually ordered as subject, then object, then verb. Adjectives come before nouns, and objects come before verbs. The language has postpositions, three genders, and two numbers. Verbs are made by adding endings to a root word to show different times and feelings.
Sample text
Gandhiji stayed in a small hut made from palm leaves under a mango tree from April 14 to May 4, 1930. This was after his famous walk to protest unfair salt laws. He used this place to help spread his message across the country and wrote a letter to the British leader about his plan to walk to another salt area.
The British arrested him late at night on May 4, 1930, right at this spot.
ગાંધીજીની ઝૂંપડી-કરાડી
જગ પ્રસિદ્ધ દાંડી કૂચ પછી ગાંધીજીએ અહીં આંબાના વૃક્ષ નીચે ખજૂરી નાં છટિયાંની એક ઝૂંપડીમાં તા.૧૪-૪-૧૯૩૦ થી તા.૪-૫-૧૯૩૦ સુધી નિવાસ કર્યો હતો. દાંડીમાં છઠ્ઠી એપ્રિલે શરૂ કરેલી નિમક કાનૂન (મીઠાના સત્યાગ્રહ) ભંગની લડભી તેમણે અહીંથી વેગ આપી દેશ વ્યાપી બનાવી હતી. અહીંથી જ તેમણે ધરાસણાના મીઠાના અગરો તરફ કૂચ કરવાનો પોતાનો સંકલ્પ બ્રિટિશ વાઈસરૉયને પત્ર લખીને જણાવ્યો હતો.
તા.૪ થી મે ૧૯૩૦ની રાતના બાર વાગ્યા પછી આ સ્થળેથી બ્રિટિશ સરકારે તેમની ધરપકડ કરી હતી.
gāndhījīnī jhūmpḍī-karāḍī
jag prasiddh dāṇḍī kūc pachī gāndhījīe ahī̃ āmbānā vrukṣ nīce khajūrī nā̃ chaṭiyānnī ek jhūmpḍīmā̃ tā.14-4-1930 thī tā.4-5-1930 sudhī nivās karyo hato. dāṇḍīmā̃ chaṭhṭhī eprile śarū karelī nimak kānūn (mīṭhānā satyāgraha) bhaṅgnī laḍatne temṇe ahīnthī veg āpī deś vyāpī banāvī hatī. ahīnthī ja temṇe dharāsṇānā mīṭhānā agro taraph kūc karvāno potāno saṅkalp briṭiś vāīsarôyane patra lakhīne jaṇāvyo hato.
tā.4thī me 1930nī rātnā bār vāgyā pachī ā sthaḷethī briṭiś sarkāre temnī dharapkaḍ karī hatī.
Transcription (IPA)—
[ɡɑndʱid͡ʒini d͡ʒʱũpɽi-kəɾɑɽi]
[d͡ʒəɡ pɾəsɪddʱ ɖɑɳɖi kut͡ʃ pət͡ʃʰi ɡɑndʱid͡ʒie ə̤ȷ̃ ɑmbɑnɑ ʋɾʊkʃ nit͡ʃe kʰəd͡�uɾnɑ̃ t͡ʃʰəʈijɑ̃ni ek d͡ʒʱũpɽimɑ̃ tɑ _________tʰi tɑ|| _______ sudʱi niʋɑs kəɾjoto|| ɖɑɳɖimɑ̃ t͡ʃʰəʈʰʈʰi epɾile ʃəɾu kəɾeli nimək kɑnun bʱəŋɡni ləɽətne tɛmɳe ə̤ȷ̃tʰi ʋeɡ ɑpi deʃ ʊjɑpi bənɑʋiti|| ə̤ȷ̃tʰid͡ʒ tɛmɳe dʱəɾɑsəɽ̃ɑnɑ miʈʰɑnɑ əɡəɾo təɾəf kut͡ʃ kəɾʋɑno potɑno səŋkəlp bɾiʈiʃ ʋɑjsəɾɔjne pətɾə ləkʰine d͡ʒəɽ̃ɑʋjoto]
[tɑ| __tʰi me ____ni ɾɑtnɑ bɑɾ ʋɑɡjɑ pət͡çʰi ɑ stʰəɭetʰi bɾiʈiʃ səɾkɑɾe tɛmni dʱəɾpəkəɽ kəɾiti]
Simple gloss—
gandhiji's hut-karadi
world famous dandi march after gandhiji here mango's tree under palm date's bark's one hut-in date.14-4-1930-from date.4-5-1930 until residence done was. dandi-in sixth April-at started done salt law break's fight (-to) he here-from speed gave country wide made was. here-from he dharasana's salt's mounds towards march doing's self's resolve British viceroy-to letter written-having notified was.
date.4-from May 1930's night's twelve struck after this place-at-from British government his arrest done was.
Transliteration and detailed gloss—
Gandhiji's hut-Karadi
After the world-famous Dandi March Gandhiji resided here in a date palm bark hut underneath a/the mango tree, from 14-4-1930 to 4-5-1930. From here he gave speed to and spread country-wide the anti-Salt Law struggle, started in Dandi on 6 April. From here, writing in a letter, he notified the British Viceroy of his resolve of marching towards the salt mounds of Dharasana.
The British government arrested him at this location, after twelve o'clock on the night of 4 May 1930.
Translation (provided at location)—
Gandhiji's hut-Karadi
Here under the mango tree in the hut made of palm leaves (khajoori) Gandhiji stayed from 14-4-1930 to 4-5-1930 after the world famous Dandi march. From here he gave impetus to the civil disobedience movement for breaking the salt act started on 6 April at Dandi and turned it into a nationwide movement. It was also from this place that he wrote a letter to the British viceroy expressing his firm resolve to march to the salt works at Dharasana.
This is the place from where he was arrested by the British government after midnight on 4 May 1930.
| gāndhījī-n-ī | jhū̃pṛ-ī-∅ | Karāṛī |
| gandhiji–GEN–FEM | hut–FEM–SG | karadi |
| jag | prasiddh | dāṇḍī | kūc | pachī | gāndhījī-e | ahī̃ | āmb-ā-∅-n-ā | vṛkṣ | nīce |
| world | famous | dandi | march | after | gandhiji–ERG | here | mango–MASC.OBL–SG–GEN–MASC.OBL | tree | under |
| khajūr-ī-∅-n-ā̃ | chaṭiy-ā̃-n-ī | ek | jhū̃pṛ-ī-∅-mā̃ | tā. | 14 4 1930thī | tā. | 4 5 1930 | sudhī |
| palmdate–FEM–SG–GEN–NEUT.OBL | bark–NEUT.PL.OBL–GEN–FEM.OBL | one | hut–FEM–SG–in | date | 14 4 1930–from | date | until |
| nivās | kar-y-o | ha-t-o | . | dāṇḍī-mā̃ | chaṭhṭhī | epril-e | śarū | kar-el-ī | nimak |
| residence.MASC.SG.OBJ.NOM | do–PERF–MASC.SG | be–PAST–MASC.SG | dandi–in | sixth | April–at | started | do–PAST.PTCP–FEM | salt |
| kānūn | bhaṅg-n-ī | laṛat-∅-ne | te-m-ṇe | ahī̃-thī | veg | āp-ī | deś | vyāpī |
| law | break–GEN–FEM.OBL | fight.FEM.OBJ–SG–ACC | 3.DIST–HONORIFIC–ERG | here–from | speed–OBJ | give–CONJUNCTIVE | country | wide |
| ban-āv-∅-ī | ha-t-ī | . | ahī̃-thī-j | te-m-ṇe | dharāsaṇā-n-ā |
| become–CAUS–PERF–FEM | be–PAST–FEM | here–from–INTENSIFIER | 3.DIST–HONORIFIC–ERG | dharasana–GEN–MASC.PL |
| mīṭh-ā-n-ā | agar-o | taraph | kūc | kar-v-ā-n-o | potā-n-o |
| salt–NEUT.SG.OBL–GEN–MASC.PL | mound.MASC–PL | towards | march.MASC.SG | do–INF–OBL–GEN–MASC.SG | REFL–GEN–MASC.SG |
| saṅkalp | briṭiś | vāīsarôy-∅-ne | patra | lakh-īne | jaṇ-āv-y-o | ha-t-o | . | tā. |
| resolve.MASC.SG.OBJ.ACC | British | viceroy.OBJ–SG–DAT | letter | write–CONJUNCTIVE | know–CAUS–PERF–MASC.SG | be–PAST–MASC.SG | date |
| 4-thī | me | 1930-n-ī | rāt-∅-n-ā | bār | vāg-y-ā | pachī | ā | sthaḷ-e-thī | briṭiś |
| 4-th | may | 1930–GEN–FEM.OBL | night.FEM–SG–GEN–MASC.OBL | twelve | strike–PERF–OBL | after | 3.PROX | place–at–from | British |
| sarkār-e | te-m-n-ī | dharpakaṛ | kar-∅-ī | ha-t-ī | . |
| government–ERG | 3.DIST–HONORIFIC–GEN–FEM | arrest.FEM.SG.OBJ.ACC | do–PERF–FEM | be–PAST–FEM |
Images
Related articles
This article is a child-friendly adaptation of the Wikipedia article on Gujarati language, available under CC BY-SA 4.0.
Images from Wikimedia Commons. Tap any image to view credits and license.
Safekipedia