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Majhi dialect


Majhi dialect


Majhi (Gurmukhi: ਮਾਝੀ, Shahmukhi: ماجھی, Punjabi: [mä˦d̆.d͡ʒi˨]), also known as Central Punjabi, is a dialect or variety of the Punjabi language, spoken in the Majha region of the Punjab, between Pakistan and India. The two most important cities in this area are Lahore and Amritsar because of their historic significance.

Standard varieties of Punjabi are based on Majhi, with influences from Western Punjabi in Pakistan and Eastern Punjabi in India.

Notable features

Verbs

Some Majhi sub-dialects use the past-tense inflection of ḍēhṇā ਡਹਿਣਾ / ڈہݨا verb to form continuous tenses.

- Alternate auxiliary verbs

han (ਹਨ / ہَن) is never used in spoken Majhi, it is replaced with (ਨੇ, ਨੇਂ / نے، نیں). E.g. ó kardē (ਉਹ ਕਰਦੇ ਨੇ / اوہ کردے نے)

First person singular ā̃ or (ਆਂ, ਜੇ / آں، جے) is used. E.g. mẽ karnā ʷā̃ / (ਮੈਂ ਕਰਨਾ ਆਂ, ਮੈਂ ਕਰਨਾ ਜੇ / میں کرنا آں، میں کرنا جے)

Third person singular ī or è (ਏ, ਵੇ, ਈ / اے، وے، ای) is used. E.g. ṓ kardā ī (ਉਹ ਕਰਦਾ / اوہ کردا ای)

- Use of -na verb ending instead of -da ending for future-habitual aspect

- Absent subject realised in auxiliary verb

ਕੀ ਕੀਤਾ ਈ کی کیتا ای : What have you (sing.) done?

ਕੀ ਕੀਤਾ ਜੇ کی کیتا جے : What have you (sing. formal / pl.) done?

ਕੀ ਕੀਤਾ ਸੂ کی کیتا سُو : What has he/she done?

ਕੀ ਕੀਤਾ ਨੇ کی کیتا نے : What have they done?

ਲੜਾਈ ਕੀਤੀ ਸਾਈ لڑائی کیتی ساای : You (sing.) made a fight.

ਲੜਾਈ ਕੀਤੀ ਸਾਜੇ لڑائی کیتی ساجے : You (sing. formal / pl.) made a fight

ਲੜਾਈ ਕੀਤੀ ਸਾਸੂ لڑائی کیتی ساسُو : He/She made a fight.

ਲੜਾਈ ਕੀਤੀ ਸਾਨੇ لڑائی کیتی سانے : They made a fight.

Tone

Unlike typical Punjabi, Majhi does not always write tonal h in script. Thus, syllables often drop the h letter (ਹ / ہ) when written although this does not affect the pronunciation.

Variation

Because of the lack of standardisation in Shahmukhi, words with the six tonal consonants (gh, jh, ḍh, dh, bh, ṛh) which are now unaspirated and voiceless word-initially[a] (k, c, ṭ, t, p) have multiple spellings. The word kàr (house) for example is sometimes written as ghar گھر or kar کر.

^a ṛh does not occur word-initially and is always voiced.

Falling-tone, in general, is not well represented, and low-tone words in both major scripts have various spellings, e.g. tuā̀ḍḍā (your/yours): تواڈا ਤੁਆਡਾ, ਤਵਾਡਾ, تاڈا ਤਾਡਾ, تہاڈا ਤੁਹਾਡਾ etc., though the pronunciation remains consistent.

Other Features

Nasalisation of tusī̃ (ਤੁਸੀਂ / تُسِیں) and asī̃ (ਅਸੀਂ / اَسِیں) are lost in Majhi; pronounced tusī (ਤੁਸੀ / تُسی) and asī (ਅਸੀ / اَسی) respectively.

Sometimes when speaking fast in Majhi, the s sound rounds to a h sound, as in words like asī (ਅਸੀ / اَسی), sāḍā (ਸਾਡਾ / ساڈا), pēse (ਪੈਸੇ / پیسے), being heard as ahī, hāḍā, and pēhe respectively.

hē(gā) sī is used instead of sīgā.

The ēvẽ class of adverbial pronouns are used for "how" rather than ēddā̃.

Northern Majhi

Northern Majhi refers to the subdialect spoken in the northern side of the Majha region in Pakistan, such as in the areas of Gujrat and Sialkot.

In these areas, word-initial 'h' is very faint, acting more as a low-tone marker, until it completely disappears in upper dialects like Dogri. Words such as hatth ਹੱਥ ہَتّھ (hand) are pronounced more like àtth.

Northern Majhi also uses the ēñj class of adverbial pronouns for "how" in place of ēvẽ.

Another notable difference is the use of -dā instead of -gā to indicate future tense.

Examples of Majhi

References

Notes


Text submitted to CC-BY-SA license. Source: Majhi dialect by Wikipedia (Historical)



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