The sankEti language
sankEti is distinct from tamizh and is now an independent language according to Dravidian linguists such as
Hampa Nagarajaiah. Many still call it a dialect of tamizh in keeping with tradition. It is to be noted that sankEti can hardly
be understood by native tamizh speakers.
This language clearly separated from Tamizh around the same time as malayALam did and is unique in that no
contact was retained with the country of origin. Thus the language grew independently. It has certaily been influenced by
and borrowed from kannaDa and Sanskrit but has some unique characteristics. It shares similarities with malayALam as well,
as the land from which the sankEtis migrated is on the Kerala-Tamilnadu border and they must have spoken a similar tongue
in the days gone. Some of the words used in sankEti are more similar to classical tamizh vocabulary. sankEti has also retained
the proto-Dravidian elements in some places.
Content
1 Phonology
2 Grammar
Number
Tense
3 Dialects |
Phonology
The language is highly developed and differentiated in terms of the number of sounds used. It uses all the
sounds in Sanskrit or kannaDa plus a few more. In particular, the inflection of the sound "a" can change the meaning significanly.
"à" can be called the interrogative as it seems to be a development of "e" and gives the meaning of interrogation when placed
initially while "a" gives an affirmative meaning.
e.g "àdu" will mean "which" while "adu" means "that". Likewise àttukku= why,to which? and attukku- because
of that, to that; àvuñ= which man, avuñ= that man etc.
This sound can of course occur in other places and cause differences in meaning. Another peculiar sound used
is the anunAsika/nasal intonation as in avuñ. This is like the sound in Spanish. The presence or absence of this sound at
the end of some words can be crucial in differentiating whether it refers to the masculine gender or a feminine/plural.
e.g colnAñ= he said, colnA= she said, they said.
Another unigue feature is the occurrence of the full sound "u" and the half rounded "ù". In tamizh "ù" occurs
as a rule at the end of words. There are only some exceptions. But in sankEti the 2 sounds are distinct and can cause a change
in meaning.
e.g aNNu= brother, aNNù= say, count.
There is also the rare occurrence of a flattend "Ā" as in the english word "bank".
e.g pĀru-grandson.
There is also a clear distinction between voiced and unvoiced consonants unlike in tamizh.
Grammar
sankEti has a rich vocabulary. As the community is very close-knit, there also kinship terms aplenty in the
sankEti language. There is much emphasis laid on differentiation of numbers(singular and plural) which is not seen either
in spoke kannaDa or tamizh. There is also a clear dfferentiation of the tenses and person(1st, 2nd or 3rd). There are 3 genders(masculine,
feminine and neuter) and a clear differentiation between the inclusive nad non-inclusive pronoun- nAnga,engaDE vs nAmba/nAma,
nammaDE/nambaDE.The case markers are also significantly different from tamizh. Nearly all words are vowel-ending and there
is a musical quality to the speech. Also most words ending in "a" in kannada including the proper names end in u"u" in SankEti.
As a rule words that end in "e" in kannada and "ai" in tamil end in "a" in sankEti. This is similar to malayALam and telugu.
Negation is indicated by suffixing the appropriate ending. They usually contain "al", "il" or "Ade" and rarely "Ame" and
"A" nAñ paNNinEñ- I did, nAñ paNNitillEñ- I did not do paNNallEñ- I will not do paNNAde (rarely paNNAme)- without doing
1st person- Eñ, paNNinEñ- I did, paNNitillEñ- I didn't do
2nd person- a, A- paNNinA- you did, paNNitilla- You didn't do
3rd person- paNNinAñ-he did, paNNinA-she/they did, paNNitilAņ- he didn't do, paNNitillA- she/theydidn't do.
Number
adu- that, avhiyA- those, avhA- they
adu paNNitu- it did, avhiyA paNNitina- those did, avhA paNNinA- they did
adu paNNitilla- it did not do, avhiyA paNNitillina- those did not do , avhA paNnaitillA- they did not do
adu paNNalla- it will not do, avhiyA paNNallina- those wont do,avhA paNNallA- they will not do
As for tense
past- paNNinEñ- I did
Past continuous- paNNANindEñ- I was doing
present continuous- paNNANñ rANi/rANEñ- I am doing
future- paNNaNi/ paNNaNEñ- I will do
future continuous- paNNAN iraNi/iraNEñ- I will be doing
Vibhakti or case endings( illustrated with avuñ and rAmu)[ tamil usage is indicated within
square brackets for comparison]{kannada usage given within flower brackets}
1st case- no ending, the prakRti itself will act in the 1st case- avuñ, rAmu [same] {same}
2nd case- a- avana. rAmana [ai-avanai, rAmanai], {an, annu, a-avanan, avanannu, avana, rAmanannu}
3rd case- aNNu- avanaNNu, rAmanaNNu [Al-avanAl, rAmanAl], {in, inda-avanin, avaninda, rAmaninda}
4th case- kù- avanukkù, rAmanukkù [ku-avanukku,rAmanukku], {ge-avanige, rAmanige}
5th case- àNNu,- avańaNNu, rAmańaNNu [in- avanin, rAmanin, avanaiviDa], {in,iginta-avanin, avanigin,
avaniginta, rAmaniginta}
6th case- dE,ndE,DE,tE- avandE, rAmandE [adu- avandu, rAmanadu also avanuDaiya]{a, A-avana,avanA, rAmana}
7th case- uL, paDe, al, [kaN, il, uL, mEl] {oL, alli, ali, oLu}
8th(sambOdhana)- by elongating the final vowel or prefixing with DE, dO, aDa, Eyi , Oyi etc
Dialects
The four subgroups speak distinct dialects which are mutually easily understood. Of the 4 dialects,
The Kaushika dialect stands furthest from tamizh.The language has no script of its own. Efforts are on to develop/improvise
one. There are some traditional songs in sankEti. Many have tried their hand at writing prose, poetry and songs in sankEti.
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