Multilingual

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L A N G U A G E

Tongue

Multilingual
B. Harikumar

ike myriads of other paradoxes, the spoken language of Kerala is also a bone of contention for many. The southern Keralites are harshly attacked by the Malabaris for their accent. The Malabaris are attacked for their use of slang and so on and so forth. Volumes have been written for establishing the supremacy of Valluvanadan, Onattukara or Thekkan dialects. Cinemas, comedy shows etc. all market this weakness of Malayali. But what is the truth? Apart form the dialectical variations of Malayalam, this tiny state with 32 million people is home to more than 40 distinctive languages! Many of them have their own script also. From the tribal language Allar to the internationally known Judeo-Malayalam, the Indianised Jewish language, the facts show that some of these languages are fast growing despite no organisational help, like Yerukula or Korava. These languages usually come under the language category Dravidian, the prominent ones being Tamil, Telugu, Kannada, Malayalam and Brahui. For the same reason, they will tend to have lexical similarity with this Dravidian group of languages. Ernakulam district stands first with nine tribal languages just above Kannur,

which has eight. Moreover, Ernakulam has a few foreign language collaborations also. The tribal languages in use in Ernakulam are Kadar, Kanikkaran, Malapandaram, Malaryan popularly known as Malayarayan, Malavedan, Muthuvan, Paliyan and Vishavan. Apart

from these, Kachchi, an Indo-Aryan language with Devanagari script close to Sindhi has natal speakers in Kochi. The main tribal languages spoken in Kannur are Kodagu meaning situated to the west, Koraga (Korava), Mudu Koraga, Paniya, Kurichiya, Mullu

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Kurumba, Muthuvas and Ravula. Of these the Kurichya language (ISO 6393 kfh), also spoken in Wayanad and Kozhicode districts, is endangered as speakers are shifting to Malayalam in Kerala and Kannada in Karnataka. Though known as tribal district, Wayanad has only five tribal languages, namely, Kurichiya, Betta Kurumba (Hill shepherds), Jennu Kurumba (Honey shepherds), Pariya and Ravula. Among these, Betta Kurumba, the natal tongue of 32,000 (2003 census), shows favourable attitude towards literacy and has grammar of its own. (ISO 639 3 xub) Another tribal district Idukki has seven languages namely, Malaryan, Malavedan, Mannan (no relation to the Mannan -washer man caste), Muthuvan, Paliyan, Urali and Yerukula. Malavedan a nomadic language, spoken in Ernakulam, Kottayam, Kollam and Thiruvananthapuram districts also, is replaced by Malayalam in Idukki. The neighbouring Kottayam speaks in Malankuravan, Malapandaran, Malaryan, Malavedan, Muthuvan, Paliyan and Vishavan languages. Whereas Alappuzha stands out with no such languages manageable to its tongue. The capital district has only three distinctive languages apart from Malayalam, namely Kanikkaran, Malankuravan and Malavedan. The same languages are shared by Kollam also. Pathanamthitta has just two Malankuravan and Malapandaram. Bellari, Kodagu, Konkani, Koraga (Korava), Mudu Koraga, Kudiya (Male Kudiya) and Tulu compose the language distinctions of this Northern most district Kasaragod. Among these languages, Konkani (ISO 639-3 gom), belonging to Indo-Aryan language group had script in earlier days and is presently used by upper class Hindus. This is also one of the official languages of India, which is spoken in Kenya and UAE also. The second smallest language spoken only by 236 people is Aranadan (ISO 639-3 aaf ). Popularly known as Eranadan, this language is mainly spoken by natives of Eranad Taluk in Malappuram. Other native languages in this district are Allar and Paniya. Irula (ISO 639 3 iru), also known as Korava, is mainly spoken in Palakkad,

though it is 67 per cent intelligible with Tamil. Allar, Aranadan, Kadar and Yerukula are other natal tongues of Palakkad. The Paniya language (ISO 639 3 pcg), one of the five natal tongues of Kozhikode, is used in the home and religious activities. Other languages are Aranadan, Kanikkaran, Kurichiya and Muthuvan with two dialects and 68 per cent lexical similarity with Malayalam. Kadar, Malaryan, Muthuvan and Vishavan comprise the language varieties of Thrissur. Vishavan (ISO 639-3: vis), also known as Malankudi or Malarkuti is supposed to be the smallest language in Kerala with just 150 native tongues in it that include groups on Chalakudi River near Ittyani. Ullatan (ISO 639-3 ull) - , also known as Ulladan, Katan, Kattalan, Kochuvelan etc. speakers are seen in almost all districts of Kerala. This Dravidian, unclassified language speakers prefer to be considered Malayalis rather than Ullatan. All Dravidian languages except Brahui have their share of users in Kerala. Major Indo-Aryan languages such as Hindi, Urdu, Marathi etc. also have place in this land in some pockets, especially in business centres, with people using them as natal tongue. Another surprising thing is that Kashmiri is also spoken as parent language by some vendors living in Kerala, to be specific, at Kovalam and surroundings. There is foreign collaboration in language also. Indo-Portuguese (ISO 639-3 idb), similar to Tamil in phonology and syntax and is popular in Sri Lanka, has its roots in Kerala. This is used in Vypeen Island and Kochi area.

Apart from the dialectical variations of Malayalam, this tiny state with 32 million people use more than 40 distinctive languages to speak! Many of them have their own script also.

Another is Judeo-Malayalam, the traditional language of the Cochin Jews (also called Malabar Jews. This language is spoken today by about 8,000 people in Israel and by probably fewer than 100 in India. Judeo-Malayalam is the only known Dravidian Jewish language. Unlike most Jewish languages, JudeoMalayalam is not written using the Hebrew alphabet. It does, however, like most Jewish languages, contain a large number of Hebrew loanwords, which are regularly transliterated, inasmuch as possible, using the Malayalam script. French is widely used in Mahe. Being a union territory, this need not be enlisted. Last but not the least, English, the lingua franca of the world, is also a parental language to many a Keralites, especially to Anglo-Indians. The second and third generations of non-resident Keralites living in English speaking countries also assume English as their mother tongue. All said, there are more than 6,900 languages spoken in the world today. But scholars group them together into a very short number less than twenty. Because languages are linked to each other by shared words or sounds or grammatical constructions. The theory is that the members of each linguistic group have descended from one language, a common ancestor. Believe it or not, the original language is judged by the experts to have been spoken in surprisingly a few thousand years ago. Thus the story of the tower of Babel seems more meaningful in this context. And the relentless tussle between south and north Malayalis over dialectical variation seems futile. Footnote: ISO 639-3 attached to each language is an international standard for language codes. The standard was published by ISO on fifth February 2007. The language codes defined in the several sections of ISO-639 are used for bibliographic purposes and, in computing and internet environments, as a key element of locale data. The codes also find use in various applications such as Wikipedia URLs for its different language editions.
Courtesy: Ethnologue: Languages of the World, Raymond G. Gordon, Jr., Editor,2005, Fifteenth edition. Dallas, Tex.: SIL International.

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