Wiki Languages: Meitei language (ꯃꯤꯇꯩꯂꯣꯟ)
Language: Meitei (Meitei language) | Local name: ꯃꯤꯇꯩꯂꯣꯟ |
Language code: mni | Display language: English (en)|
Speak area: India | Classification: Sino-Tibetan |
Country: India | Second language: |
Usage: regional | Wiki language for Meitei language |
Dictionary for Meitei (ꯃꯤꯇꯩꯂꯣꯟ) in English
English | Meitei |
ꯃꯤꯇꯩꯂꯣꯟ | English |
Meitei | |
---|---|
Manipuri[a] (Meiteilon, Meetei, Meeteilon) | |
ꯃꯩꯇꯩꯂꯣꯟ • Meiteilon | |
Pronunciation | /mə́i.təi/[1] |
Native to | Manipur, India |
Region |
|
Ethnicity | Meitei people |
Native speakers | 1,800,000+[11] |
Language family | Sino-Tibetan
|
Early forms | Ancient Meitei
|
Dialects |
|
Writing system |
|
Official status | |
Official language in | India
|
Recognised minority language in | Bangladesh Myanmar |
Regulated by | Directorate of Language Planning and Implementation (DLPI), Government of Manipur |
Development body |
|
Language codes | |
ISO 639-2 |
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ISO 639-3 | Either:mni – Manipuriomp – Old Manipuri (Ancient Meitei) |
Linguist List | omp Old Manipuri (Ancient Meitei) |
Glottolog | mani1292 Manipuri |
Meitei language is predominantly spoken in Manipur, India. | |
Constitutionally recognised languages of India |
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Category |
Official Languages of the Indian Republic |
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Related |
Eighth Schedule to the Constitution of India Official Languages Commission Languages by number of native speakers |
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Meitei (/mə́i.təi/[14]), officially known as Manipuri (/mənɪˈpʊri/[15][16]), is a Tibeto-Burman language of the Sino-Tibetan family. It is the official language, the lingua franca and the most widely spoken language of the state of Manipur in northeastern India. It is one of the official languages of the Government of India. It is also spoken in the states of Assam and Tripura in Northeast India as well as in parts of Bangladesh and Burma (now Myanmar).[17][18] It was the court language of the Manipur Kingdom (Meeteileipak) and was used with honour before and during the Durbar (court) sessions before Manipur was merged into the Dominion of the Indian Republic, having its history of existence dating back to 1500-2000 years in accordance to most eminent linguists and scholars, including Padma Vibhushan awardee Indian scholar Suniti Kumar Chatterji.[19][20] In accordance to the "Manipur State Constitution Act 1947" of the once independent Manipur Kingdom, it was the court language of the kingdom (before merging into the Indian Republic).[21][22][23][24][25] Meitei was recognised by the National Sahitya Akademi, the highest Indian body of language and literature, as one of the major Indian languages in 1972 .[26][27]
Speakers of Meitei language are known as "Kathe" by the Burmese people, "Moglie" or "Mekhlee" by the people of Cachar, Assam (Kacharis and Assamese) and "Cassay" by the Shan people and the other people living in the east of the Ningthee River (or Khyendwen River). "Ponna" is the Burmese term used to refer to the Meiteis living inside Burma.[28]
Meitei is the most widely spoken Indian Sino-Tibetan language and the most spoken language in northeast India after Bengali and Assamese. In the 2011 census of India, there were 1.8 million native speakers of Meitei. Additionally, there are around 200,000 L2 speakers of Meitei. It is currently classified as a "vulnerable language" by UNESCO.[29]
Meiteilon is a tonal language whose exact classification within Sino-Tibetan remains unclear. It has lexical resemblances to Kuki and Tangkhul.[30]
Meitei language has been recognised (under the name Manipuri) by the Indian Union and was included in the list of scheduled languages (included in the 8th schedule by the 71st amendment of the constitution in 1992). It has been recognised as one of the most advanced languages of India by the National Sahitya Academy for its rich literary traditions. Besides being a medium of instructions in the educational institutions in Manipur, it is taught as a subject up to the post-graduate level (Ph.D.) in major universities of India, including Jawaharlal Nehru University, Delhi University, Gauhati University, University of North Bengal, etc.[31][32]
In modern era, several Meitei language movements were advocated and upheld by people for the development of Meitei language in diverse critical, discriminative and unfavorable circumstances and situations, including the linguistic purism movement, scheduled language movement, classical language movement, associate official language movement, among many others.
Name
The name Meitei or its alternate spelling Meithei is preferred by many native speakers of Meitei over Manipuri.[33] The term is derived from the Meitei word for the language Meitheirón (Meithei + -lon 'language').[33]Meithei may be a compound from mí 'man' + they 'separate'.[33] This term is used by most Western linguistic scholarship.[33] Meitei scholars use the term Mei(h)tei when writing in English and the term Meitheirón when writing in Meitei.[33] Chelliah (2015: 89) notes that the Meitei spelling has replaced the earlier Meithei spelling.[34]
The language (and people) is also referred to by the loconym Manipuri.[33] The term is derived from name of the state of Manipur.[33]Manipuri is the official name of the language for the Indian government and is used by government institutions and non-Meitei authors.[33] The term Manipuri is also used to refer to the different languages of Manipur and people.[33] Additionally, Manipuri, being a loconym, can refer to anything pertaining to Manipur state.
The term Meetei is used by Meitei speakers who want political autonomy from India, so-called "revivalists".[33]
Dialects
The Meitei language exhibits a degree of regional variation; however, in recent years the broadening of communication, as well as intermarriage, has caused the dialectal differences to become relatively insignificant. The only exceptions to this occurrence are the speech differences of the dialects found in Tripura, Bangladesh and Myanmar.[35] The exact number of dialects of Meitei is unknown.[36]
The three main dialects of Meitei are: Meitei proper, Loi and Pangal. Differences between these dialects are primarily characterised by the extensions of new sounds and tonal shifts. Meitei proper is considered to be the standard variety—and is viewed as more dynamic[clarification needed] than the other two dialects.[clarification needed] The brief table below compares some words in these three dialects:[37]
Standard Meitei | Loi | Pangal | English translation |
---|---|---|---|
chaaba | chaapa | chaaba | to eat |
kappa | kapma | kappa | to weep |
saabiba | saapipa | saabiba | to make |
thamba | thampa | thamba | to put |
chuppiba | chuppipa | chuppiba | to kiss |
Devi (2002)[38] compares the Imphal, Andro, Koutruk, and Kakching dialects of Meitei.
Legal status
Meitei is the sole official language of the Government of Manipur. It is used for all official purposes, except for some interstate cases. Meitei is included among the languages that stand apart of the Eighth Schedule to the Constitution of India, thus granting it the status of a "scheduled language".[39][40]
Meitei language is proposed to be granted the elite status of "Classical Languages of India".[41][42][43] Besides, it is also proposed to be recognised as an "associate official language" of the Government of Assam. According to Leishemba Sanajaoba, the present titular king of Manipur and a Member of Parliament, Rajya Sabha from Manipur state, by recognising Meitei as an associate official language of Assam, the identity, history, culture and tradition of Manipuris residing in Assam could be able to get protected and preserved.[44][45][46]
Syntax
Meitei language is an SOV language, though topics can be fronted.[citation needed]
Phonology
Tone
The Meitei language is a tonal language. There is a controversy over whether there are two or three tones.[47]
Segments
Meitei uses the following sounds:[48]
Consonants
Labial | Dental/Alveolar | Palatal | Velar | Glottal | |||
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Nasal | m | n | ŋ | ||||
Stop | voiceless | unaspirated | p | t | tʃ | k | ʔ |
aspirated | pʰ | tʰ | kʰ | ||||
voiced | unaspirated | b | d | dʒ | ɡ | ||
breathy-voiced | bʱ | dʱ | ɡʱ | ||||
Fricative | s | h | |||||
Flap | ɾ | ||||||
Lateral | l | ||||||
Approximant | w | j |
Vowels
Front | Central | Back | |
---|---|---|---|
High | i | u | |
Mid | e | ɐ | o |
Low | a |
Note: the central vowel /ɐ/ is transcribed as <ə> in recent linguistic work on Meitei. However, phonetically it is never [ə], but more usually [ɐ]. It is assimilated to a following approximant: /ɐw/ = /ow/, /ɐj/ = [ej].
Phonological processes
Velar deletion
A velar deletion is noted to occur on the suffix -lək when following a syllable ending with a /k/ phoneme.[47]
Grassman's law
Meitei has a dissimilatory process similar to Grassmann's law found in Ancient Greek and Sanskrit, though occurring on the second aspirate.[49] Here, an aspirated consonant is deaspirated if preceded by an aspirated consonant (including /h/, /s/) in the previous syllable. The deaspirated consonants are then voiced between sonorants.[citation needed]
/tʰin-/
pierce
+
/-kʰət/
upward
→
/tʰinɡət/
pierce upwards
/səŋ/
cow
+
/kʰom/
udder
→
/səŋɡom/
milk
/hi-/
trim
+
/-tʰok/
outward
→
/hidok/
trim outwards
Writing systems
Meitei script
Meitei has its own script, which was used until the 18th century. Its earliest use is not known. Pamheiba, the ruler of the Manipur Kingdom who introduced Hinduism, banned the use of the Meitei script and adopted the Bengali script. Now in schools and colleges, the Bengali script is gradually being replaced by the Meitei script. The local organisations have played a major role in spreading awareness about their own script.[citation needed]
Many Meitei documents were destroyed at the beginning of the 18th century during the reign of Hindu converted King Pamheiba, under the instigation of the Bengali Hindu missionary, Shantidas Gosai.[citation needed]
Between 1709 and the middle of the 20th century, the Meitei language was written using the Bengali script. During the 1940s and 1950s, Meitei scholars began campaigning to bring back the Old Meitei (Old Manipuri) alphabet. In 1976 at a writers conference, all the scholars finally agreed on a new version of the alphabet containing a number of additional letters to represent sounds not present in Meitei when the script was first developed. The current Meitei alphabet is a reconstruction of the ancient Meitei script.[citation needed]
Since the early 1980s, the Meitei alphabet has been taught in schools in Manipur[citation needed]
It is a syllabic alphabet in which consonants all have an inherent vowel /a/. Other vowels are written as independent letters or by using diacritical marks that are written above, below, before or after the consonant they belong to. Each letter is named after a part of the human body.[citation needed]
Latin script
There exists an informal, but fairly consistent practical spelling of Meitei in Latin script.[citation needed] This spelling is used in the transcription of personal names and place names, and it is extensively used on the internet (Facebook, blogspots, etc.). It is also found in academic publications, for the spelling of Meitei book titles and the like (examples can be seen in the References, below). This spelling, on the whole, offers a transparent, unambiguous representation of the Meitei sound system, although the tones are usually not marked. It is practical in the sense that it does not use extra-alphabetical symbols, and can, therefore, be produced easily on any standard keyboard. The only point of ambiguity is found in the spelling of the vowels /ɐ/ and /a/, which are usually both written "a", except when they occur before an approximant (see table below). The vowel /a/ is sometimes written as "aa" to distinguish it from /ɐ/.[citation needed]
IPA | Practical |
---|---|
/m/ | m |
/n/ | n |
/ŋ/ | ng |
/b/ | b |
/d/ | d |
/dʒ/ | j |
/ɡ/ | g |
/bʱ/ | bh |
/dʱ/ | dh |
/dʒʱ/ | jh |
/ɡʱ/ | gh |
/p/ | p |
/t/ | t |
/tʃ/ | c or ch |
/k/ | k |
/ʔ/ | ’ |
/pʰ/ | ph (rarely f) |
/tʰ/ | th |
/kʰ/ | kh |
/s/ | s or sh |
/h/ | h |
/ɾ/ | r |
/l/ | l |
/w/ | w |
/j/ | y |
/ɐ/ | a |
/ɐj/ | ei |
/ɐw/ | ou |
/a/ | a or aa or ā |
/aj/ | ai |
/aw/ | ao |
/e/ | e |
/i/ | i (rarely ee) |
/o/ | o |
/oj/ | oi |
/u/ | u (rarely oo) |
/uj/ | ui |
Bengali script
Meitei language in Bangladesh and India currently use the Bengali script, alongside the Meitei script.[11]
Grammar
Sentences in the Meitei language use the format Subject + Object + Verb (SOV). For example, in the sentence Ei chak chai (ꯑꯩ ꯆꯥꯛ ꯆꯥꯢ), which translates to I eat rice, the gloss is "ei" (I), "chak" (rice), "chai" (eat).
Number agreement
Agreement in nouns and pronouns is expressed to clarify singular and plural cases through the addition of the suffixes -khoi (for personal pronouns and human proper nouns) and -sing (for all other nouns). Verbs associated with the pluralised nouns are unaffected. Examples are demonstrated below:[50]
Noun (Meitei) | Noun (English) | Example (Meitei) | Example (English) |
---|---|---|---|
angaang | baby | angaang kappi | Baby cries. |
angaangsing | babies | angaangsing kappi | Babies cry. |
When adjectives are used to be more clear, Meitei utilises separate words and does not add a suffix to the noun. Examples are show in the chart below:[50]
Adjective (Meitei) | Adjective (English) | Example (Meitei) | Example (English) |
---|---|---|---|
ama | one | mi ama laak’i | A person comes. |
khara | some | mi khara laak’i | Some persons come. |
mayaam | many | mi mayaam laak’i | Many persons come. |
Compound verbs
Compound verbs are created by combining root verbs each ending with aspect markers. While the variety of suffixes is high, all compound verbs utilise one of two:[51]
Suffix | English translation |
---|---|
-thok | out/ come out |
-ning | To wish/ want/ desire |
Aspect markers appear as suffixes that clarify verb tense and appear at the end of the compound verb. Overall, the formula to construct a compound verb becomes [root verb] + [suffix] + [aspect marker]:[51]
Language | Root verb | Suffix | Aspect marker | Combined form |
---|---|---|---|---|
Meitei | tum | -thok | -le | tumthokle |
English | sleep | out/ come out | perfect aspect | has started sleeping |
Meitei | tum | -ning | -le | tumningle |
English | sleep | want | perfect aspect | has felt sleepy |
Compound verbs can also be formed utilising both compound suffixes as well, allowing utterances such as pithokningle meaning "want to give out".
Number words
Numeral | Word | Etymology | Meitei Script |
---|---|---|---|
1 | a-ma ~ a-maa | "1" | ꯑꯃꯥ |
2 | a-ni | Proto-Tibeto-Burman *ni | ꯑꯅꯤ |
3 | a-húm | PTB *sum | ꯑꯍꯨꯝ |
4 | ma-ri | PTB *li | ꯃꯔꯤ |
5 | ma-ngaa | PTB *ŋa | ꯃꯉꯥ |
6 | ta-ruk | PTB *luk | ꯇꯔꯨꯛ |
7 | ta-ret | PTB *let | ꯇꯔꯦꯠ |
8 | ni-paan | "2-less" | ꯅꯤꯄꯥꯟ |
9 | maa-pan | "1-less" | ꯃꯥꯄꯟ |
10 | ta-raa | "10" | ꯇꯔꯥ |
11 | taraa-maa-thoi | "ten + 1-more" | ꯇꯔꯥꯃꯥꯊꯣꯏ |
12 | taraa-ni-thoi | "ten + 2-more" | ꯇꯔꯥꯅꯤꯊꯣꯏ |
13 | taraa-húm-doi | "ten + 3-more" | ꯇꯔꯥꯍꯨꯝꯗꯣꯏ |
14 | taraa-mari | "ten +4" | ꯇꯔꯥꯃꯔꯤ |
15 | taraa-mangaa | "ten +5" | ꯇꯔꯥꯃꯉꯥ |
16 | taraa-taruk | "ten +6" | ꯇꯔꯥꯇꯔꯨꯛ |
17 | taraa-taret | "ten +7" | ꯇꯔꯥꯇꯔꯦꯠ |
18 | taraa-nipaan | "ten +8" | ꯇꯔꯥꯅꯤꯄꯥꯟ |
19 | taraa-maapan | "ten +9" | ꯇꯔꯥꯃꯥꯄꯟ |
20 | kun ~ kul | "score" | ꯀꯨꯟ ~ ꯀꯨꯜ |
30 | *kun-taraa > kun-thraa | "score ten" | ꯀꯨꯟꯊ꯭ꯔꯥ |
40 | ni-phú | "two score" | ꯅꯤꯐꯨ |
50 | yaang-khéi | "half hundred" | ꯌꯥꯡꯈꯩ |
60 | hum-phú | "three score" | ꯍꯨꯝꯐꯨ |
70 | hum-phú-taraa | "three score ten" | ꯍꯨꯝꯐꯨꯇꯔꯥ |
80 | mari-phú | "four score" | ꯃꯔꯤꯐꯨ |
90 | mari-phú-taraa | "four score ten" | ꯃꯔꯤꯐꯨꯇꯔꯥ |
100 | chaama | "one hundred" | ꯆꯥꯃ |
200 | cha-ni | "two hundreds" | ꯆꯥꯅꯤ |
300 | cha-hum | "three hundreds" | ꯆꯥꯍꯨꯝ |
400 | cha-mri | "four hundreds" | ꯆꯥꯃ꯭ꯔꯤ |
500 | cha-mangaa | "five hundreds" | ꯆꯥꯃꯉꯥ |
1,000 | lisíng ama | "one thousand" | ꯂꯤꯁꯤꯡ |
10,000 | lisīng-taraa | "ten thousands" | ꯂꯤꯁꯤꯡꯇꯔꯥ |
1,00,000 | licha | "one hundred-thousand" | ꯂꯤꯆꯥ |
10,00,000 | licha-taraa | "ten hundred-thousands" | ꯂꯤꯆꯥꯇꯔꯥ |
1,00,00,000 | leepun | "one ten-million" | ꯂꯤꯄꯨꯟ |
10,00,00,000 | leepun-taraa | "ten ten-millions" | ꯂꯤꯄꯨꯟꯇꯔꯥ |
1,00,00,00,000 | leepot | "one billion" | ꯂꯤꯄꯣꯠ |
10,00,00,00,000 | leepot-taraa | "ten billions" | ꯂꯤꯄꯣꯠꯇꯔꯥ |
1,00,00,00,00,000 | leekei | "one hundred-billion" | ꯂꯤꯀꯩ |
10,00,00,00,00,000 | leekei-taraa | "ten hundred-billions" | ꯂꯤꯀꯩꯇꯔꯥ |
1,00,00,00,00,00,000 | pu-ama | "one ten-trillion" | ꯄꯨ ꯑꯃꯥ |
Literature
Linguistic tradition
The culture involved with the Meitei language is rooted deeply with pride and tradition based on having respect to the community elders. Young children who do not know about the tales that have been passed on from generation to generation are very rare. Regarding the history behind the ancient use of proverbs that defines the way conversation is held with the Meitei language, it is a way of expressing and telling stories and even using modern slang with old proverbs to communicate between one another.[52]
The Meitei language had its own script. The history behind the Meitei language itself comes primarily from the ancient period of northeastern India.[53]
Literary Awards
Media
All the Meitei newspapers will be using the Meitei script instead of the Bengali script from 15 January 2023
, according to a joint meeting consensus of the "Meetei Erol Eyek Loinasillol Apunba Lup" (MEELAL), "All Manipur Working Journalists’ Union" (AMWJU) and "Editors' Guild Manipur" (EGM) in Imphal.[54][55][56][57][58]Language Day
The Meitei Language Day (Meitei Longi Numit; /mei-tei lon-gee noo-meet/), also known as the Manipuri Language Day (Manipuri Longi Numit; /ma-nee-poo-ree lon-gee noo-meet/), is observed on 20 August every year, in memory of the day on which the language was included in the Eighth Schedule to the Constitution of India and made one of the languages with official status in India on 20 August 1992.[59][60][61][62][63]
Software
In 2021, Rudali Huidrom, a Manipuri researcher of the EBMT/NLP laboratory, Waseda University, Japan, created a text corpus named "EM Corpus" (shortened form of "Emalon Manipuri Corpus"). It is the first comparable text to text corpus built for Meitei language (mni) and English language (eng) pair from sentences. The writing system used for Meitei language in this corpus is Bengali script. It was crawled and collected from thesangaiexpress.com - the news website of "The Sangai Express",[64] a daily newspaper of Manipur from August 2020 to 2021. In version 1, she created the monolingual data, having 1,034,715 Meitei language sentences and 846,796 English language sentences. In version 2, she created the monolingual data, having 1,880,035 Meitei language sentences and 1,450,053 English language sentences.[65][66]
EM-ALBERT is the first ALBERT model available for Meitei language. EM-FT is also FastText word embedding available for Meitei language. These resources were created by Rudali Huidrom and are now available at free of cost at the European Language Resources Association catalogue (ELRA catalogue) under CC-BY-NC-4.0 license.[65][66]
On 11 May 2022, Google Translate added Meitei-language (under the name "Meiteilon (Manipuri)") during its addition of 24 new languages to the translation tool. The writing system used for Meitei language in this tool is Meitei script.[67][68][69]
Sample text
The following is a sample text in Modern Meitei of the Article 1 of the Universal Declaration of Human Rights (by the United Nations)[70][c]:
ꯃꯤꯑꯣꯏꯕ ꯈꯨꯗꯤꯡꯃꯛ ꯄꯣꯛꯄ ꯃꯇꯝꯗ ꯅꯤꯡꯇꯝꯃꯤ, ꯑꯃꯗꯤ ꯏꯖꯖꯠ ꯑꯃꯁꯨꯡ ꯍꯛ ꯃꯥꯟꯅꯅ ꯂꯧꯖꯩ ꯫ ꯃꯈꯣꯏ ꯄꯨꯝꯅꯃꯛ ꯋꯥꯈꯜ ꯂꯧꯁꯤꯡ ꯁꯦꯡꯏ, ꯑꯐ ꯐꯠꯇ ꯈꯪꯏ, ꯑꯗꯨꯅ ꯑꯃꯅ ꯑꯃꯒ ꯂꯣꯏꯅꯕ ꯃꯇꯝꯗ ꯃꯆꯤꯟ ꯃꯅꯥꯎꯒꯨꯝꯅ ꯂꯣꯏꯅꯒꯗꯕꯅꯤ ꯫
— Modern Meitei in Meitei script
মিওইবা খুদিংমক পোকপা মতমদা নিংতম্মী, অমদি ইজ্জৎ অমসুং হক মান্ননা লৌজৈ । মখোই পুম্নমক ৱাখল লৌশিং শেঙই, অফ ফত্তা খঙই, অদুনা অমনা অমগা লোইনবদা মচীন মনাওগুম্না লোইনগদবনি ।
— Modern Meitei in Bengali script
Mioiba khudingmak pokpa matamda ningtammi amadi ijjat amasung hak mānnana leijei, makhoi pumnamak wākhal loushing shengi, apha phatta khangi, aduna amana amaga loinabada machin manāogumna loinagadabani.
— Modern Meitei in Roman transliteration, faithful to script
míːójbə kʰud̯íŋmək pókpə mət̯ə̀md̯ə níːŋt̯ə̀mmi, əməd̯i iːdʒət əməʃùng hə́k màːnənə lɐ̀jdʒɐ̀j. məkʰój púmnəmək wakʰə̀l lə̀wʃiŋ ʃèŋi, əpʱə̀ pʱə́ːt̯ə kʰə́ŋi, əd̯unə əmənə əməgə lòjnəbəd̯ə mət͡ʃìn mənáwgùmnə lójnəgəd̯əbəni'.
— Modern Meitei in IPA
All human beings are born free and equal in dignity and rights. They are all pure in mind, knowing right from wrong, and should be treated like brothers and sisters when they treat each other.
— Gloss, word-for-word
All human beings are born free and equal in dignity and rights. They are endowed with reason and conscience and should act towards one another in a spirit of brotherhood.
— Translation, grammatical
See also
- Languages of India
- List of languages by number of native speakers in India
- List of Manipuri poets
- Meitei inscriptions
- Meitei literature
- Meitei Language Day
- List of epics in Meitei language
- List of Sahitya Akademi Award winners for Meitei
- List of Sahitya Akademi Translation Prize winners for Meitei
- List of Yuva Puraskar winners for Meitei
- Vikaspedia
Footnotes
- ^"Manipuri" is the official name of "Meitei"
- ^The terms, "Meitei", "Meetei" and "Manipuri" are synonymous. While "Meitei" is more popular than "Meetei", "Meetei" is the officially mentioned synonym of the term "Manipuri".
- ^The Meitei-language translation of the passage of the Article 1 has two foreign words present, "ꯏꯖꯖꯠ" ("iːdʒət") and "ꯍꯛ" ("hə́k"), meaning "dignity" and "rights" respectively, as given in the source website. The original Meitei-language terms for "dignity" and "rights" are "ꯏꯀꯥꯏ ꯈꯨꯝꯅꯕ" ("í.kai kʰum.nə.bə") and "ꯐꯪꯐꯝ ꯊꯣꯛꯄ" ("pʰəŋ.pʰəm tʰok.pə") respectively.
References
- ^Sharma, H. Surmangol (2006). "Learners' Manipuri-English dictionary.Meitei". dsal.uchicago.edu. Retrieved 30 July 2022.
- ^"Languages Specified in the Eight Schedule (Scheduled Languages)"(PDF). census.gov.in.
Listed as Manipuri in the 2011 Indian census
- ^"C-16 Population By Mother Tongue - Manipur". census.gov.in.
- ^"C-16 Population By Mother Tongue - Assam". census.gov.in.
- ^"C-16 Population By Mother Tongue - Tripura". census.gov.in.
- ^"C-16 Population By Mother Tongue - Nagaland". census.gov.in.
- ^"C-16 Population By Mother Tongue - Meghalaya". census.gov.in.
- ^"C-16 Population By Mother Tongue - Arunachal Pradesh". census.gov.in.
- ^"C-16 Population By Mother Tongue - Mizoram". census.gov.in.
- ^Sunil, Oinam (14 July 2015). "Manipuris in Mandalay see ray of hope in Modi". The Times of India.
- ^ abcde"Meitei". Ethnologue. Retrieved 10 April 2020.
- ^"GAZETTE TITLE: The Manipur Official Language (Amendment) Act, 2021". manipurgovtpress.nic.in.
- ^"GAZETTE TITLE: The Manipur Official Language (Amendment) Act, 2021". manipurgovtpress.nic.in.
- ^Sharma, H. Surmangol (2006). "Learners' Manipuri-English dictionary.Meitei". dsal.uchicago.edu. Retrieved 30 July 2022.
- ^"At a Glance". Official website of Manipur.
- ^Abstract of speakers' strength of languages and mother tongues – 2000, Census of India, 2001
- ^"Manipuri language and alphabets". omniglot.com.
- ^"Manipuri language | Britannica". www.britannica.com.
- ^Sanajaoba, Naorem (1988). Manipur, Past and Present: The Heritage and Ordeals of a Civilization. Mittal Publications. p. 290. ISBN 978-81-7099-853-2.
- ^Mohanty, P. K. (2006). Encyclopaedia of Scheduled Tribes in India: In Five Volume. p. 149. ISBN 978-81-8205-052-5.
- ^Chishti, S. M. A. W. (2005). Political Development in Manipur, 1919-1949. p. 282. ISBN 978-81-7835-424-8.
- ^Sharma, Suresh K. (2006). Documents on North-East India: Manipur. Mittal Publications. p. 168. ISBN 978-81-8324-092-5.
- ^Tarapot, Phanjoubam (2003). Bleeding Manipur. Har-Anand Publications. p. 309. ISBN 978-81-241-0902-1.
- ^Sanajaoba, Naorem (1993). Manipur: Treatise & Documents. Mittal Publications. p. 369. ISBN 978-81-7099-399-5.
- ^Sanajaoba, Naorem (1993). Manipur: Treatise & Documents. Mittal Publications. p. 255. ISBN 978-81-7099-399-5.
- ^Hajarimayum Subadani Devi. "Loanwords in Manipuri and their impact"(PDF). sealang.net.
In 1972 the Sahitya Akademi, the highest body of language and literature of India recognized Manipuri (Manipuri Sahitya Parisad. 1986:82)
- ^"Dr Thokchom Ibohanbi - first Manipuri writer to get Akademi award : 24th feb22 ~ E-Pao! Headlines". e-pao.net. Retrieved 20 August 2022.
- ^Gangte, Priyadarshini M. "Evolution of Meetei state- Emergence of Nongda Lairen Pakhangba". The People's Chronicle. Archived from the original on 19 January 2021. Retrieved 21 March 2022.
- ^Moseley, C., ed. (2010). Atlas of the world's languages in danger (3rd ed). Paris: UNESCO Publishing.
- ^Burling, Robbins (2003). "The Tibeto-Burman Languages of Northeastern India". In Thurgood, Graham; LaPolla, Randy J. (eds.). The Sino-Tibetan Languages. Routledge. pp. 169–191. ISBN 0-7007-1129-5.
- ^Devi, S. (May 2013). "Is Manipuri an Endangered Language?"(PDF). Language in India. 13 (5): 520–533.
- ^Bareh, Hamlet (2001). Encyclopaedia of North-East India. Mittal Publications. p. 80. ISBN 978-81-7099-790-0.
- ^ abcdefghijChelliah (1997: 2)
- ^Chelliah (2015: 89)
- ^Thoudam, P. C. (2006). Demographic and Ethnographic Information: Problems in the analysis of Manipuri language. Central Institute of Indian Language.
- ^Haokip, P. (April 2011). "The Languages of Manipur: A Case Study of the Kuki-Chin Languages". Linguistics of the Tibeto-Burman Area. 34 (1): 86–118.
- ^Ningoma, M. S. (1996). Manipur Dialects. Sealang Projects.
- ^Devi, L. Manimala. 2002. A comparative study of Imphal, Andro, Koutruk and Kakching dialects of Meiteiron. (Doctoral dissertation, Canchipur: Manipur University; 273pp.)
- ^"Manipuri language and alphabets". omniglot.com.
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- ^"Government must take concrete step for recognition of Manipuri as classical language". Imphal Free Press.
- ^IANS (20 August 2016). "Classic language status for Manipuri demanded". Business Standard India.
- ^"Manipur Govt Begins Efforts for Inclusion of Manipuri Among 'Classical' Languages". India Today NE (in Hindi). 21 August 2019.
- ^"Manipuri as associate official language in Assam Sanajaoba approaches Sonowal". www.thesangaiexpress.com.
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- ^Laithangbam, Iboyaima (27 September 2020). "Assam to look into demand to include Manipuri in list of associate languages". The Hindu. ISSN 0971-751X.
- ^ abLaPolla, Randy J. (2000). "Book review: A grammar of Meitei, by S. L. Chelliah". Lingua. Elsevier. 110 (4): 299–304. doi:10.1016/s0024-3841(99)00037-6.
- ^Chelliah, S. L. (1997). Meitei Phonology. Mouton de Gruyter. pp. 17–21.
- ^Chelliah (1997)
- ^ abSingh, S. Indrakumar (November 2013). "Agreements in Manipuri"(PDF). Language in India. 13 (11): 216–231.
- ^ abDevi, M. Bidyarani (May 2014). "Compound Verbs in Manipuri"(PDF). Language in India. 14 (5): 66–70.
- ^Betholia, C. (August 2008). "Manipuri Culture Seen Through Proverbs". Indian Folklife (30): 4–5.
- ^Singh, T. D. (April 2014). "Phonological System of Medieval Manipuri"(PDF). Language in India. 14 (4): 56–68.
- ^"Meetei Mayek in newspapers". www.thesangaiexpress.com. Retrieved 3 August 2022.
- ^"Meetei Mayek in newspapers : 29th jan22 ~ E-Pao! Headlines". e-pao.net. Retrieved 3 August 2022.
- ^Time, Pratidin. "Meetei Mayek to Replace Bengali Script in Manipuri Newspapers from 2023". Pratidin Time. Retrieved 3 August 2022.
- ^HYNews. "All Bengali script Manipuri Dailies in Manipur to Print in Meitei Eyek (Script) from 15th January 2023". hynews.in. Retrieved 3 August 2022.
- ^"State dailies to cease Bengali script Manipuri papers from Jan, 2023 : 29th jan22 ~ E-Pao! Headlines". e-pao.net. Retrieved 3 August 2022.
- ^Singh, Dr Th Suresh (2 June 2014). The Endless Kabaw Valley: British Created Visious Cycle of Manipur, Burma and India. Quills Ink Publishing. p. 24. ISBN 978-93-84318-00-0.
- ^Singh, Dr Th Suresh (2 June 2014). The Endless Kabaw Valley: British Created Visious Cycle of Manipur, Burma and India. Quills Ink Publishing. p. 25. ISBN 978-93-84318-00-0.
- ^Coleman, Daniel; Glanville, Erin Goheen; Hasan, Wafaa; Kramer-Hamstra, Agnes (26 April 2012). Countering Displacements: The Creativity and Resilience of Indigenous and Refugee-ed Peoples. University of Alberta. p. 131. ISBN 978-0-88864-592-0.
- ^"30th Manipuri Language Day observed : 21st aug21 ~ E-Pao! Headlines". e-pao.net.
- ^"Manipuri Language Day observed in Manipur - Eastern Mirror". easternmirrornagaland.com. 20 August 2017.
- ^"The Sangai Express - Largest Circulated NewsPaper in Manipur". thesangaiexpress.com. Retrieved 12 August 2022.
- ^ ab"Machine translation of English-Manipuri made possible : 13th oct21 ~ E-Pao! Headlines". e-pao.net. Retrieved 11 August 2022.
- ^ ab"Ema-lon Manipuri Corpus (including word embedding and language model) – ELRA Catalogue". catalog.elra.info. Retrieved 11 August 2022.
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- ^"Google Translate adds support for Assamese, Mizo and Manipuri languages - Eastern Mirror". easternmirrornagaland.com. 11 May 2022. Retrieved 11 August 2022.
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Further reading
- 1. A Short History of Kangleipak (Manipur) Part-I, by Chingtamlen, 2005
- 2. A Short History of Kangleipak (Manipur) Part-II, by Chingtamlen, 2007
- 3. A Short History of Kangleipak (Manipur) Part-III, by Chingtamlen, 2008
- 4. The Meetei and the Bishnupriya, by Chingtamlen, 2008
Culture
- Brara, N. Vijaylakshmi. (1998). Politics, society, and cosmology in India's North East. Delphi: Oxford University Press.
- Budha, W. (1992). Indigenous games of the Meiteis. Manipur: Wangkeimayum Publications.
- Kshetrimayum, Otojit. (2014). Ritual, Politics and Power in North East India: Contexualising the Lai Haraoba of Manipur. Delhi: Ruby Press & Co.
- Singh, M. Kirti. (1988). Religion and culture of Manipur. Delhi: Manas Publications.
- Singh, M. Kirti. (1993). Folk culture of Manipur. Delhi: Manas Publications.
- Singh, Saikhom Gopal. (2014). The Meeteis of Manipur: A Study in Human Geography. Delhi: Ruby Press & Co.
Language
- Bhat, D. N. S.; & Ningomba, S. (1997). Manipuri grammar. Munich: Lincom Europa.
- Chelliah, Shobhana L. (1990). Experiencer subjects in Manipuri. In V. M. Manindra & K. P. Mohanan (Eds.), Experiencer subjects in South Asian languages (pp. 195–211). Stanford: The Center for the Study of Language and Information.
- Chelliah, Shobhana L. (1992). Tone in Manipuri. In K. L. Adams & T. J. Hudak (Eds.), Papers from the first annual meeting of the Southeast Asian Linguistics Society 1991 (pp. 65–85). Tempe, AZ: Arizona State University.
- Chelliah, Shobhana L. (1992). Bracketing paradoxes in Manipuri. In M. Aronoff (Ed.), Morphology now (pp. 33–47). Albany: State University of New York Press.
- Chelliah, Shobhana L. (1994). Morphological change and fast speech phenomena in the Manipuri verb. In K. L. Adams & T. J. Hudak (Eds.), Papers from the second annual meeting of the Southeast Asian Linguistics Society 1992 (pp. 121–134). Tempe, AZ: Arizona State University.
- Chelliah, Shobhana L. (1997). A grammar of Meitei. Berlin: Mouton de Gruyter. ISBN 0-19-564331-3.
- Chelliah, Shobhana L. (2002). Early Meitei manuscripts. In C. I. Beckwith (Ed.), Medieval Tibeto-Burman languages: PIATS 2000: Tibetan studies: Proceedings of the ninth seminar of the International Association of Tibetan Studies, Leiden 2000 (pp. 59–71). Leiden, Netherlands: Brill.
- Chelliah, Shobhana L. (2002). A glossary of 39 basic words in archaic and modern Meitei. In C. I. Beckwith (Ed.), Medieval Tibeto-Burman languages: PIATS 2000: Tibetan studies: Proceedings of the ninth seminar of the International Association of Tibetan Studies, Leiden 2000 (pp. 189–190). Leiden, Netherlands: Brill.
- Chelliah, Shobhana L. (2004). "Polysemy through metonymy: The case of Meitei pi 'grandmother'". Studies in Language. 28 (2): 363–386. doi:10.1075/sl.28.2.04che.
- Chelliah, Shobhana L. (2015). "Is Manipur a linguistic area?". Journal of South Asian Languages and Linguistics. 2 (1): 87–109. doi:10.1515/jsall-2015-0004. S2CID 130962163.
- Singh, Ningthoukhongjam Khelchandra. (1964). Manipuri to Manipuri & English dictionary.
External links
- "Meetei Mayek". tabish.freeshell.org. Retrieved 21 August 2022.
- "Manipuri/Meiteilon/Meithei:". tabish.freeshell.org. Retrieved 21 August 2022.
- "Manipuri language and alphabets". omniglot.com. Retrieved 21 August 2022.
- "Learn to speak Manipuri". tabish.freeshell.org. Retrieved 21 August 2022.
- "Learn Manipuri". www.e-pao.net. Retrieved 21 August 2022.
- "Meetei Mayek keys". www.e-pao.net. Retrieved 21 August 2022.
- "Meetei Mayek Poems". www.e-pao.net. Retrieved 21 August 2022.