
presented
by
Brenda
Macedo and Sally Giannini
Summer 2000
South
Asia is dominated by two language families, Indo-Iranian and Dravidian.The
Indo-Iranian branch of the Indo-European family extends through much of
India. Pakistan, and Bangladesh as well as Sri Lanka and the Himalayan
kingdom of Nepal.In India and Pakistan,
the Indic languages have come into contact with Dravidian languages from
which they have acquired features such as retroflex consonants and strict
verb-final order.The Dravidian languages
have also borrowed from Indic vocabulary. (Comrie)
Hindustani and Bengali are from the same Indo-Iranian family of languages.Hindustani was promoted by Gandhi as a unifying force in India during the British occupation. (Comrie)
The
British take-over in the 19th century added a third strand to
an already composite culture.Bengal
became the focus of European cultural influence in India, including literary
genres, such as the novel. (Comrie)
Modern
writing is almost entirely in calitbhasa, which is based upon Calcutta
colloquial.The distinction between
book language and spoken language persists.Wherever
philosophical or scientific terminology is required, there are limitless
Sanskrit reservoirs available.There
are numerous dialects within the Bengali language; many of them are quite
divergent.Until the 20th
century, Bengali was written in a heavily Sanskritized book language known
as sadhu-bhasa. (Campbell)
Sir
William “Oriental” Jones, who identified the Indo-European language family,
described Sanskrit as having a “wonderful structure, more perfect than
Greek, more copious than Latin and more exquisitely refined than either.”For
example, Latin had six cases.Sanskrit
has eight. (Comrie)
Sanskrit
means purified.Its
cultural significance is similar to Latin, in that it is also the language
used for religious purposes.Sanskrit
is typically written in the Devanagari script (script of the gods) and
contains the root deva. . . as in “divine”.Dating
from as early as 1500 BC, the Sanskrit texts represent crucial evidence
in the reconstruction of Indo-European.Among
the famous works of Sanskrit literature are the Vedas, the epic of the
Ramayana and Panini’s writings on grammar. (Comrie)
The
Bengali literature is also replete with folklore such as the Songs of Bauls,
or wandering minstrels, and the Yatras, the nocturnal celebrations of the
Hindu gods and goddesses. (Campbell)
PHONOLOGY
Vowels all occur nasalized.Difference in length is not phonemic.‘Vowel raising’ is a characteristic feature of Bengali.
Stress is on the first syllable in citation form and on the head word of a phrase in speech.For more information go to www.it.dtu.dk/~pfw/bengali/sounds.html .
The following table from Comrie shows the Bengali consonants according to the traditional ordering of characters.
The
oral vowels and consonants of the standard dialect of Bengali are shown
in Comrie’s table below:
MORPHOLOGY
Modern Bengali morphology is very productive for verbs, minimal for nounsand non-existent for adjectives. (Comrie)According to Comrie, “The most interesting area of Bengali morphology is the derivation of inflecting stems from verbal bases.”
Four
Bengali verbal bases are shown in Comrie’s chart below.
SYNTAX
SOV
(subject-object-verb) is the normal word order in Modern Bengali. (Campbell)For
example, in English one would say, “I speak Bengali” and in Bengali, “I
Bengali speak.”A preposition would
fit into the structure thus:SOPV.For
example, “I shop to go.”According
to Comrie, “Bengali has been characterized as a rigidly verb-final language,
wherein nominal modifiers precede their heads; verbal modifiers follow
verbal bases; the verbal complex is placed sentence-finally; and the subject
noun phrase occupies the initial position in a sentence.”
Campbell,
George L., Compendium of the World’s Languages, vol. 1, Routledge,
London/New York.
Comrie,
Bernard, ed., The World’s Major Languages, Oxford University, New
York, 1987.
The following might also be helpful for learning more about speaking Bengali.
Beames,
John, Grammar of the Bengali Language Literary and Colloquial, Oxford
at the Clarendon Press, 1894.
Dabbs,
Jack A., A Short Bengali-English/English-Bengali Dictionary, Texas
A & M University, 1971.
Hudson,
D. F., Teach Yourself Bengali, English Universities Press, London,
1965.
Klaiman, M. H., Volitionality and Subject in Bengali:A Study of Semantic Parameters in Grammatical Processes, Indiana University Linguistics Club, Bloomington, Indiana, 1981.
Web
sites:
www.virtualbangladesh.com/bd_search.html
This
is an all-inclusive site and a great starting point.It
will give you a tour of the country of Bangladesh as well as transliteration
information and actual translations (with sound) into Bengali.This
is a wonderful source as it includes links to books, recipes, government,
the arts, and much more about the people and language of Bangladesh.
www.cyberbangladesh.org/info.html
This site also is a good starting point as it leads to a variety of links to news profiles, literature, encyclopedias, songs, tourist information, fonts, etc.It also links to Bengali web pages (written in Bengali).
www.travlang.com/languages/cgi-bin/langchoice.cgi
Click on the Bengali flag and to learn travel language.
This is the site of the Summer Institute of Linguistics.You can order Ethnologue publications either in CD or on-line form that include research and detailed information.This site also sets forth links to specific elements of Linguistics.
You can click on a Bengali dictionary, which provides grammar and fonts.
www.ranainside.com/cgi-bin/first_login.cgi
Go first to this site to register and then proceed to www.ranainside.com/banglasongs to listen to Bangla songs.You need to proper plug-ins to hear the music, which can be downloaded from this site if needed.