Yahoo Web Search

Search results

  1. Aug 3, 2021 · Dravidian-group languages, despite being spoken mostly in southern India (e.g., Tamil, Telugu, Kannada, Malayalam), also have scattered representations in India’s North-Western (Brahui), North ...

  2. Gondi (Gōṇḍī), natively known as Koitur (Kōī, Kōītōr), is a South-Central Dravidian language, spoken by about three million Gondi people, chiefly in the Indian states of Madhya Pradesh, Maharashtra, Chhattisgarh, Andhra Pradesh, Telangana and by small minorities in neighbouring states. Although it is the language of the Gond people ...

  3. Dravidian languages - South India, Tamil, Telugu: As mentioned above, Dravidian and Indo-Aryan languages share many convergent features due to their long proximity to one another. The major features of Indo-Aryan phonology that are attributed to Dravidian influence are the voicing or weakening of the intervocalic stop consonants in Pali and Prakrits; the simplification of consonant clusters (e ...

  4. The Dravidian languages are spoken by over 200 million people in South Asia and in Diaspora communities around the world, and constitute the world's fifth largest language family. It consists of about 26 languages in total including Tamil, Malayalam, Kannada and Telugu, as well as over 20 non-literary languages.

  5. Apr 19, 2024 · This ancestral language, Proto-Dravidian, appears to have diversified into various regional languages that are still spoken today across southern India. Fig. 4 Maximum Likelihood (ML) tree showing the genetic relatedness between the Koraga and selected South Asian populations present in Dataset 3, using TreeMix v1.13.

  6. The languages are mainly spoken in South India, western Bangladesh, northern Sri Lanka and southern Pakistan. There are about 26 languages in this family. A total of about 215 million people speak the Dravidian languages. Dravidian languages probably used to be spoken over a larger area of the subcontinent. There are several ethnic groups in ...

  7. Dravidian languages - Phonology, Grammar, Scripts: The Dravidian languages belong to a single family—including the distant relative Brahui. Examples that are prefixed with asterisks have been reconstructed following the time-tested procedures of comparative linguistics. Proto-Dravidian reconstructions can be explained in terms of the systematic changes that have occurred in the different ...

  1. People also search for