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Chakma language
Language of India and Bangladesh
Language of India and Bangladesh
| Field | Value |
|---|---|
| name | Chakma |
| nativename | 𑄌𑄋𑄴𑄟𑄳𑄦 𑄞𑄌𑄴 |
| pronunciation | |
| states | |
| region | *Bangladesh |
| ethnicity | Chakma, Daingnet |
| speakers | |
| date | 2011-2024 |
| ref | |
| familycolor | Indo-European |
| fam2 | Indo-Iranian |
| fam3 | Indo-Aryan |
| fam4 | Eastern |
| fam5 | Bengali–Assamese |
| script | |
| nation | India (CADC) |
| ietf | ccp |
| iso3 | ccp |
| glotto | chak1266 |
| glottorefname | Chakma |
| lingua | 59-AAC-? |
| map2 | Lang Status 60-DE.svg |
| mapcaption2 | |
| minority | |
| dia1 | Tanchangya |
| dia2 | Daingnet |
- Chittagong Hill Tracts
- India
- Northeast India
- Myanmar
- Rakhine State Chakma (; autonym: {{Script/Chakma|𑄌𑄋𑄴𑄟𑄳𑄦 𑄞𑄌𑄴}}) is an Eastern Indo-Aryan language in the branch of the Indo-Iranian languages in the Indo-European language family, whose speakers are known as the Chakma or the Daingnet people. It has nearly 1 million speakers, with 60% residing in the Chittagong Hill Tracts (CHT) in Bangladesh and 35% spread across Arunachal Pradesh, Assam, Mizoram and Tripura in India. The remaining 5% live in Myanmar. The language has it own script, the Chakma script or the ajhapat ({{Script/Chakma|𑄌𑄋𑄴𑄟𑄳𑄦 𑄃𑄧𑄏𑄛𑄖𑄴}}), which is an abugida similar other South-east Asian scripts. It is mutually intelligible with the Chittagonian language.
Similarities of the Chakma language with Sanskrit, Maghadi Prakrit and with Pali is visible referring it to be a classical language. This suggests that the Chakmas have been present in the Indian subcontinent since ancient times. Cultural exchanges with neighboring communities have led to the adoption of Indo-Aryan and Arakanese terms. Studies suggest that the language may have originally been a Tibeto-Burman language before transitioning into an Indic language. However, there are abundant of vocabularies used in the Chakma language that do belong neither to Indo-Aryan nor Tibeto-Burman linguistic group, likely originating from their ancestral language. Historically, a Mongoloid group that settled in the Himalayan foothills spoke a Tibetan-related language but gradually incorporated Aryan vocabulary.
Classification
Chakma is classified as an Eastern Indo-Aryan language within the Bengali-Gauda subgroup. According to Masica (1991), the Bengali-Gauda group includes Bengali, Noakhali, Chittagonian, Sylheti, Bishnupriya Manipuri, Hajong, Chakma, Tanchangya, Thar, and Rohingya. The language is mutually intelligible with Chittagonian. Studies indicate that the Chakma people originally spoke a Tibeto-Burman language belonging to the Jingpo-Luish branch before adopting their current Indo-Aryan language. This historical language shift was aimed at consolidating intertribal power. Evidence of this transition is preserved in the Chakma lexicon, which contains abundant vocabulary items that belong neither to Indo-Aryan nor Tibeto-Burman linguistic groups, likely originating from their ancestral language. Despite its Indo-Aryan classification, Chakma is notably tonal—a characteristic rare among Indo-Aryan languages, which are typically non-tonal. This tonal feature is believed to be a substrate influence from the earlier Tibeto-Burman language.
History
Origins and Early Development
The earliest form of the Chakma language appears to have been distinct from both Indo-Aryan and Tibeto-Burman languages. Evidence for this comes from a significant portion of the Chakma vocabulary, which does not closely resemble words in either linguistic group. This suggests that early Chakma may have belonged to an isolated or lesser-documented linguistic lineage before later influences shaped its development.
Historical migration patterns indicate that the Chakma people likely moved from Magadha (modern Bihar, India) to Arakan (Rakhine State, Myanmar) before settling in the Chittagong Hill Tracts. During this journey, their language encountered and absorbed elements from Pali and Sanskrit, particularly in religious and administrative contexts. At the same time, interactions with Burmese and Arakanese speakers introduced phonetic and structural adaptations, though the core vocabulary remained distinct.
Medieval Chakma
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The Chakma and Daingnet people now speak what may be considered divergent dialects of Magadhi Prakrit. However, this is due to language shift from a Tibeto-Burman language; that medieval language may have been related to Sak or Chairel (and therefore of the Brahmaputran branch).
Scholars discovered nearly century-old Chakma manuscripts bound in animal hide, preserved by the Chakma community. Displayed at a seminar in Pecharthal, Tripura, these texts cover history, culture, music, herbal medicine, and Buddhism. Written in Chakma script on handmade tree-bark paper, the ink was sourced from China via Myanmar. Over 3,000 such manuscripts exist, with some now conserved by Tripura University. This discovery highlights the rich literary heritage of the Chakma language.
Modern Chakma
It is officially recognized by the government of Tripura in India and also by the government of Bangladesh. In India, it is also spoken primarily in the Chakma Autonomous District Council (CADC) which consists of the Tuichawng constituency of Lawngtlai district in Mizoram and many places in Tripura.
Although there were no Chakma language radio or television stations as of 2011, the language has a presence in social media and on YouTube. The Hill Education Chakma Script website provides tutorials, videos, e-books, and Chakma language forums.{{Cite web| title = Languages: Online Activism To Save Chakma Language| work = Rising Voices| access-date = 2 September 2012
In 2012, the government of Tripura announced the implementation of Chakma language in Chakma Script (or Ajhā Pāṭh) in primary schools of Tripura. Imparting of education up to the elementary stage in the mother tongue is a national policy. To begin with, Chakma language subjects in its own scripts has been introduced in 87 primary schools in Chakma concentrated areas in Tripura."{{Cite web| last = Hueiyen News Service / Newmai News Network| title = Chakma script to be introduced in Tripura| work = E-Pao! Headlines | access-date = 2 September 2012| date = 31 August 2012| url = http://e-pao.net/GP.asp?src=20..010912.sep12
"In preparation for the January 2014 education season, the national curriculum and textbook board has already started printing books in six languages ... Chakma, Kokborok (Tripura community), Marma, Santal, Sadri (Orao community) and Achik."
Mor Thengari (My Bicycle) was Bangladesh's first Chakma-language movie. However, it was banned in Bangladesh due to its controversial plot.
Phonology
Vowels sounds
| Front | Central | Back | Close | Close-mid | Open-mid | Open |
|---|
Consonant sounds
| Labial | Dental | Alveolar | Post- | ||||||||||||||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| alveolar | Palatal | Velar | Glottal | Plosive | voiceless | voiced | breathy | Affricate | voiceless | voiced | Fricative | voiceless | voiced | Nasal | Trill/Tap | Approximant | |||
| () |
- can be heard as in intervocalic and word-final positions.
- can be heard as in word-initial and intervocalic positions.
- A sound is rare, and in some cases, is a free variant sound of .
Tones
Chakma is a tonal language, it has contrastive tones; differences in the pitch of the speaker's voice can distinguish words.
Writing system
Main article: Chakma script
The Chakma script is an abugida that belongs to the Brahmic family of scripts. Chakma evolved from the Burmese script, which was ultimately derived from Pallava.
Sample text
Article 1 of the Universal Declaration of Human Rights:
Educational institutions
The Chakma language is being taught in many government and private schools in India (Tripura, Mizoram, Arunachal Pradesh) and Bangladesh. The Chakma language was officially introduced in primary schools by the government of Tripura under The Directorate of Kokborok & Other Minority Languages in 2004 through Bengali script and since 2013 through Chakma script (also known as Ajhā Pāṭh). Presently, the Chakma language is being taught in 87 schools.
Notes
References
- Cāṅmā, Cirajyoti and Maṅgal Cāṅgmā. 1982. Cāṅmār āg pudhi (Chakma primer). Rāṅamāṭi:Cāṅmābhāṣā Prakāśanā Pariṣad.
- Khisa, Bhagadatta. 2001. Cāṅmā pattham pāt (Chakma primer.) Rāṅamāṭi: Tribal Cultural Institute(TCI).
- Singā. 2004. Phagadāṅ
References
- (2021). "Table A-1.4 Ethnic Population by Group and Sex". Bangladesh Bureau of Statistics.
- {{e28. ccp
- {{e28. ccp
- [[Chakma Autonomous District Council]]
- Chakma, Jyotirmoy. (April–July 2010). "Origin and Evolution of Chakma Language and Script". [[National Mission for Manuscripts]].
- "A Linguistic Description of Chakma Language". Institute of Language and Culture for Rural Development, Mahidol.
- (5 October 2023). "Chakma Language POS Tagging Dataset".
- Masica, Colin P.. (1991). "The Indo-Aryan Languages". Cambridge University Press.
- "Chakma language and alphabet".
- "Language & Scripts".
- (12 January 2022). "SOCIO-LINGUISTIC PROFILE OF CHAKMA: AN INDO-ARYAN LANGUAGE SPOKEN IN ARUNACHAL PRADESH".
- Bradley, David. (2002). "Medieval Tibeto-Burman Languages". Brill.
- [[Charles F. Voegelin. Voegelin, Charles Frederick]] & [[Florence M. Voegelin. Florence Marie Robinett Voegelin]]. 1977. Classification and Index of the World's Languages. New York: Elsevier. {{ISBN. 0-444-00155-7
- (29 August 2012). "Chakmas exhibit literary cache". The Telegraph.
- "Chakma Language, The Directorate of Kokborok & Other Minority Languages, Govt. of Tripura, India".
- Chowdhury, K. R.. (21 May 2013). "Native tongue offers ethnic children a good start". khabarsouthasia.com.
- (11 December 2015). "Bangladesh's Censor Board Blocks the Country's First Chakma-Language Film".
- Tanchangya, Shanta Rakshit. (December 2013). "A comparative study of vowels in Chakma and English". BRAC University, Dhaka, Bangladesh.
- Bhattacharyya, Sumana. (2004). "A Linguistic study of Chakma". University of Calcutta.
- Pal, Animesh K.. (1965). "Phonemes of a Dacca Dialect of Eastern Bengali and the Importance of Tone". Journal of the Asiatic Society.
- Masica, Colin P.. (1991). "The Indo-Aryan Languages". Cambridge University Press.
- "Hajong". The Ethnologue Report.
- "Language & Scripts – Chakma Autonomous District Council".
- (2010). "Genesis of Indigenous Chakma Buddhists and Their Pulverization Worldwide". Gyan Publishing House.
- (11 November 2013). "Mru: Hill People on the Border of Bangladesh". Birkhäuser.
- "Proposal for encoding the Chakma script in the UCS".
- "UDHR - First article, all languages".
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