NIHALI LANGUAGE


'Nihali' is a language isolate of India. It is spoken by some 2,000 people (1991) in the Buldana District of Maharashtra. Speakers are bilingual in Korku, Hindi or Marathi, and the language shows strong lexical convergence with Korku and Dravidian (60% to 70% of vocabulary items). Nihali is assumed to be the last surviving member of a language family formerly spoken more widely and marginalized by a prehistoric expansion of the Munda and Dravidian families.
Nihali was formerly conflated with, but is not to be confused with the Indo-Aryan Nahali language.
Kuiper (1962) conjectured that it is unrelated to any other Indian language but, even if that is so, its vocabulary has over the millennia been heavily influenced, in turn by Munda, Dravidian and Indo-Aryan.
Nihali is possibly related to another near-extinct remnant of the Indian linguistic substratum, namely Kusunda, spoken in central Nepal. Some scholars, including Michael Witzel of Harvard suggest, quoting Shafer and Kuiper, a possible relationship to Ainu.

Contents
References
See also

References



★ Gordon, Raymond G., Jr. (ed.), ''Ethnologue: Languages of the World'', Fifteenth edition 2005 (online version).

★ Kuiper, F. B. J. (1962) "Nahali: A Comparative Study". Noord-Hollandshe. Amsterdam.

See also



Burushaski language

This article provided by Wikipedia. To edit the contents of this article, click here for original source.

psst.. try this: add to faves