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| Contents | ||
| Assamese (অসমীয়া) | |
|---|---|
| Spoken in: | India, Bangladesh, Bhutan |
| Region: | Asia |
| Total speakers: | N/A |
| Ranking: | See [1] |
| Genetic classification: | Indo-European Indo-Iranian |
| Official status | |
| Official language of: | Assam |
| Regulated by: | not regulated |
| Language codes | |
| ISO 639-1 | as |
| ISO 639-2(B) | asm |
| SIL | ASM |
Assamese (অসমীয়া) or Asamiya is the language spoken by the natives of the state of Assam in northeast India. It is also the official language of Assam. It is also spoken in parts of Arunachal Pradesh and other norteast Indian states. Small pockets of Assamese speakers can be found in Bhutan and Bangladesh. Immigrants from Assam have carried the language with them to other parts of the world. The eastern most of Indo-European languages, it is spoken by over 20 million people.
The language descends from classical Sanskrit via the eastern branch of PrakritPrakrit (Sanskrit prakrta "natural, usual, vulgar") refers to the broad family of the Indic languages and dialects spoken in ancient India. The Prakrits were vernaculars, often used for ordinary speech, and may be contrasted with Sanskrit, which continued. Assamese, along with Oriya and Bengali, is believed to have developed from Magahi apabhramsa . Written records relating to Assamese language can be traced to 6th/7th century AD when Kamarupa (the ancient name of Assam) was ruled by the Varman dynasty. Since then over the passage of the centuries it has been influenced by the languages and dialects of tribes that migrated from south eastern parts of Asia. Among these, primarily it was the Ahom tribe, that ruled Assam for over 600 years until 1824 AD. It is from the word Ahom that the Assamese or Axomiya language derives its name. Other big tribes like the Boro's and the Kachari's have also lended charm to the language.
The Assamese script derives its ancestry to Nagari, an earlier form of Devanagari script which is used in India's national language Hindi. The script is very similar to Bengali script with some minor differences. The spellings in Assamese are not necessarily phonetic. Hemkox, the first Assamese dictionary introduced spellings based on Sanskrit which are now the standard.
Assamese phonetics has two distinguishing features vis-a-vis the other Indic languages of the Indo-European family. The absence of the retroflex sound and the presence of the voiceless velar fricative. As an example of the second, some Assamese prefer Axomiya to Asomiya while writing the name of their language.
The history of the Assamese language may be broadly divided into three periods: