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Sora language

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Sora
Savara
𑃐𑃚𑃝, ସଉରା
'Sora' in Sorang Sompeng
RegionIndia
EthnicitySora
Native speakers
409,549, 61% of ethnic population (2011 census)[1]
Austroasiatic
  • Munda
    • South
      • Sora-Gorum
        • Sora
Sora Sompeng, Odia, Latin, Telugu
Language codes
ISO 639-3srb
Glottologsora1254
ELPSora

Sora is a south Munda language of the Austroasiatic language of the Sora people, an ethnic group of eastern India, mainly in the states of Odisha and Andhra Pradesh. Sora contains very little formal literature but has an abundance of folk tales and traditions. Most of the knowledge passed down from generation to generation is transmitted orally. Like many languages in eastern India, Sora is listed as 'vulnerable to extinction' by UNESCO.[2] Sora speakers are concentrated in Odisha and Andhra Pradesh. The language is endangered according to the International Mother Language Institute (IMLI).[3]

Distribution

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Speakers are concentrated mainly in Ganjam District, Gajapati District (including the central Gumma Hills region (Gumma Block),[4] and Rayagada District, and are also found in adjacent areas such as Koraput and Phulbani districts; other communities exist in northern Andhra Pradesh (Vizianagaram District, Parvatipuram Manyam District and Srikakulam District).

History

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The Sora language has faced a wavelike pattern of usage—that is, the number of people who speak Sora climbed steadily for decades before crashing down. In fact, the number of people who spoke Sora went from 157 thousand in 1901 to 166 thousand in 1911.[5] In 1921, this number marginally rose to 168 thousand and kept climbing.[5] In 1931, speaker numbers jumped to 194 thousand but in 1951, a period of exponential growth occurred, with speaker numbers jumping to 256 thousand.[5] in 1961, numbers topped at 265 thousand speakers before crashing down in 1971 when speaker numbers dropped back down to 221 thousand.[5]

Culture

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Sora is spoken by the Sora people, who are a part of the Adivasi, or tribal people, in India, making Sora an Adivasi language.[6] Sora is found in close proximity to Odia and Telugu speaking peoples so that many Sora people are bilingual.[6] Sora had little literature except for a few songs and folk tales which are usually transmitted orally.[6]

Phonology

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On a similar note, our understanding of Sora phonology is limited at best but there are some generalizations that can be made. Most syllables are of the Consonant, Vowel, Consonant form and morphemes usually contain one to three syllables.[7] There are 18 identifiable consonants and they fall into most of the established origins of sound. Five consonants originate from the palate while only one consonant originates from the glottis. An interesting facet of Sora consonants is that they contain an inherent ɘ vowel.[8] Although vowels may be pronounced differently, there exist only six vowels in Sora. There are no diacritics and aspiration varies depending on the speaker.[8] It is likely that the influence of English, Odia, and Telugu has also affected vowel pronunciation over the course of Sora's use.[9] Pronunciations also change in prevocalic (occurring before a vowel) and non prevocalic environments.[8]

Consonants

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  Bilabial Dental Retroflex Palatal Velar Glottal
Stop voiceless p t c k ʔ
voiced b d ɟ ɡ
Fricative   s      
Nasal m n ɲ ŋ  
Flap   r ɽ      
Approximant   l j    

Vowels

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Front Central Back
Close i ɨ u
Near-close ʊ
Mid e ə o
Open a

Morphophonology

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Sora consonants and vowels can undergoing an process of sound alternation at prosodic level based on stress-shifts and morphosyntactic conditioned during which the consonants and vowels assimilate to match with the sound of preceding or following stem, or the final nasal with the initial obstruent of the following word. By doing this, some suffixes will merge with its verb phonotactically and a word can have several allomorphs depending on morphological structure of initials and codas produced during a casual or rapid speech.[10]

Grammar

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Overview

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Sora is polysynthetic and noun-incorporating.[11] A single Sora word can convey the meaning of a whole sentence. However, while researchers consider Sora sentence-words to be single individual words, native Sora speakers perceive them as phrases and break them into sequences of iambic words with a rising contour.

For example, ǝdmǝltijdariŋdae:

ǝd

NEG

-mǝl

-DES

-tij

-give

-dar

-rice

-iŋ

-1.UND

-da

-AUX:TAM

-e

-3.ACT

ǝd -mǝl -tij -dar -iŋ -da -e

NEG -DES -give -rice -1.UND -AUX:TAM -3.ACT

'he does not want to give me rice'

The grammatically correct form in Sora however requires a subject:

anin

he

ǝd

NEG

-mǝl

-DES

-tij

-give

-dar

-rice

-iŋ

-1.UND

-da

-AUX:TAM

-e

-3.ACT

anin ǝd -mǝl -tij -dar -iŋ -da -e

he NEG -DES -give -rice -1.UND -AUX:TAM -3.ACT

'he does not want to give me rice'

A full sentence in Sora:

Ňen ǝdmǝljomjɛlyɔajtenay.

Ňen

1SG

ǝd

NEG

-mǝl

-want

-jom

-eat

-jɛl

-meat

-yɔ

-fish

-aj

-all

-t

-NPST

-en

-INTR

-ay

-SS

Ňen ǝd -mǝl -jom -jɛl -yɔ -aj -t -en -ay

1SG NEG -want -eat -meat -fish -all -NPST -INTR -SS

'I don't want to eat all the fish.'

Sora uses grammatical devices, including subject and object agreement, word order, and noun compounding to show case. It is seen as a predominantly nominative-accusative language and once again differs from most other languages with its lack of a passive structure.[12] However, just because Sora lacks a passive case does not mean other established forms of grammatical case are also missing. Rather, Sora has some complex grammatical cases.[12] A few examples are as follows:[12]

In addition, Sora, like many other Munda languages, uses relator nouns to link nouns with the other parts of the sentence in order to provide a more specific meaning, called compounding.[9] These monosyllabic nouns that enhance meaning are called Semantic relator nouns and are used widely in Sora.[12] Sora also has a combining form for every noun in addition to the full form of the noun.[13] The combining form allows the noun to be attached to a verb root to create a more semantically complex word, similar to compounding in other languages.[13] Sora contains prefixes, infixes, and suffixes to form its affixation but only uses its suffixes to change the possession of nouns.[9] The combining form is the form seen when the noun is being used with a verb or another full formed noun.[13] The full form is the form seen when the noun is standing alone or functioning not in tandem with other parts of speech.[13] Some templates of Sora combinations between nouns and verbs are as follows:[13]

Verb + Combined Form

Verb + Combined Form + Combined Form

Full Form + Combined Form

Full Form + Combined Form + Combined Form

An example of a Full Form noun shortened into the Combined Form is as follows: mənra, the Full Form of man, transform into the combined form word --mər . The two—indicate that a Noun (Full or Combined) or Verb has to precede the Combined Form noun; that is the Combined Form Noun can not stand on its own.[13] Although by no means conclusive, a few general guidelines about the Combined Form is that it depends on where the combination with the verb or other noun is to take place.[13] If the combined form is to an infix, then its resulting form will be different from if it were to be combined as a prefix. Some examples of Full Form Nouns and their Combined Forms are as follows:[13]

Full Form Combined Form English Translation

ədɘ'ŋ --dɘ'ŋ honeycomb

ərɘ'ŋ --rɘ'ŋ sour

bɘ'nra'j --bɘn flour

ba'ra' --bal gun barrel

kəṛíŋ—diŋ drum

Nominal morphology

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Number

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Plural in nouns and verbs is marked by enclitic/suffix -ji positions just right behind noun-suffix -ɘn. Animate nouns generally can attach (not obligatorily) the plural suffix, but inanimate nouns may often not.[14]

ətɛŋ

many

kəndʊd-ən-ji

frog-NMZ-PL

ətɛŋ kəndʊd-ən-ji

many frog-NMZ-PL

'many frogs'

si-leŋ

hand-1PL

si-leŋ

hand-1PL

'our hand(s)'

The plural suffix is not attached after countable numerals and finite numbers but it may trigger plural-verb agreement. Numerals can form compounds with nouns; in those cases, they are nominalized and become plural marking by themselves.[15]

bagu-mər-an-ji

two-person-NMZ-PL

bagu-mər-an-ji

two-person-NMZ-PL

'two people'

Pronouns

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singular plural
1st person nen anlen
2nd person amən ambeŋ
3rd person anɪn anɪnji

Third person pronouns can be used as definite markers in noun phrases.[16] A reflexive pronoun can be formed with the reflexive enclitic =dəm. For example, anɪnji + =dəm → anɪnji=dəm 'themselves'.

Demonstratives

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Demonstratives in Sora listed by Starosta (1967).[17]

Proximal Distal
'this/that' kəni/kun -ənt/kun
'like this/that' ɛʔne ɛʔte
'like this way/that way' ɛʔnegɔj ɛʔtegɔj
‘this/that little’ dəkiyne dəkiyte
‘this/that big’ dəkəʔne dəkəʔte
‘here/there’ teʔne teʔte
‘around here’ arɛʔne -
‘at that time’ - səlɛʔte

Case

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Case marking in Sora is generally murky. A number of grammatical constructions that may or may not be expressed morphologically into an animate primary object argument of the verb, eg. the oblique-dative marker -dɔ[ʔɔ]ŋ- can be seen in standalone morpheme as adɔŋ.[18]

anɪnji-a-sîː

3PL-POSS:3-hand

anɪnji-a-sîː

3PL-POSS:3-hand

'their hand(s)'

Gender & Class

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Grammatical gender or class is not deeply encoded in Sora morphosyntax. To signal something masculine/feminine, Sora speakers utilize indigenous compound endings =mar (male, person) and =boj (female) while also use, albeit rarely, gender suffixes borrowed from Indo-Aryan like -a and -i.[19]

Adjectives

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Many Sora adjectives are nominal compounds, i.e. phrase-words, and pre-nominal with modificational function.

Adpositions

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Adverbs

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Adverbs are uninflected.[20] Some Sora adverbs are: tiki 'after', tikki 'afterwards', mailen 'together', 'so', əntɚpsɛlɛ 'therefore', biɲdɔ 'but', bɔibɔi 'very', annɚŋ 'during', nam 'now', aŋaːnʼaŋaːn 'sometimes', moyed 'previous', moyedʼmoyed 'recently', etc.

Verbal morphology

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Sora verbal morphology makes use of prefixes, infixes, and suffixes per grammatical categories. In typical Munda synthetic structure, the verb phrase in Sora is subject-object-verb SOV. However, Sora has developed an elaborate and productive noun incorporation system which appears to have originated from an earlier offshoot of proto-Munda. Its noun incorporation clearly distinguishes free form and incorporated forms of lexical nouns. In polysynthetic morphosyntax, Sora verb phrases display a strict head-first SVO template like those typically seen in non-Munda Austroasiatic languages. The most intriguing aspect of Sora syntactic noun incorporation is agent incorporation, describes that the language allows transitive verb to incorporate (absorb) its agent with the verb stems remaining transitive and object indexing stays active even after being incorporated.[21]

sa:-bud-t-am

mangle-bear-NPST-2.OBJ

sa:-bud-t-am

mangle-bear-NPST-2.OBJ

'Bear will mangle you'

Syntax

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In Sora, the basic clausal constituent order is SOV.

anlen

1PL

aman

2SG

daʔa-n

water-NMZ

aʔ-tiy-t-am

1PL.SUBJ-give-NPST-1>2SG.OBJ

anlen aman daʔa-n aʔ-tiy-t-am

1PL 2SG water-NMZ 1PL.SUBJ-give-NPST-1>2SG.OBJ

'We give you water'

Vocabulary

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Compared to other Munda languages such as Kharia whose vocabulary is reported as having 40 percent of words borrowed from Indo-Aryan, Sora has very few, if not negligible, number of foreign loan words. Sora also has zero foreign phonemes. (Donegan & Stampe, 2002) Sora borrows words from surrounding languages like Telugu and Oriya.[13] An example of a word borrowed from Oriya is kɘ'ra'ñja' which is a tree name.[13] From Telugu mu'nu', which means black gram, is borrowed.[13] Moreover, within the Munda family itself most words appear to be mutually intelligible owing to minor differences in pronunciations and phonology. Kharia and Korku, two other Munda languages, share mutually intelligible words with Sora.[12] For example, the number 11 in Kharia is ghol moŋ, in Korku it is gel ḑo miya, and in Sora it is gelmuy.[12] Each 11 in each language looks and sounds remarkably similar to the other 11's. This phenomenon is not just contained in numbers but rather a great deal of vocabulary is mutually intelligible among the Munda languages. Within the Austroasiatic language family more knowledge about Sora vocabulary can be found. The Mon-Khmer language family which encompasses the languages primarily spoken in Southeast Asia has lexical cognates with the Munda family.[9] That means that some words found in Sora are of direct proto-Austroasiatic origin and share similarities with other derived Austroasiatic language families.[9] Words that relate to the body, family, home, field, as well as pronouns, demonstratives, and numerals are the ones with the most cognates.[9]

Numerals

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The Sora numeral system uses a base 12, which only a few other languages in the world do. Ekari, for example, uses a base 60 system.[22] For example, 39 in Sora arithmetic would be thought of as (1 * 20) + 12 + 7. Here are the first 12 numerals in the Sora language :[22]

English: one two three four five six seven eight nine ten eleven twelve

Sora: aboy bago yagi unji monloy tudru gulji thamji tinji gelji gelmuy migel

Similar to how English uses the suffix from the numeral ten after twelve (such as thirteen, fourteen, etc.), Sora also uses a suffix assignment to numerals after 12 and before 20. Thirteen in Sora is expressed as migelboy (12+1), fourteen as migelbagu (12+2), etc.[22] Between numerals 20 and 99, Sora adds the suffix kuri to the first constituent of the numeral. For example, 31 is expressed as bokuri gelmuy and 90 as unjikuri gelji.[22]

The Sora number system was featured in a puzzle by Lera Boroditsky, found in the More Resources section associated with her "TED talk".

Writing systems

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The Sora language is written using multiple systems. The Sora Sompeng script was developed in 1936 by Mangei Gomango as a native writing system created for the Sora language.

Sora is also written in the Latin script, in the Odia alphabet in Odisha, and in the Telugu script in Andhra Pradesh.[8]

Media coverage

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Sora was one of the subjects of Ironbound Films' 2008 American documentary film The Linguists, in which two linguists attempted to document several moribund languages.[citation needed]

Further reading

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  • Hammarström, Harald; Forkel, Robert; Haspelmath, Martin; Bank, Sebastian, eds. (2016). "Sora". Glottolog 2.7. Jena: Max Planck Institute for the Science of Human History.
  • Ramamurti, R. S. (1931). A Manual of the Sora (Savara) Language. Delhi: Mittal Publication.
  • Veṅkaṭarāmamūrti, G. (1986). Sora–English dictionary. Delhi: Mittal Publication.
  • Anderson, Gregory D.S (ed). 2008. The Munda languages. Routledge Language Family Series 3.New York: Routledge. ISBN 0-415-32890-X.

References

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  1. ^ "Statement 1: Abstract of speakers' strength of languages and mother tongues - 2011". www.censusindia.gov.in. Office of the Registrar General & Census Commissioner, India. Retrieved 2018-07-07.
  2. ^ "Sora". UNESCO Atlas of the World's Languages in danger. UNESCO. Retrieved 2018-03-18.
  3. ^ দেশোয়ারা, মিন্টু (21 February 2022). "হারিয়ে যাচ্ছে সৌরা ভাষা". The Daily Star Bangla. Retrieved 21 February 2022.
  4. ^ Anderson, Gregory D.S (ed). 2008. The Munda languages. Routledge Language Family Series 3.New York: Routledge. ISBN 0-415-32890-X.
  5. ^ a b c d Mahapatra, B.P. (1991). "Munda Languages in Census". Bulletin of the Deccan College Research Institute. 51/52: 329–336. JSTOR 42930411.
  6. ^ a b c Chatterji, Suniti Kumar (1971). "'Adivasi' Literatures of India: The Uncultivated 'Adivasi' Languages". Indian Literature. 14 (3): 5–42. JSTOR 23329913.
  7. ^ Stampe, David L. (1965). "Recent Work in Munda Linguistics I". International Journal of American Linguistics. 31 (4): 332–341. doi:10.1086/464864. JSTOR 1264042. S2CID 224807949.
  8. ^ a b c d Sora Sompeng. (n.d.). Retrieved April 15, 2017, from http://scriptsource.org/cms/scripts/page.php?item_id=script_detail&key=Sora
  9. ^ a b c d e f Donegan, Patricia; Stampe, David (2002). South-East Asian Features in the Munda Languages: Evidence for the Analytic-to-Synthetic Drift of Munda. Proceedings of the Twenty-Eighth Annual Meeting of the Berkeley Linguistics Society: Special Session on Tibeto-Burman and Southeast Asian Linguistics. pp. 111–120.
  10. ^ Anderson, Gregory D. S.; Harrison, K. David (2008). "Sora". The Munda Languages. New York: Routledge. pp. 299–380. ISBN 0-415-32890-X.
  11. ^ Horo, Luke; Anderson, Gregory D. S. (2021). "Prosody and Morphosyntax in Sora: A Preliminary Study". Living Tongues Institute for Endangered Languages: 51–55. doi:10.21437/TAI.2021-11.
  12. ^ a b c d e f Starosta, Stanley (1976). "Case Forms and Case Relations in Sora". In Jenner, Philip N.; Thompson, Laurence C.; Starosta, Stanley (eds.). Austroasiatic Studies, Part 2. Oceanic Linguistics Special Publications. University Press of Hawaii. pp. 1069–1107. ISBN 978-0-8248-0280-6. JSTOR 20019195. OCLC 6015240755.
  13. ^ a b c d e f g h i j k Zide, Arlene R. K. (1976). Nominal Combining Forms in Sora and Gorum. Oceanic Linguistics Special Publications. University of Hawai'i Press. pp. 1259–1294. JSTOR 20019202.
  14. ^ Anderson & Harrison (2008:308)
  15. ^ Anderson & Harrison (2008:319)
  16. ^ Anderson & Harrison (2008:316)
  17. ^ Anderson & Harrison (2008:317)
  18. ^ Anderson & Harrison (2008:309–311)
  19. ^ Anderson & Harrison (2008:315)
  20. ^ Anderson & Harrison (2008:326)
  21. ^ Anderson, Gregory D. S. (2017). "Polysynthesis in Sora (Munda) with Special Reference to Noun Incorporation". In Fortescue, Michael; Mithun, Marianne; Evans, Nicholas (eds.). The Oxford Handbook of Polysynthesis. Oxford University Press. pp. 930–947. doi:10.1093/oxfordhb/9780199683208.013.50.
  22. ^ a b c d Mohan, Shailendra (2012). "Numeral Expressions in Kharia Korku, and Sora: A Comparative Account". Bulletin of the Deccan College Post-Graduate and Research Institute. 72/73: 367–374. JSTOR 43610713.
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