Indo-Aryan languages, grouping according to
SIL Ethnologue:
Western and Central zones
Northern zone
Northwestern zone
Eastern zone
Southern zone
Insular
The Indo-Aryan languages include some 210 (SIL estimate) languages and dialects spoken by many people in Asia; this language family is a part of the Indo-Iranian language family.
Historical
- Old Indic (ca. 1500-300 BC)
- Middle Indic (ca. 300 BCE to 1500 CE)
- early phase: 3rd century BC
- middle phase (200 BCE to 700 CE)
- late phase: Apabhramsa (700 CE to 1500 CE)
- Abahatta (Maghadi Apabhramsa)
- Elu (Sinhalese Apabhramsa)
- Early Modern Indic (Mughal period, 1500 to 1800)
Contemporary languages
This classification follows Kausen (2006). The main differences from SIL are noted.
(SIL includes the Nuristani languages within Indo-Aryan.)
Dardic
(The relation of this family to other Indo-Aryan languages is unclear; SIL includes it in the Northwestern zone, despite these languages having a very different grammatical structure from that of the Classical Indo-Aryan languages.)
- Kunar languages
- Chitral languages
- Kohistani languages
- Shina languages
- Kashmiri
Northern Zone
North-Western Zone
Map of areas where Dogri-Kangri languages are spoken
Dogri-Kangri languages (Western Pahari) (included in Pahari by SIL)
Punjabi (Eastern or Central Punjabi; included in Central zone by SIL)
- Lahnda languages
- Sindhi languages
Western Zone
(SIL includes these languages in the Central zone)
- Rajasthani–Marwari
- Gujarati languages
- Bhil languages
- Khandeshi
- Domari–Romani
(treated as a separate group by Kausen)
Central Zone (Madhya or Hindi)
- West Central Zone (Western Hindi)
- East Central Zone (Eastern Hindi)
Eastern Zone (Magadhan)
These languages derive from Magadhi Prakrit through Ardhamagadhi ("Half-Magadhi").
- Assamese–Bengali languages
- Bihari languages
- Oriya languages
- Tharu
- Tharu (several languages)
Southern Zone languages
- Insular Indic
The insular languages are spoken in the islands of Sri Lanka and Maldives along with the island of Minicoy. The insular languages share several characteristics which set them apart significantly from their continental sister languages. (SIL makes them a separate branch of Indo-Aryan.) However, Sinhala and Dhivehi are no longer mutually intelligible.1
Unclassified
The following languages have not been classified within the Indo-Aryan family.
See also
References
- ^ http://findarticles.com/p/articles/mi_go2081/is_3_127/ai_n31523541/