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Pahari-Pothwari
پوٹھواری, پہاڑی
Poṭhwārī, Pahāṛī
Native toPakistan
Regionnorthern parts of Pothohar region of Punjab, Azad Kashmir and western parts of Jammu and Kashmir, other parts of India including Punjab and Haryana (by partition refugees and descendants)
Native speakers
several million[a]
Shahmukhi
Language codes
ISO 639-3phr
Glottologpaha1251  Pahari Potwari

Pahari-Pothwari is an Indo-Aryan language variety of Lahnda group,[b] spoken in parts of the Pothohar Plateau in the far north of Punjab, Pakistan, as well as in most of Pakistan-administered Azad Kashmir and in western areas of Indian-administered Jammu and Kashmir. It is known by a variety of names, the most common of which are Pahari (English: /pəˈhɑːri/;[1] an ambiguous name also applied to other unrelated languages of India), and Pothwari (or Pothohari).

The language is transitional between Hindko and Standard Punjabi and is mutually intelligible with both.[2] There have been efforts at cultivation as a literary language,[3] although a local standard has not been established yet.[4] The Shahmukhi script is used to write the language, such as in the works of Punjabi poet Mian Muhammad Bakhsh.

Grierson in his early 20th-century Linguistic Survey of India assigned it to a so-called "Northern cluster" of Lahnda (Western Punjabi), but this classification, as well as the validity of the Lahnda grouping in this case, have been called into question.[5] In a sense both Pothwari, as well as other Lahnda varieties, and Standard Punjabi are "dialects" of a "Greater Punjabi" macrolanguage.[6]

Geographic distribution and dialects

Map
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75km
50miles
Baramulla
Srinagar
Bagh
Rajouri
Poonch
Jhelum
Murree
Mirpur
Gujarkhan
Bharakao
Abbottabad
Muzaffarabad
Azad Kashmir and surrounding areas with some of the locations mentioned in this section. Places where Pahari–Pothwari is spoken are in dark red.

There are at least three major dialects: Pothwari, Mirpuri and Pahari.[c]

The dialects are mutually intelligible,[7] but the difference between the northernmost and the southernmost dialects (from Muzaffarabad and Mirpur respectively) is enough to cause difficulties in understanding.[8]

Pothohar Plateau

Pothwari (پوٹھواری), also spelt Potwari, Potohari and Pothohari (پوٹھوہاری),[9] is spoken in the north-eastern portion of Pothohar Plateau of northern Punjab,[10] an area administratively within Rawalpindi division.[11] Pothwari is its most common name, and some call it Pindiwal Punjabi to differentiate it from the Punjabi spoken elsewhere in Punjab.[12]

Pothwari extends southwards up to the Salt Range, with the city of Jhelum marking the border with Majha Punjabi. To the north, Pothwari transitions into the Pahari-speaking area, with Bharakao, near Islamabad, generally regarded as the point where Pothwari ends and Pahari begins.[13] In Attock and Chakwal districts of Pothohar, Pothohari comes in contact with other Lahnda varieties, namely Chacchi, Awankari and Dhanni. In Pindi Gheb, yet another dialect is spoken, Ghebi.[14]

Pothwari has been represented as a dialect of Punjabi by the Punjabi language movement,[4] and in census reports the Pothwari areas of Punjab have been shown as Punjabi-majority.[d]

Mirpur

East of the Pothwari areas, across the Jhelum River into Mirpur District in Azad Kashmir, the language is more similar to Pothwari than to the Pahari spoken in the rest of Azad Kashmir.[15] Locally it is known by a variety of names:[e] Pahari, Mirpur Pahari, Mirpuri,[f] and Pothwari,[16] while some of its speakers call it Punjabi.[17] Mirpuris possess a strong sense of Kashmiri identity that overrides linguistic identification with closely related groups outside Azad Kashmir, such as the Pothwari Punjabis.[18] The Mirpur region has been the source of the greater part of Pakistani immigration to the UK, a process that started when thousands were displaced by the construction of the Mangla Dam in the 1960s and emigrated to fill labour shortages in England.[19] The British Mirpuri diaspora now numbers several hundred thousand, and Pahari has been argued to be the second most common mother tongue in the UK, yet the language is little known in the wider society there and its status has remained surrounded by confusion.[20]

Kashmir, Murree and the Galyat

Pahari (پہاڑی) is spoken to the north of Pothwari. The central cluster of Pahari dialects is found around Murree.[21] This area is in the Galyat: the hill country of Murree Tehsil in the northeast of Rawalpindi District (just north of the capital Islamabad) and the adjoining areas in southeastern Abbottabad District.[22] One name occasionally found in the literature for this language is Dhundi-Kairali (Ḍhūṇḍī-Kaiṛālī), a term first used by Grierson[23] who based it on the names of the two major tribes of the area – the Kairal and the Dhund.[10] Its speakers call it Pahari in Murree tehsil, while in Abbottabad district it is known as either Hindko or Ḍhūṇḍī.[24] Nevertheless, Hindko – properly the language of the rest of Abbottabad District and the neighbouring areas of Khyber Pakhtunkhwa – is generally regarded as a different language.[25] It forms a dialect continuum with Pahari, [10] and the transition between the two is in northern Azad Kashmir and in the Galyat region. For example, on the road from Murree northwest towards the city of Abbottabad, Pahari gradually changes into Hindko between Ayubia and Nathiagali.[26]

A closely related dialect is spoken across the Jhelum River in Azad Kashmir, north of the Mirpuri areas. Names associated in the literature with this dialect are Pahari (itself the term most commonly used by the speakers themselves), Chibhālī,[27] named after the Chibhal region[28] or the Chibh ethnic group,[11] and Pahari (Poonchi) (پونچھی, also spelt Punchhi). The latter name has been variously applied to either the Chibhali variety specific to the district of Poonch,[29] or to the dialect of the whole northern half of Azad Kashmir.[30] This dialect (or dialects) has been seen either as a separate dialect from the one in Murree,[23] or as belonging to the same central group of Pahari dialects.[31] The dialect of the district of Bagh, for example, has more shared vocabulary with the core dialects from Murree (86–88%) than with the varieties of either Muzaffarabad (84%) or Mirpur (78%).[32]

In Muzaffarabad the dialect shows lexical similarity[g] of 83–88% with the central group of Pahari dialects, which is high enough for the authors of the sociolinguistic survey to classify it is a central dialect itself, but low enough to warrant noting its borderline status.[33] The speakers however tend to call their language Hindko[34] and to identify more with the Hindko spoken to the west,[35] despite the lower lexical similarity (73–79%) with the core Hindko dialects of Abbottabad and Mansehra.[36] Further north into the Neelam Valley the dialect, now known locally as Parmi, becomes closer to Hindko.[37]

Pahari is also spoken further east across the Line of Control into the Pir Panjal mountains in Indian Jammu and Kashmir. The population, estimated at 1 million,[38] is found in the region between the Jhelum and Chenab rivers: most significantly in the districts of Poonch and Rajouri, to a lesser extent in neighbouring Baramulla and Kupwara,[39] and also – as a result of the influx of refugees during the Partition of 1947 – scattered throughout the rest of Jammu and Kashmir.[40] Pahari is among the regional languages listed in the sixth schedule of the Constitution of Jammu and Kashmir.[41] This Pahari is sometimes conflated with the Western Pahari languages spoken in the mountainous region in the south-east of Indian Jammu and Kashmir. These languages, which include Bhadarwahi and its neighbours, are often called "Pahari", although not same they are closely related to Pahari–Pothwari.[42]

Diaspora

Pahari-Pothwari is also very widely spoken in the United Kingdom. Labour shortages after World War II, and the displacement of peoples caused by the construction of the Mangla Dam, facilitated extensive migration of Pahari-Pothwari speakers to the UK during the 1950s and 1960s, especially from the Mirpur District. Academics estimate that between two thirds and 80% of people officially classified as British Pakistanis originate as part of this diaspora, with some suggesting that it is the second most spoken language of the United Kingdom, ahead of even Welsh, with hundreds of thousands of speakers.[43] However, since there is little awareness of the identity of the language among speakers,[44] census results do not reflect this.[45] The highest proportions of Pahari-Pothwari speakers are found in urban centres, especially the West Midlands conurbation and the West Yorkshire Built-up Area.[45]

Phonology

Vowels

Vowels of Pahari
Front Central Back
oral nasal oral nasal oral nasal
Close ĩː ũː
Near-close ɪ ʊ
Mid e ẽː ə o
Open æ æː ãː
Vowels of Pothwari
Front Central Back
oral nasal oral nasal oral nasal
Close i ĩ ĩː u ũ ũː
Mid e ɐ ɐ̃ o õ
Open ɑ ɑ̃

A long diphthong /ɑi/ can be realized as [äː].[46]

Consonants

Consonants of Pahari[47]
Labial Dental Alveolar Post-alv./
Palatal
Velar Glottal
Stop/
Affricate
voiceless p t t͡ʃ k
aspirated t̪ʰ t͡ʃʰ
voiced b d d͡ʒ ɡ
Fricative voiceless f s ʃ x
voiced v z ɣ ɦ
Nasal m n ŋ
Approximant l j
Tap/Trill r ɽ
Consonants of Pothwari[46]
Labial Alveolar Retroflex Post-alv./
Palatal
Velar/
Uvular
Glottal
Stop voiceless p t ʈ k
aspirated ʈʰ
voiced b d ɖ ɡ
breathy ɖʱ ɡʱ
Affricate voiceless t͡s
aspirated t͡sʰ
voiced d͡z
Fricative voiceless (f) s ʃ (χ) h
voiced v z (ʒ) (ʁ)
Nasal m n ɳ
Approximant l ɭ j
Tap/Trill r ɽ
  • Sounds [f, ʒ, χ, ʁ, q] are heard from Persian and Arabic loanwords.
  • /h/ is realized as voiced [ɦ] in word-initial position.
  • /n/ before a velar consonant can be heard as [ŋ].[46]

Grammar and notable features

Future Tense

The future tense in Pothwari is formed by adding -s as opposed to the Eastern Punjabi gā.[48]

This tense is also used in other Western Punjabi dialects such as the Jatki dialects, Shahpuri, Jhangochi and Dhanni, as well as in and Hindko and Saraiki.[49]

English Pahari-Pothwari Eastern Punjabi
Transliteration Shahmukhi Transliteration Shahmukhi
I will do Mãi karsā̃ مَیں کرساں Mãi karāngā مَیں کرانگا
We will do Asā̃ karsā̃ اَساں کرساں Asī̃ karānge اَسِیں کرانگے
You will do (s) Tū̃ karsãi تُوں کرسَیں Tū̃ karãigā تُوں کریں گا
You will do (p) Tusā̃ karso تُساں کرسو Tusī̃ karoge تُسِیں کروگے
He/She will do Ó karsi اوه کَرسی Ó karega اوه کرے گا
They will do Ó karsan اوہ کرسن Ó karaṇge اوه کرݨ گے

This type of future tense was also used by classical Punjabi poets. Punjabi poet Bulleh Shah sometimes uses a similar form of future tense in his poetry[50]

Shahmukhi: جو کُجھ کرسَیں, سو کُجھ پاسَیں

Transliteration: Jo kujh karsãĩ, so kujh pāsãĩ

Translation: Whatsoever you do, is what you shall gain

- From one of Bulleh Shah's poems[51]

Continuous Tense

Similar to other Punjabi varieties, Pothwari uses peyā (past tense form of pēṇā) to signify the continuous tense.[52]

Present Continuous

English Pahari-Pothwari
Transliteration Shahmukhi
I am doing (m.) Mē̃ karnā peyā ā̃̀ میں کرنا پیا ہاں
We are doing (m./mixed) Asā̃ karne pa'e ā̃̀ اساں کرنے پئے ہاں
You are doing (sing., m.) Tū̃ karna peya aĩ̀ تُوں کرنا پیا ہیں
You are doing (sing., f.) Tū̃ karnī paī aĩ̀ تُوں کرنی پئی ہیں
You are doing (plural, m./mixed) Tusā̃ karne pa'e ò تُساں کرنے پئے ہو
He is doing Ó karna peya aì اوہ کرنا پیا ہے
She is doing Ó karnī paī aì اوہ کرنی پئی ہے
They are doing (m.) Ó karne pa'e ìn اوہ کرنے پئے ہِن
They are doing (f.) Ó karniyā̃ paiyā̃ ìn اوہ کرنیاں پئیاں ہِن

Past Continuous

The past tense in Pothwari resembles that of Eastern Punjabi, however depending on the dialect, there may be slight variations.

English Pahari-Pothwari Standard Punjabi
I was doing (m.) میں کرنا پیا ساں


maĩ karna pya sã

میں کردا پیا ساں


maĩ karda pya sã

We were doing (m./mixed) اساں کرنے پئے سیاں/ساں اسِیں کردے پئے ساں
You were doing (sing., m.) تُوں کرنا پیا سیں تُوں کردا پیا سیں
You were doing (pl., m./mixed or sing. formal) تُساں کرنے پئے سیو/سو تُسِیں کردے پئے سو
He was doing اوہ کرنا پیا سا/سی اوہ کردا پیا سی
She was doing اوہ کرنی پئی سی اوہ کردی پئی سی
They were doing (m./mixed) اوہ کرنے پئے سے/سن اوہ کردے پئے سن
They were doing (f.) اوہ کرنِیاں پئیاں سِیاں/سن اوہ کردِیاں پئیاں سن

The place of "pyā" may sometimes be switched with respect to the verb. This is common in Majhi (e.g: Noor Jehan's "Chann Māhi Teri Rāh Pyi Takkni Aā̃) and as well as in Jhangochi, Shahpuri, etc

"Tusā̃ báhū̃ changā kamm karne ò pa'e", meaning "You (plural/sing. formal) are doing a very good thing"

"Mē̃ vī tā̃ éhe gall ākhnā sā̃ peyā", meaning "I was also saying the same thing"

"Mē̃ vī tā̃ ehe gall peyā ākhnā ā̃̀", meaning "I am also saying the same thing"

Common prepositions, adjectives and adverbs

These are typically the same in Pothohari and Standard Punjabi, but some differences can be noted.

Prepositions and adverbs

English Pothohari Standard Punjabi
Which (relative) جہڑا جہڑا
Which (interogative) کہڑا کہڑا
If جے جے
And تے تے
Near نیڑے نیڑے
Distant پرھاں پرھاں
Before / Previously اگّے اگّے
Hence / Thus تاں مارے تاں کرکے
Exactly why تاں ای تاں ای
First پہلوں پہلوں / پہلاں
Once اِکّ واری اِکّ واری
Now ہُن ہُن
Just now ہُنے / میسں ہُنے
Right at that time اوسے ویلے اوسے ویلے
Sometimes کدے کدے / کدی
Somewhere کِرے / کُرے کِتّے / کِدھرے
When کدوں کدوں
Like this (adv.) ایوں / اِنج / اِسراں ایوں / اِنج / اِس طرحاں
Like this (adj.) ایہے جیہا ایہو جیہا
Exactly this / Only this ایہے ایہو
Above اَپّر اُتّے / اُپّر
Below تھلّے / بُن تھلّے
From below تھلّوں تھلّوں
Right سجّے سجّے
Left کھبّے کھبّے
Within وِچّ وِچّ
From within وِچّّوں وِچّوں
Between وِشکار وِچکار
From توں / سوں / کولں توں / کولوں
From the front اگّوں اگّوں
From behind پِچھوں، مگروں پِچھوں، مگروں
In comparision کولوں / نالوں کولوں / نالوں
With (utility) نال نال
Furthermore نالے نالے
Yet / Still حالے / اجے حالے / اجے
With (possession) کول کول
Along / Including سݨے سݨے
ٰEverywhere چوہاں پاسے چوہاں پاسے
Properly چنگی طرحاں چنگی طرحاں
Harshly ڈاہڈا ڈاہڈا
With ease سوکھا سوکھا
With difficulty اوکھا اوکھا
Lest متے متاں / کِتے ایہہ نہ ہووے
Who knows خورے خورے
Very بہُوں

(بہوں is used in most Western Punjabi dialects)

Enough بتیرا بتھیرا / بتیرا
Less گھٹّ گھٹّ
Alone کلھیوں کلھیاں  
Together کٹھّیوں کٹھّیاں
Again مُڑی تے مُڑکے
Repeatedly مُڑی مُڑی مُڑ مُڑ
Eventually ہَولے ہَولے ہَولی ہَولی
Quickly بہلی چھیتی
This much (quality.) ایڈا ایڈا
This much (quantity.) ہیتݨاں اِنّا
Alright / Okay / Oh ہلا اچّھا

Note:

  • Some Majhi subdielcts do use کٹھّیوں for کٹھّیاں
  • Standard Punjabi makes use of اُپّر
  • In Pothohari مسیں means now, while in other dialects مسیں / مساں means "barely/hardly"
  • The pronunciation وِشکار is not unique to Pothohari alone
  • The word and expression ہلا / Hala is common throughout Western Punjab, also used in Majhi

Adjectives

English Pothohari Majhi
Difficult اوکھا اوکھا
Easy سَوکھا سَوکھا
Small نِکّا نِکّا
Large بڑا / بڈّا وڈّا
Unfamiliar اوپرا اوپرا
New نوَاں نوَاں
Old پراݨاں پراݨاں
Straight سِدھّا سِدھّا
Inverted پُٹھّا پُٹھّا
Crooked ڈِنگّا ڈِنگّا
High اُچّا اُچّا
Low نِیواں نِیواں
Good چنگا چنگا
Bad ماڑا / مندا ماڑا / مندا
Very bad بھَیڑا بھَیڑا
Heavy بھارا بھارا
Light ہَولا ہَولا
Narrow سَوڑا سَوڑا
Open کھُلھّا کھُلھّا
Firm پِیڈا پِیڈا
Loose ڈھِلّا ڈھِلّا
Late چِرکا چِرکا
On time ویلے نال ویلے نال
Red رتّا لال رتّا لال
Crimson سُوہا کھٹّ سُوہا کھٹّ
White چِٹّا دُدھّ چِٹّا دُدھّ
Black کالا شاہ کالا شاہ
Yellow پِلّا زرد پِلّا زرد
Sweet مِٹھّا مِٹھّا
Bitter کَوڑا کَوڑا
Slow مٹھّا مٹھّا
Well بلّ ولّ
Empty سکھّݨاں سکھّݨاں
Filled بھریا بھریا
Dry سُکّا / آٹھریا سُکّا / آٹھریا
Wet گِلّا / بھِجّا گِلّا / بھِجّا
Hot تتّا تتّا
Cold ٹھڈّا ٹھنڈا
Hungry بھُکھّا بھُکھّا
Fed رجّیا پُجّیا رجّیا پُجّیا
Smart سیاݨا سیاݨا
Fool جھلّا جھلّا
Deep ڈُونگھا ڈُونگھا
Beautiful سوہݨاں سوہݨاں
Ugly کوجھا کوجھا
Evil لُچّا لُچّا
Faux naïf مِیسݨا مِیسݨا

Tribal groupings

Pahari-Pothwari speakers belong to the same tribes found in Punjab. While the names of the tribes remain the same, the Punjabi word for tribe Birādrī/Barādarī (برادری) becomes Bilādrī/Balādarī (بل ادری) in Pahari-Pothwari and several other Punjabi dialects such as Jatki/Shahpuri.

Numbering system

Pahari-Pothwari follows the numbering traditions of Standard Punjabi. A point of departure from Eastern Punjabi dialects occurs in the use of Trai (ترَے) instead of Tinn (تِنّ) for the number 3. Other Western Punjabi dialects also tend to use trai over tinn.[53]

Similarly, Pothwari, Majhi and other Western Punjabi dialects use "Yārā̃" (یاراں) for "Gyarā̃" (گیاراں), "Trei" (ترئی) for "Tei" (تئی) "Panji" (پنجِی) for "Pachchi" (پچّی) and "Trih" (ترِیہہ) for "Tih" (تِیہہ), for the numbers 11, 23, 25, and 30.

Unlike Jhangochi, Shahpuri and Dhanni Punjabi dialects, Pothohari does not use "Dāh" for 10, and instead uses "Das" as in Eastern Punjabi and Urdu/Hindi.

English Pahari-Pothwari
Numbers Numerals Transliteration Shahmukhi Numerals
One 1 ikk اِکّ ۱
Two 2 do دو ۲
Three 3 trai ترَے ۳
Four 4 chār چار ۴
Five 5 panj پَنج ۵
Six 6 che چھے ۶
Seven 7 satt سَتّ ۷
Eight 8 aṭṭh اَٹّھ ۸
Nine 9 nau نَو ۹
Ten 10 das دَس ۱۰

Oblique form

The numbers in their oblique form function the same throughout Punjabi dialects.

English Pothohari Jhangochi Majhi
I got it for forty-four میں ایہہ چُرتالیاں نا آندا آ میں ایہہ چُرتالیاں دا آندا اے میں ایہہ چوتالیاں دا آندا آ
Above twenty-five or thirty پنجِیاں ترِیہاں توں اپّر پنجِیاں ترِیہاں توں اُتّے پنجِیاں ترِیہاں توں اُتّے
After two or four days دوَنہہ چَونہہ دیہاڑیاں بعد دَونہہ چَونہہ دیہاڑیاں پِچھّوں دَونہہ چَونہہ دیہاڑیاں پِچھّوں
At 8:46 اٹھّ چھتالیاں اپّر اٹھّ چھتالیاں تے اٹھّ چھتالیاں تے
For almost five lac پنجاں اِک لکھّاں نا پنجاں اِک لکھّاں دا پنجاں اِک لکھّاں دا
Nearing twenty وِیہاں نے نیڑے وِیہاں دے نیڑے وِیہاں دے نیڑے

Ordinals

The ordinal numbers are largely the same. The only difference occurs in the words for Second and Third. Second is Doowa (دووا) in Pothwari, whilst it is Dooja (دوجا) in Punjabi. Likewise Third is Treeya (تریا) in Pothwari whilst it is Teeja (تیجا) in Punjabi. Western Punjabi in general tends to follow this trend.

English Pahari-Pothwari Standard Punjabi Jatki
Ordinals Shahmukhi Transliteration Shahmukhi Transliteration Shahmukhi Transliteration
First پہلا Pehla پہلا Pehla پہلا Pehla
Second دووا Dūwā دوجا Dūjjā دووا / دُوجا Dūwā / Dūjjā
Third تریا Trīyā تیجا Tījjā ترِجیا Trījjā
Fourth چوتھا Chauttha چَوتھا Chauttha چَوتھا Chauttha

Pronouns

Direct case

Person Romanisation Shahmukhi
Singular Plural Singular Plural
1st Person Mē̃ As میں اس
2nd Person Tū̃ Tus توں تُس
3rd Person Near É ایہ
Remote Ó اوہ

Oblique Case

Person Romanisation Shahmukhi
Singular Plural Singular Plural
1st Person Mē̃ Asā̃ میں اساں
2nd Person Tū̃ Tusā̃ توں تُساں
3rd Person Near Is Innā̃ اِس اِنّاں
Remote Us Unnā̃ اُس اُنّاں

Pronominal suffixes

Pothohari makes use of the general Punjabi suffixes.

romanisation
singular plural
2nd person -ne
3rd person -s -ne
English Pothohari Jhangochi / Shahpuri Majhi
Alright what did he say next? (3rd person sing.)

ہلا فیر کے آخیاس؟

ہلا مُڑکی آکھیُس؟

ہلا مُڑ کی آکھیا سُو؟

اچھا فیر کی اکھیا سُو؟

Are you hands and feet broken? (2nd person plural.)

ہتھّ پَیر بھجّے / ترُٹّے نی؟

ہتھّ پَیر بھجّے نی؟

ہتھّ پَیر بھجّے نی؟ (یا ٹُٹّے)

I'm bringing it for you (2nd person sing.)

ایہہ میں تہاڑے واسطے آݨنا ای

ایہہ میں تیرے واسطے لیاندا ای

ایہہ میں تیرے واسطے آݨدا ای

Did you eat? (2nd person respect.)

روٹی کھادی نے؟

روٹی کھادی ہِنے؟

روٹی کھادی جے؟

He didn't even bother this much (3rd person sing.)

اتنا وی نہیس آخیا

ایتݨاں وی نِسُو آکھیا

اِنّا وی نہیں آکھیا سُو

Vocative case

These cases remain the same between Pothohari and other dialects.

As example of the vocative case:

English Pothohari Majhi
Oh my son! او مہاڑیا پُتّرا او میریا پُتّرا
You born to a blind a woman!

(Derogatory)

اَنّھی نیا اَنّھی دیا
Oh you people of God! او ﷲ نیو بندیو او ﷲ دیو بندیو
Listen to me girl کُڑِیے گلّ سُݨ کُڑِی گلّ سُݨ
Brother! بھراوا بھراوا
Oh elderly! (can be singular) بُزرگو بزرگو

Dative and definite object marker

The dative and definite object marker in Pothwari is (ਕੀ /کی) as opposed to nū̃ (ਨੂੰ / نوں) in Standard Punjabi.

  • The phrase: lokkā̃ nū̃ (ਲੋਕਾਂ ਨੂੰ / لوکاں نوں), meaning "to the people" in Standard Punjabi, would become lokkā̃ (ਲੋਕਾਂ ਕੀ / لوکاں کی) in Pothwari.

Hence, the objective personal pronouns would be as follows:

English Pahari-Pothwari Standard Punjabi
Shahmukhi Shahmukhi
To me میکی مَینُوں
To you (sing.) تُکی تَینُوں
To you (plural.) تُساں کی تُہانُوں
To us اساں کی سانُوں
To him/her اُس کی اوہنُوں

Genitive marker

The genitive marker in Pahari-Pothwari is represented through the use of (ਨਾ / نا) as opposed to (ਦਾ / دا) in common Punjabi.[54]

  • The phrase: lokkā̃ (ਲੋਕਾਂ ਦਾ / لوکاں دا), meaning "people's" or "of the people" in Pahari-Pothwari, would become lokkā̃ (ਲੋਕਾਂ ਨਾ / لوکاں نا)

It should also be noted that in Pahari-Pothwari, the present form of verb does not end with the standard sound either, and is replaced with nā. This means that ākhdā would be ākhnā in Pahari-Pothwari meaning "to say" and similarly the word takkdā would be takknā in Pahari-Pothwari meaning "to look/to watch".

For example:

  • Miki eh nih si cāhinā (میکی ایہہ نِیہ سی چاہینا), meaning "This is not what I wanted"
  • Oh kai pyā ākhnā ae? (اوہ کے پیا آخنا ہے؟), meaning "What is he saying?"
  • This also affects the common Punjabi passive tense: Is tarhā̃ nih ākhī nā (اِس طرحاں نہیں آخی نا), instead of "ākhee dā", meaning "That's not how it should be said"
English Pothohari Majhi Jhangochi
We come اساں اچھنے آں

 

اسِیں آؤنے آں اسِیں آنے آں
What do you say? تُوں کے آخنا ایں؟ تُوں کی آکھدا ایں؟ تُوں کی آہیندا ایں؟
The things I do جہڑے کمّ میں کرنا آں جہڑے کمّ میں کرنا آں جہڑے کمّ میں کرنا/کریٔنا آں

This also affects some of the genitive pronouns.

English Pahari-Pothwari Jatki Hindko
Jhangvi/Shahpuri Dhanni
Shahmukhi Shahmukhi Shahmukhi Shahmukhi
Mine مہارا میرا مَینڈھا مڑھا
Yours (sing.) تَہاڑا تیرا تَینڈھا تُڑھا
Yours (plural.) تُساں نا تُہاڈا تُساڈا / تُساں دا تُساں دا
Ours اساں نا / ساہڑا ساڈا اساڈا / اساں دا اساں دا

Oblique case of nouns

Pahari-Pothwari has unique forms for nouns in oblique cases. This is not observed in Standard Punjabi, but is seen in Hindko.[55]

English Pahari-Pothwari Standard Punjabi
Shahmukhi Shahmukhi
Housework گھرے نا کمّ گھر دا کمّ
Dinner راتی نی روٹی رات دی روٹی
In a young age نِکّی عُمرے وِچ نِکّی عُمر وِچّ
On my heart مھاڑے دِلّے اپّر میرے دِل تے
With care دھیاݨے نال دھیان نال
Patiently ارامے نال ارام نال
To my sister بھیݨُوں کی بھین نُوں
For my brother بھراُو واسطے بھرا واسطے
Important detail کمّے نی گلّ کمّ دی گلّ
There's no accounting for taste شَونقے نا کوئی مُل نہیں ہوݨا شَونق دا کوئی مُل نہیں ہوندا
Understand the point گلّے کی سمجھ گلّ نُوں سمجھ

Adding "i" to root form of verb

A peculiar feature of Pahari-Pothwari is to end the basic root form of verbs with an "i" sound.[56]

English Pahari-Pothwari Standard Punjabi
Shahmukhi Shahmukhi
It happened ہوئی گیا ہو گیا
It may be possible ہوئی سکنا اے ہو سکدا اے
Together رلی مِلی تے رل مِل کے
Finish it مُکائی چھوڑ مُکا چھڈّ/چھوڑ
Look تکّی گھِنو ویکھ لو
Come back after having lunch روٹی کھائی تے مُڑی اچھِیں روٹی کھا کے مُڑ آوِیں
Eat it کھائی گھِن کھا لَے
Sit quietly for once کدے ٹِکی تے بہی وی جُلیا کر کدے ٹِک کے بہہ وی جایا کر

Vocabulary

General verbs

A majority of the general verbs between Pothohari and most other dialects of Punjabi appears to be the same.[57]

English Pothohari Majhi
Taking out کڈھّݨا کڈھّݨا
Taking off لاہݨا لاہُݨا
Applying لاݨا لاؤݨا
Decreasing گھٹّݨا گھٹّݨا
Jumping چھال مارنی چھال مارنی
Agreeing منّݨا منّݨا
Hesitating جھکّݨا جھکّݨا
Forgetting بھُلّݨا بھُلّݨا
Wearing / Pouring باݨا پاؤݨا
Lying / To be poured پَیݨا پَیݨا
Sitting بہݨا بہݨا
Breaking بھنّݨا یا تروڑنا بھنّݨا
Returning موڑنا موڑنا
Flipping پرتاݨا پرتاؤݨا
Seeing تکھّݨا

تکّݨا یا ویکھݨا

To be seen دِسّݨا دِسّݨا
Telling دسّݨا دسّݨا
Saying آخݨا آکھݨا
Running نسّݨا نسّݨا
Falling ڈھیہݨا

ڈھہݨا یا ڈِگّݨا

Slipping تِلکݨا تِلکݨا
Chewing چِتھّݨا چِتھّݨا
Coughing کھنگھݨا کھنگھݨا
Raise چاڑھنا چاڑھنا
Coming اچھݨا آؤݨا
Walking ٹُرنا ٹُرنا
Pulling چھِکّݨا

چھِکّݨا / کھِچّݨا

Passing لنگھّݨا لنگھّݨا
Capturing مَلّݨا مَلّݨا
Cooling ٹھارنا ٹھارنا
Obtaining لبھّݨا لبھّݨا
Lighting up بالݨا بالݨا
Cooking رِنھّݨا رِنھّݨا
Tying بنھّݨا بنھّݨا
Roasting بھُنّݨا بھُنّݨا
Slaughtering کوہݨا کوہݨا
To identify سیاݨنا سیاݨنا
Throwing سٹّݨا

سُٹّݨا / سٹّݨا

Losing ہرنا ہرنا
Entering بڑنا وڑنا
Crumbling بھورنا بھورنا
Covering کجّݨا کجّݨا
Dividing ونڈݨا ونڈݨا
Stuffing / Thrusting تُنّݨا تُنّݨا
To press منڈݨا منڈݨا
To vex کھپاݨا کھپاؤݨا
To spread کھِلارنا کھِلارنا
To be stolen کھُسّݨا کھُسّݨا
To blow پھُوکݨا پھُوکݨا
To dust off چھنڈݨا چھنڈݨا
To mix رلݨا رلݨا
To dry سُکّݨا سُکّݨا
Hanging لمکݨا لمکݨا
Boiling کاڑھنا کاڑھنا
Spilling ڈولھݨا ڈولھݨا
Shining لِشکݨا لِشکݨا
Plastering / Coating لِنبݨا لِنبݨا
Maintain سانبھݨا سانبھݨا
To take along کھڑنا کھڑنا یا لَےجاݨا

Note:

  • Eastern Majhi and Malvai use Khichchna for pulling, while Western Majhi, Jhangochi, Shahpuri, Pothohari use Chhikkna.
  • Eastern dialects will use Bhann-Toṛ and Ṭuṭṭ-Bhajj, while Western dialects like Pothohari use Bhann-Troṛ and Truṭṭ-Bhajj.
  • Saṭṭna for throwing is used in Western dialects, and Chaana for picking. (As opposed to Suṭṭna / Chukkna), though Pothohari may use Chukkna as well.
  • Pothohari verbs do not seem to involve the -aavna or -aauna sound. This is similar to certain Majhi sub-dialects.
  • Labbhna is used for obtaining and receiving as in most dialects of Punjabi, however it is often not used in the active sense. For this Pothohari prefers Loṛna. (The passive form of this word "Loṛeenda" is commonly used in Standard Punjabi)
  • The Pothohari word for grabbing and holding is Nappṅa (common in Punjabi) and Lapaṛna (unique verb)

The passives remain the same throughout Punjabi dialects

  • Bhannṅa (to break) and Bhajjṅa (to be broken)
  • Bhunnṅa (to roast) and Bhujjṅa (to be roasted)
  • Rinnhṅa (to cook) and Rijjhṅa (to be cooked)
  • Ḍolhṅa (to spill) and Dullhṅa (to be spilt)
  • Laahṅa (to take off) and Lehṅa (to descend/come off)
  • Laveṛna (to besmear) and Livaṛna (to be besmeared)

The irregular past tense remains the same throughout Punjabi dialects

Differences in brackets.

  • Khaadhā
  • Peetā
  • Dittā
  • Keetā
  • Suttā
  • Moeā
  • Seāṅtā (Jhangochi/Shahpuri/Dhanni: Seātā, Majhi: Seāṅeā)
  • Latthā
  • Ḍhaṭṭhā
  • Baddhā
  • Nahātā
  • Dhotā
  • Khaltā (In other dialects: Khalotā) e.g.: Miki saɽke apar khalteon addhā ghantā hoi gya sā
  • Baṅtā (In other dialects: Baṅeā) e.g.: Chāʼ kadū̃ ni banti hoi ae
  • Guddhā

and Khā̃

Used throughout Punjabi dialects (e.g.: Majhi, Jhangochi, etc.)

  • Gall suṅeṉ na (Please listen)
  • Gall suṅ khā̃ (Listen up!)

Word for sleep

English Pothohari Jhangochi / Shahpuri Majhi
To sleep سَیݨا سَوݨا

سن٘وݨا

سَوݨا
Has slept  

سئی ریہا

سَیں پیا

سَیں ریہا

سَوں گیا
He is sleeping

اوہ سَیݨا اے پیا

اوہ سَوندا اے پیا

اوہ سَوندا اے پیا

Asleep سُتّا پیا سُتّا پیا سُتّا پیا
Having slept or

While asleep

سُتّیوں سُتّیاں سُتّیاں
After sleeping سئی تے سَیں کے

(or تے)

سَوں کے
Go to sleep سئی گو

سئی جا سئی روہ

سَیں پو

سَیں جا

سَیں روہ

سَوں جا

He is to sleep اوہ سئے اوہ سَون٘وے اوہ سَون٘وے
Putting to sleep

سن٘واولݨا

سن٘واوݨا

سن٘واؤݨا

Family relations

The names of family relations are mostly the same throughout the Punjabi dialects.

English Punjabi / Pothohari
Shahmukhi
Mother / Father ماں پیو
Son / Daughter دھِیاں پُتّر
Brother / Sister بھَیݨاں بھرا
Husband گھر الا / جݨا / خسم
Wife گھر آلی / زنانی
Grandchildren (from son) پوترے پوترِیاں
Grandchildren (from daughter) دوترے دوترِیاں
Son-in-law جوائی
Daughter-in-law نوںھہ
Mother-in-law سسّ
Father-in-law سوہرا
Husband's sister نناݨ
Sister's husband بھݨوئیا
Brother's wife بھرجائی
Father's brother / Father's sister چاچا / پُپھّی
Father's brother's wife چاچی
Father's sister's husband پُھپھّڑ
Mother's brother / Mother's sister ماما / ماسی
Mother's brother's wife مامی
Mother's sister's husband ماسڑ
Cousin from father's brother چچیر / دد پوترا
Cousin from father's sister پھُپھیر
Cousin from mother's brother ملویر
Cousin from mother's sister مسیر

Some words unique to Pothohari include:

  • Daad-Potraa to refer to a cousin (Son of father's brother, Potraa is a common Punjabi word)
  • Be for mother (Eastern Punjabi does use Be-Be for mother)
  • Bhaapaa for brother (Sometimes used in Eastern-Majhi)

Body part names

Names of body parts are the same throughout Punjabi dialects with minimal differences if any.

English Pothohari Jhangochi / Shahpuri Majhi
Eyes اکھِّیاں اکھِّیاں / اکھِیں اکھّاں
Head سِر سِر سِر
Forehead متھّا متھّا متھّا
Eyelashes پِمݨِیاں پِپّݨیاں پلکاں
Eyebrows بھروٹّے بھربِٹّے بھروٹّے
Eyelids چھپّر چھپّر چھپّر
Eyeballs آنّے آنّے آنّے
Ears کنّ کنّ کنّ
Arms باہاں باہِیں باہواں
Throat سنگھ سگّھ سنگھ
Neck دھَوݨ دھَوݨ دھَوݨ
Shoulders موڈھے موڈھے موڈھے
Elbow ارک ارک ارک
Nails نَونہہ نَونہہ نَونہہ
Hands ہتھّ ہتھّ ہتھّ
Fingers انگلاں انگلاں اُنگلاں
Belly ڈھِڈّ ڈھِڈّ ڈھِڈّ
Waist لکّ لکّ لکّ
Legs لتّاں لتّاں لتّاں
Knees گوڈے گوڈے گوڈے
Ankles گِٹّے گِٹّے گِٹّے
Feet پَیر پَیر پَیر
Palm تلّی تلّی تلّی
Teeth دند دند دند
Molars ہݨیوں ہݨیوں جاڑھاں
Tongue جِیبھ جِبھّ جِیبھ
Nose نکّ نکّ نکّ
Nostrils ناساں ناساں ناساں
Face مونہہ مونہہ مونہہ
Back کنڈ کنڈ کنڈ
Hips ڈھاکاں ڈھاکاں ڈھاکاں
Hip bone چُوکݨا چُوکݨا چُوکݨا

Words for "Coming" and "Going"

The Pahari-Pothwari word for "coming" is acchṇā, whereas for "going" gacchṇā, julṇā and jāṇā are used.[56]

English Pahari-Pothwari Jatki Standard Punjabi
Shahmukhi Shahmukhi Shahmukhi
I am coming میں اچھنا پیا ہاں میں آوندا پیا ہاں میں آوندا پیا ہاں
I am going میں گچھنا پیا ہاں

میں جُلنا پیا ہاں

میں ویندا پیا ہاں

میں جاوندا پیا ہاں

میں جاندا پیا ہاں
I am not understanding میکی سمجھ نِیہ اچھنی پئی مینُوں سمجھ نہیں آوندی پئی مینُوں سمجھ نہیں آوندی پئی
I will leave tomorrow میں کلّ گیساں

میں کلّ جُلساں

میں کلّھ ویساں

میں کلّھ جاساں

میں کلّھ جاواں گا
We are going for work اساں کمّے اپّر جُلے ہاں اسِیں کمّ تے چلے ہاں اسِیں کمّ تے چلے ہاں
It happens ہوئی گچھنا اے

ہوئی جُلنا اے

ہوئی جانا اے

ہو ویندا ہے

ہو جاوندا ہے

ہو جاندا ہے
Sit down بہی جُل

بہی گچھ

بہی جا

بہہ ونج

بہہ جا

بہہ جا
I will take him along اُسکی وی نال گھِنی گیساں

اُسکی وی نال گھِنی جُلساں

اوہنُوں وی نال لے ویساں/جاساں

اوہنُوں وی نال گھِن ویساں

اوہنُوں وی نال لَے جاواں گا

The imperative for gacchṇā is both gacch and gau.

Causative verbs

Pahari-Pothwari causative verbs end with -ālnā.[58] This feature also exists in the Eastern Majhi dialect. (e.g.: Vikhālṇā)

English Pahari-Pothwari Standard Punjabi Jatki
To cause to eat کھوالݨا کھواوݨا کھواوݨا
To cause to drink پیالݨا پیاوݨا پِواوݨا
To cause to bathe نہوالݨا نہواوݨا نہواوݨا
To cause to wash دھوالݨا دھواوݨا دھواوݨا
To cause to cry رووالنا رواوݨا رواوݨا
To cause to sleep سوالݨا سواوݨا سواوݨا
To cause to sit بہالݨا بہاوݨا بہاوݨا
To cause to stand اُٹھالݨا اُٹھاوݨا اُٹھاوݨا

*Notes

Not all causative verbs are formed like this, e.g. to play -kheṛṇā to khaṛāṇa,

Words used for "Taking" and "Bringing"

Commonly observed in the Lahnda dialects is the use of Ghinṇā (گھِننا)[59][60] and Aaṇnā (آننا)[61][62] instead of the Eastern Punjabi words Laiṇā (لَینا) and Lyāṇā (لیانا).

Notice how Ghin āo becomes Ghini achho, and Ghin ghidā becomes Ghini ghidā in accordance with Pothwari grammar and vocabulary.

English Pahari-Pothwari Jatki Hindko Saraiki
Shahpuri/Jhangochi Dhanni
From tomorrow onwards, I'll also bring it for you, just cope for today. کلّ سوں میں تُساں کی وی آݨی دِتّا کرساں، اجّ گُزارہ کری گھِنو کلّ توں میں تُہانُوں وی لیا دِتّا کرساں، اجّ گُزارہ کر لوو کلّ توں میں تُسانُوں وی آݨ دِتّا کریساں، اجّ گُزارہ کر گھِنو کلّ توں میں تُساں آں وی آݨ دیا کرساں، اجّ گُزارہ کر گھِنو کلّ توں میں تُہاکُوں وی آݨ ڈِتّا کریساں، اجّ گُزارہ کر گھِنو
Take him along as well. اُسکی وی نال گھِنی اچھو اوہنُوں وی نال لَے آوو اوہنُوں وی نال گھِن آوو اُساں وی نال گھِن آؤ اُوکُوں وی نال گھِن آوو
They took it from me as well اُنھاں مھاڑے کولُوں وی گھِنی گھِدا اُنھاں میرے کولُوں وی لَے لیا اُنھاں مینڈھے کولُوں وی گھِن گھِدا اُنھان مڑھے کولُوں وی گھِن گھِدا اُنھاں میڈے کولُوں وی گھِن گھِدا
He is bringing اوہ آݨنا پیا ہے اوہ لیاندا پیا ہے اوہ اݨیندا پیا ہے اوہ آݨدا پیا ہے اوہ اݨیندا پیا ہے
We will also have to bring them back اُنھاں کی واپس وی آݨنا ہوسی اُنھاں نُوں واپس وی لیاوَݨا ہوسی اُنھاں نُوں واپس وی آݨنا ہوسی اُنھاں آں واپس وی آݨنا ہوسی اُنھاں کُوں واپس وی آݨنا ہوسی
Eat it کھائی گھِن کھا لَے کھا گھِن کھا گھِن کھا گھِن
Bring it

Brought it

چائی آݨو

چائی آݨنا


چا لیاؤ

چا لیاندا


چا آݨو

چا اݨیندا


چا آݨو

چا اݨدا


چا آݨو

چا اݨیندا


Take it

Took it

چائی گھِنو

چائی گھِدا


چا لوو

چا لیا


چا گھِنو

چا گھِدا


چا گھِنو

چا گھِدا


چا گھِنو

چا گھِدا


He will take him along اوہ اِسکی نال گھِنی گیسی/ جُلسی/ جاسی اوہ ایہنُوں نال لَے ویسی

اوہ ایہنُوں لے جاسی



اوہ ایہنُوں نال گھِن ویسی اوہ اِساں نال گھِن جُلسی اوہ اِیکُوں نال گھِن ویسی

Interrogative words

English Pahari-Pothwari Jatki Standard
Why کِیاں کیوں کیوں
Where کتھے کِتھّے کِتھّے
Whither کُدھّر کِدّے کِدّھر
Who کُݨ کَوݨ کَوݨ
What? کے؟ کیہہ / کی کی / کِیہہ

Pahari-Pothwari vocabulary similarities with other Western Punjabi dialects

English Pahari-Pothwari Jatki Hindko Saraiki
Very / Much بُہو بہُوں بہُوں بہُوں
Go to sleep سئی گو سَیں ونج سَیں جُل سم ونج
Alright / Okay ہلا ہلا ہلا ہلا
Boy جاکت / جاتک جاتک / چھوہر جندک چھُوہر
What is his name? کے ناں اُسنا؟ کیہ/کے ناں اُس؟ کے ناں اُس؟ کیا ناں اُس؟
Take گھِنو لَوو (جھنگوچی/شاہپُوری)

گھِنو (دھنی)

گھِنو گھِنو
Bring آݨو لیاوو (جھنگوچی/شاہپُوری)

آنو (دھنی)

آنو آنو
He speaks like us اوہ اساں آر بولنا اے اوہ ساڈے آر بولیندا اے اوہ اساں آر بولدا اے اوہ ساڈے آر الیندا اے
Let's go آ جُلِیَے آ چلِیئے/جُلِیے آ جُلاں آ جُلُوں
Lift/Raise چاؤ چاوو چاؤ چاوو
Life حیاتی حیاتی حیاتی حیاتی

Notes

  1. ^ Baart (2003, p. 10) provides an estimate of 3.8 million, presumably for the population in Pakistan alone. Lothers & Lothers (2010, p. 9) estimate the Pakistani population at well over 2.5 million and the UK diaspora at over 0.5 million. The population in India is reported in Ethnologue (2017) to be about 1 million as of 2000.
  2. ^ There is no consensus among linguists or Pahari-Pothwari speakers in terms of its status as a dialect of Punjabi or a separate language entirely. For the difficulties in assigning the labels "language" and "dialect", see Shackle (1979) for Punjabi and Masica (1991, pp. 23–27) for Indo-Aryan generally.
  3. ^ According to Lothers & Lothers (2010, p. 2). Abbasi (2010, p. 104) adds as a fourth dialect the Poonchi spoken from Poonch to the Neelam Valley. Yet another classification is reportedly presented in Karnai (2007).
  4. ^ For example, according to the 1981 census report for Rawalpindi District, 85.1% of households had Punjabi as mother tongue. In any census, only a small number of major languages have been counted separately, and there has not been a separate option available for either Pahari or Pothwari.
  5. ^ One language activist from the diaspora in Britain "[has] said that he does not give the language a single name because those who speak the language call it many different things." (Lothers & Lothers 2012, p. 3).
  6. ^ Some, at least in the British diaspora, consider this term to be a misnomer if applied to the language. (Lothers & Lothers 2012, p. 3).
  7. ^ The similarity between wordlists containing 217 items of basic vocabulary from each location. (Lothers & Lothers 2010, pp. 15–16)

References

  1. ^ "Pahari". Oxford English Dictionary (Online ed.). Oxford University Press. (Subscription or participating institution membership required.)
  2. ^ Hussain, Qandeel (2020-12-31). "Punjabi (India and Pakistan) – Language Snapshot". Language Documentation and Description. 19: 144. doi:10.25894/ldd71.
  3. ^ Masica 1991, p. 440.
  4. ^ a b Shackle 1983, p. 183.
  5. ^ Shackle 1979, p. 201: Pothohari "is often so close to Panjabi that any attempt to maintain the Lahndi scheme ought probably to reckon it as 'Lahndi merging into Panjabi'."
  6. ^ Rahman, Tariq (1995-01-01). "The Siraiki Movement in Pakistan". Language Problems and Language Planning. 19 (1): 16. doi:10.1075/lplp.19.1.01rah. ISSN 0272-2690.
  7. ^ Lothers & Lothers 2010, p. 2.
  8. ^ Lothers & Lothers 2010, p. 86. Speakers from Muzaffarabad "consider the Mirpur dialect different enough that it is difficult to understand."
  9. ^ The alternative English spellings are from Ethnologue (2017).
  10. ^ a b c Abbasi & Asif 2010, p. 201.
  11. ^ a b Grierson 1919, p. 432.
  12. ^ John, Asher (2009). "Two dialects one region : a sociolinguistic approach to dialects as identity markers". CardinalScholar 1.0.
  13. ^ Lothers & Lothers 2010, pp. 2–3, 19, 112.
  14. ^ Shackle 1980.
  15. ^ Lothers & Lothers 2012, pp. 12, 26. At least in terms of lexical similarity..
  16. ^ Lothers & Lothers 2010, pp. 2–3, 5, 19, 100.
  17. ^ Lothers & Lothers 2010, p. 44.
  18. ^ Shackle 2007, p. 114.
  19. ^ Lothers & Lothers 2012, p. 1.
  20. ^ Hussain 2015, pp. 483–84.
  21. ^ Lothers & Lothers 2010, p. 23.
  22. ^ Lothers & Lothers 2010, pp. 2, 5.
  23. ^ a b Abbasi 2010, p. 104.
  24. ^ Hindko according to Lothers & Lothers (2010, pp. 5, 39) and Dhundi according to Grierson (1919, p. 495). Pahari is reported in both sources.
  25. ^ Lothers & Lothers 2010, pp. 40, 126–27. The speakers of Pahari in Abbottabad District regard the Hindko of the city of Abbottabad as a different language.
  26. ^ Lothers & Lothers 2010, pp. 2, 40.
  27. ^ Lothers & Lothers 2010, pp. 2, 5, 8.
  28. ^ Grierson 1919, p. 505.
  29. ^ Grierson 1919, p. 505 and corresponding map.
  30. ^ Abbasi 2010, p. 104; Abbasi & Asif 2010, pp. 201–202
  31. ^ Lothers & Lothers 2010, sec. 3.1. The varieties surveyed here are from Bagh and Muzaffarabad.
  32. ^ Lothers & Lothers 2010, p. 24. The wordlists that form the basis of this comparison are from the variety of Neela Butt.
  33. ^ Lothers & Lothers 2010, pp. 24–25.
  34. ^ Lothers & Lothers 2010, pp. 26, 80.
  35. ^ Lothers & Lothers 2010, pp. 108, 110.
  36. ^ Lothers & Lothers 2010, p. 24.
  37. ^ Lothers & Lothers 2010, p. 26; Akhtar & Rehman 2007, p. 68. The conclusion is similarly based on lexical similarity and the comparison is with the Hindko of the Kaghan Valley on one hand and with the Pahari of the Murre Hills on the other.
  38. ^ A 2000 estimate reported in Ethnologue (2017)
  39. ^ Singh 2014, p. 18; Bhat 2014, ch. 1, pp. 38, 40
  40. ^ Lists of regions and settlements are found in Bhat (2014, ch. 1, pp. 40, 43–44) and Kour (2014).
  41. ^ "The Constitution of Jammu and Kashmir" (PDF). Archived from the original (PDF) on September 3, 2014. Retrieved April 29, 2020.
  42. ^ Kaul 2006, pp. 42, 256–8.
  43. ^ Hussain 2015.
  44. ^ Nazir, Farah. "What is the name of my language?". University of Oxford: Creative Multilingualism. Retrieved 4 August 2024.
  45. ^ a b "Language, England and Wales: Census 2021". Office for National Statistics. Retrieved 4 August 2024.
  46. ^ a b c Kogan, Anton I. (2011). Potxoxari Jazyk. Tatiana I. Oranskaya and Yulia V. Mazurova and Andrej A. Kibrik and Leonid I. Kulikov and Aleksandr Y. Rusakov (eds.), Jazyki Mira: Novye Indoarijskie Jazyki: Moskva: Academia. pp. 516–527.
  47. ^ Khan, Abdul Qadir (2013). A Preliminary Study of Pahari Language and its Sound System. pp. 1–20.
  48. ^ "Lahnda Structure". Central Institute of Indian Languages. Retrieved from http://lisindia.ciil.org/Lahnda/lah_struct.html. Retrieved June 03, 2023.
  49. ^ Wilson, J. (1898). Grammar and Dictionary of Western Punjabi. Punjab Government Press. p. 50. The future tense is formed by adding to the root the letter -s with the general personal endings
  50. ^ Shah, Bulleh. "Uth jaag ghurarry mar nhen". Folk Punjab (in Punjabi). Retrieved June 3, 2023.
  51. ^ Shah, Bulleh. "اُٹھ جاگ گُھراڑے مار نہیں". Folk Punjab (in Punjabi). Retrieved June 3, 2023.
  52. ^ Wilson, J. (1898). Grammar and Dictionary of Western Punjabi. Punjab Government Press. p. 54. me venda pyā̃, me kamm pya karendā̃.
  53. ^ Bailey, Thomas Grahame (2013). Languages of the Northern Himalayas: Being Studies In The Grammar Of Twenty-Six Himalayan Dialects. Cambridge University Press.
  54. ^ Wilson, J. (1898). Grammar and Dictionary of Western Punjabi. Punjab Printing Press. the genitive postposition (of) is nā instead of dā...These characteristics are also found in the dialects spoken In the western tehsils of the Rawalpindi District as far north as Attack, and probably in the intervening tahsils of the Jehlam District
  55. ^ Wilson, J. (1898). Grammar and Dictionary of Western Punjabi. Punjab Government Press. p. 9. In the dialect of the Salt Range many nouns, and especialy monosyllables ending in a consonant, to form the absolute singular, add to the absolute form an e if masculine, and an i or u if feminine.
  56. ^ a b Tahir, Shiraz (2016). Shiraz ul Lughat. Peshawar: Gandhara Hindko Board. ISBN 978-969-687-010-4.
  57. ^ Tahir, Shiraz (2016). Shiraz ul Lughat. Peshawar: Gandhara Hindko Board. ISBN 978-969-687-010-4.
  58. ^ Salah-ud-Din, Iqbal (2002). Vaḍḍī Panjābī lughat: Panjābī tūn Panjābī. Aziz Publishers. Retrieved October 26, 2023 – via dsal.uchicago.edu. کھوالن مصدر کھواون.
  59. ^ Singh, Maya (1895). The Panjabi dictionary. Munshi Gulab Singh & Sons. Retrieved 2023-10-21 – via dsal.uchicago.edu. GHINNAṈÁ ਘਿੱਨਣਾ v. a. To take
  60. ^ Wilson, J. (1898). Grammar and Dictionary of Western Punjabi. Punjab Government Press. p. 1. Ghinn for Le (Take).
  61. ^ A. Jukes (1900). Dictionary of the Jatki or Western Panjábi Language. Lahore: Religious Book and Tract Society. p. 22. آننْڑ / Anan, v. t. To bring.
  62. ^ Salah-ud-Din, Iqbal (2002). Vaḍḍī Panjābī lughat: Panjābī tūn Panjābī. Aziz Publishers. Retrieved October 21, 2023 – via dsal.uchicago.edu.

Bibliography

Further reading

  • Karnai, Mian Karim Ullah (2007). Pahari aor Urdu: ik taqabali jaiza (in Urdu). Islamabad: National Language Authority.
  • Nazir, Farah (2014). Light Verb Constructions in Potwari (PhD). University of Manchester.