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Panjami Tamil Serial

03.08.2019
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Panjami Tamil Serial 4,0/5 3990 reviews

This is a complete list of original programmes that were broadcast on the Indian television channel Sun TV.

  • 2Previously broadcast

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Currently airing[edit]

SerialProduction CompanyOriginal AiringEpisode Count
Agni NatchathiramSun Entertaiment
Ravi Prasad Videos
27 May 2019093
Pandavar IllamSun Entertainment
VSAGA Pictures Pvt Ltd
15 July 2019051
MahalakshmiVision Time India Pvt Ltd06 March 2017729
Tamil SelviSun Entertainment
Vision Time India Pvt Ltd
03 June 2019087
MinnaleRadaan Mediaworks06 August 2018329
ChandralekhaSaregama Productions06 October 20141684
NilaSun Entertainment
Srikanth Productions Ltd
18 March 2019153
Kalyana ParisuVision Time India Pvt Ltd10 February 20141683
AzhaguVision Time India Pvt Ltd20 November 2017554
RojaSaregama Productions09 April 2018430
Kalyana VeeduThiru Pictures16 April 2018432
NayakiVikatan Televistas19 February 2018480
KanmaniSun Entertainment
Home Movie Makers
22 October 2018272
Lakshmi StoresSun Entertainment
Avni Telemedia
24 December 2018213
RunVikatan Televistas05 August 2019034
ArundhathiSun Entertainment
Bodhi Tree Productions
13 May 2019106

Previously broadcast[edit]

2000 – 2019[edit]

Serial NameFirst AiredLast AiredEpisode CountProduction Company
Pournami04 February 201912 July 2019118Vision Times India Pvt Ltd
Shirdi Sai Baba08 January 201812 July 2019502Dashami Creations
Kizhakku Vasal29 April 201912 July 201952BS Creations
Selvamagal04 February 201912 July 2019118Balaji Telefilms
Devayani30 January 201701 July 2017129Cine Lanka Creations
Ival Oru Thodarkathai03 July 201704 November 2017100
Yamuna28 November 201606 January 2018327
Bhama Rukmani09 July 201802 February 2019159
Naagini27 June 201621 January 2017187Balaji Telefilms
Vinayagar09 October 201716 March 2019432Contiloe Entertainment
Vinayagar Thiruvilaiyadal2011201254UTV
Ramayanam19 August 200822 January 2012152Sagar Arts
Magal08 October 200714 October 20111035Nimbus Television
Marudhani17 October 201126 October 2013510
Chellakilli02 December 201312 April 2014109Srikanth Entertainment Pvt. Ltd
Kitchen Galatta19 January 201527 January 2017618Sun TV Network
Agal Vilakkugal18 February 200226 December 2003491The Purple Productions
Surya08 May 200605 October 2007318Nimbus Television
Sondha Bandham03 September 201208 August 2015821UTV / Vaikhari Productions
Apoorva Raagangal10 August 201507 July 2018859The Purple Productions
Ahalya26 April 200422 September 2006616San Media Limited
Bandham25 September 200629 May 2009676
Uravugal01 June 200912 October 2012854
Bommalattam15 October 201222 October 20161150
Vidhi06 March 201720 January 2018301
Muthaaram14 November 201125 January 2014595Cine Times Entertainment
Maragatha Veenai27 January 201428 September 20171102
Nimmathi24 January 200505 January 2007601AVM Productions
Naanayam08 January 200717 August 2007176
Senior Chutties10 February 201928 July 201925SunNetwork
Sumangali6 March 201713 July 2019672Sathya Jyothi Films
Mangalyam07 January 200231 January 2003330Abhinaya Creations
Adugiran Kannan03 February 200321 January 2005426
Deerga Sumangali24 January 200508 December 2006490
Chellamadi Nee Enakku11 December 200605 September 2008700
Thirupaavai08 September 200823 April 2010425
Anupallavi26 April 201023 March 2012486
Vellai Thamarai23 January 201228 June 2013359
Devathai01 July 201320 August 2016924
Nijangal24 October 201604 March 2017171Plan V Productions
Sontham17 March 199924 March 2000276AVM Productions
Vazhkai27 March 200029 June 2001382
Nambikkai02 July 200128 February 2003463
Sorgam03 March 200302 March 2007985
Paasam05 March 200731 August 2007140
Vasantham03 September 200727 January 20121109Plan V Productions
Thyagam30 January 201230 August 2013394
Ponnunjal02 September 201322 October 2016940Vision Time India Pvt. Ltd
Appa29 May 200321 November 2003143Vikatan Televistas
Alaigal23 April 200123 May 2003568
Avargal07 January 200202 November 20071372
Azhagi10 October 201104 March 20161101
Deivamagal25 March 201317 February 20181466
Kolangal24 November 200304 December 20091533
EMI07 March 201629 July 2016109
Thendral07 December 200917 January 20151340
Thirumathi Selvam05 November 200722 March 20131360
Vanga Pesalam05 November 201718 February 201816
Priyamanaval19 January 201511 May 20191315
Savale Samali05 November 201709 December 201855SunNetwork
Hello Sago28 October 201827 January 201913Vision Time India Pvt. Ltd
Ilavarasi19 January 201001 November 20141263Radaan Mediaworks
Thamarai 03 November 201404 August 20181129
Krishna Dasi01 April 200130 April 20041107Saregama
My Dear Bootham03 May 200430 November 2007914
Athipookal03 December 200714 December 20121272
Valli17 December 201214 September 20191961
Bhuvenashwari28 April 200813 August 2010583Aniksha Productions
Pondatti Thevai16 August 201020 April 2012428Saregama
Pillai Nila23 April 201213 September 2014649
Mundhanai Mudichu26 April 201004 April 20151325Cine Times Entertainment
Keladi Kanmani06 April 201507 October 2017767
Kasthuri21 August 200631 August 20121532Balaji Telefilms
Madhavi21 December 200911 November 2011482Home Movie Makers
Uthiripookkal14 November 201104 October 2013476
Pasamalar07 October 201331 December 2016983
Ganga02 January 201707 July 2018464
Gopuram13 August 200115 August 2002325Sathya Jyothi Films
Varam18 August 200221 November 2003368
Anandham24 November 200327 February 20091297
Metti Oli08 April 200214 October 2005850Cine Times Entertainment
Muhurtham20 June 200517 October 2007584Cine Times Entertainment
Malargal17 October 200501 June 2007430
Megala04 June 200723 April 2010729
Kalyanam02 March 200907 August 2009110Sathya Jyothi Films
Idhayam10 August 200903 February 2012627
Nadhaswaram19 April 201009 May 20151356Thiru Pictures
Kula Deivam11 May 201513 April 2018897
Sendhoorapoove28 July 200814 January 2010355Radaan Mediaworks
Lakshmi24 July 200608 June 2008500Home Movie Makers
Anjali27 November 200625 April 2008358Aniksha Productions
Kalasam14 July 200826 June 2009234Vision Time India Pvt. Ltd
Thangam29 June 200925 January 2013903
Rajakumari28 January 201307 June 201394
Vamsam10 June 201318 November 20171338
Krishnadasi14 February 200025 October 2002500Vaishnavi Films Enterprises Limited
Nandini23 January 201722 December 2018604Sun Entertainment and Avni Telemedia
Maya09 July 201820 October 201887
Chithi20 December 199902 November 2001467Radaan Mediaworks
Kaveri05 November 200108 February 200299
Annamalai11 February 200221 January 2005757
Selvi24 January 200529 December 2006499
Arasi02 January 200711 September 2009685
Chellamay14 September 200918 January 2013845
Vani Rani21 January 201308 December 20181743
Chandrakumari10 December 201801 June 2019128Sun Entertainment and Radaan Mediaworks
Sun Naam Oruvar07 October 201813 January 201915Sun Entertainment and Rana Events
Namma Ooru Hero20 January 201912 May 201916Sun Entertainment, Maximum Media Ltd.

and Noise and Grains

Pattikada Pattanama2 June 201916 June 20193SunNetwork
Manaivi21 June 200424 February 2006435Home Entertainers Pvt. Ltd
Penn27 February 200624 November 2006195Aniksha Productions
Sivasakthi16 June 200818 December 2009385Home Movie Makers
Aan Paavam06 February 201215 June 201293Sathya Jyothi Films
Sirippulogam18 June 201213 July 201220SunNetwork
Andha Pathu Naatkal16 July 201227 July 201210Thiru Pictures
Karthigai Pengal30 July 201223 August 2013266
Then Nilavu26 August 201303 January 201490
10 Mani Kathaigal06 January 201430 May 2014100 (5 seasons)Thiru Pictures,Home Movie Makers
Sakthi02 June 201427 March 2015205Cine Times Entertainment
Aathira30 March 201524 June 2016313
Kudumbam24 March 199905 October 2001500Balaji Telefilms
Kelunga Maamiyarae Neengulum Merumagal Thaan08 October 200104 october 2002365
Kulavilakku06 October 200222 October 2004450
Kanavarukaga25 October 200418 August 2006414
Nijam21 August 200607 October 20111304Sun Network
Avalum Pennthaane20012003
Ambigai20012002

1990s[edit]

  • Panchami
  • Kadhal Pagadai
  • Kaiyalavu Manasu
  • Marmadesam - Ragasiyam
  • Marmadesam - Sorna Regai
  • Marmadesam - Vidathu Karuppu
  • Mangai

References[edit]

Retrieved from 'https://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=List_of_TV_shows_aired_on_Sun_TV_(India)&oldid=916354457'
Punjabi
ਪੰਜਾਬੀپن٘جابی
'Punjabi' written in Shahmukhi (top) and Gurmukhi (bottom) scripts
Pronunciation
Native toIndia, Pakistan
RegionPunjab
EthnicityPunjabis
Native speakers
120 million (2011 census – 2015)[1][2]
Indo-European
  • Indo-Iranian
    • Indo-Aryan
      • Northwestern
        • Punjabi
Dialects
  • Perso-Arabic(Shahmukhī)
  • Laṇḍā (historical)
Official status
  • India (Punjab, Haryana, Delhi, West Bengal)
  • Pakistan (Punjab)[3]
Language codes
ISO 639-1pa
ISO 639-2pan
ISO 639-3Either:
pnb – Pakistani Punjabi
pan – Indian Punjabi
Glottologpanj1256Punjabi[4]
Linguasphere59-AAF-e
Areas of the Indian Subcontinent where Punjabi is natively spoken
This article contains IPA phonetic symbols. Without proper rendering support, you may see question marks, boxes, or other symbols instead of Unicode characters. For an introductory guide on IPA symbols, see Help:IPA.
Part of a series on the
Punjabis
  • Language
Asia

Europe

North America

Eastern dialects

Western dialects


Punjab portal

Punjabi (English: /pʌnˈɑːbi/;[5]Punjabi: [pəɲˈdʒaːbi]ਪੰਜਾਬੀ / پنجابیpañjābī)[6] is an Indo-Aryan language with more than 100 million native speakers in the Indian subcontinent and around the world. It is the native language of the Punjabi people, an ethnolinguistic group of the cultural region called the Punjab, which encompasses northwest India and eastern Pakistan.

Punjabi is the most widely spoken language in Pakistan,[3] the 11th most widely spoken language in India, and the third most-spoken native language in the Indian subcontinent. It is also the fifth most-spoken native language in Canada after English, French, Mandarin and Cantonese.

Punjabi is unusual among Indo-European languages in its use of lexical tone;[7][8][9] see § Tone below for examples. The Punjabi language is written in one of two alphabets: Shahmukhi or Gurmukhi. In the Punjab, both writing systems are used (a rare occurrence called synchronic digraphia): Shahmukhi is used mainly by Punjabi Muslims, Gurmukhi by Punjabi Sikhs and Devanagari by Punjabi Hindus.[6] There are over 31 types of sub-accents in the Punjabi language.[10][full citation needed]

  • 1History
  • 2Geographic distribution
  • 3Major dialects
  • 4Phonology
  • 8Literature development
  • 9Status
    • 9.1In Pakistan
  • 10Advocacy

History[edit]

Etymology[edit]

The word Punjabi (sometimes spelled Panjabi) has been derived from the word Panj-āb, Persian for 'Five Waters', referring to the five major eastern tributaries of the Indus River. The name of the region was introduced by the Turko-Persian conquerors[11] of South Asia and was a translation of the Sanskrit name for the region, Panchanada, which means 'Land of the Five Rivers'.[12][13]Panj is cognate with Sanskritपञ्च (pañca) and Greekπέντε (pénte) 'five', and 'āb' is cognate with Sanskrit अप् (áp) and with the Av- of Avon. The historical Punjab region, now divided between India and Pakistan, is defined physiographically by the Indus River and these five tributaries. One of the five, the Beas River, is a tributary of another, the Sutlej.

Origin[edit]

Tilla Jogian, district Jehlum, Punjab, Pakistan a hilltop associated with many Nath jogis (considered among compilers of earlier Punjabi works)

Punjabi developed from Sanskrit through Prakrit languages and later Apabhraṃśa (Sanskrit: अपभ्रंश; corruption or corrupted speech)[14] From 600 BC Sanskrit gave birth to many regional languages in different parts of India. All these languages are called Prakrit (Sanskrit: प्राकृतprākṛta) collectively. Shauraseni Prakrit was one of these Prakrit languages, which was spoken in north and north-western India and Punjabi and western dialects of Hindi developed from this Prakrit. Later in northern India Shauraseni Prakrit gave rise to Shauraseni Aparbhsha, a descendant of Prakrit. Punjabi emerged as an Apabhramsha, a degenerated form of Prakrit, in the 7th century A.D. and became stable by the 10th century.[15][16][16][17][17] By the 10th century, many Nath poets were associated with earlier Punjabi works.[citation needed]

Arabic and Persian influence on Punjabi[edit]

Arabic and Persian influence in the historical Punjab region began with the late first millennium Muslim conquests on the Indian subcontinent.[18] The Persian language was introduced in the subcontinent a few centuries later by various Turko-Persian dynasties. Many Persian and Arabic words were incorporated in Punjabi.[19][20] It is noteworthy that the Hindustani language is divided into Hindi, with more Sanskritisation, and Urdu, with more Persianisation, but in Punjabi both Sanskrit and Persian words are used with a liberal approach to language. Later, it was influenced by Portuguese and English, though these influences have been minor in comparison to Persian and Arabic. However, in India, English words in the official language are more widespread than Hindi.[21]

EnglishGurmukhi-based (Punjab, India)Shahmukhi-based (Punjab, Pakistan)
Presidentਰਾਸ਼ਟਰਪਤੀ (rāshtarpatī)صدرمملکت (sadar-e mumlikat)
Articleਲੇਖ (lēkh)مضمون (mazmūn)
Prime Ministerਪਰਧਾਨ ਮੰਤਰੀ (pardhān mantarī)*وزیراعظم (wazīr-e aʿzam)
Familyਪਰਵਾਰ (parvār)*
ਟੱਬਰ (ṭabbar)
ਲਾਣਾ (lāṇā)
خاندان (kḥāndān)
ٹبّر (ṭabbar)
Philosophyਫ਼ਲਸਫ਼ਾ (falsafā)
ਦਰਸ਼ਨ (darshan)
فلسفہ (falsafā)
Capitalਰਾਜਧਾਨੀ (rājdhānī)دارالحکومت (dārul hakūmat)
Viewerਦਰਸ਼ਕ (darshak)ناظرین (nāzarīn)
Listenerਸਰੋਤਾ (sarotā)سامع (sāma')
  • Note: In more formal contexts, hypercorrectSanskritized versions of these words (ਪ੍ਰਧਾਨ pradhān for ਪਰਧਾਨ pardhān and ਪਰਿਵਾਰ parivār for ਪਰਵਾਰ parvār) may be used.

Modern times[edit]

  • Punjabi is spoken in many dialects in an area from Islamabad to Delhi. The Majhi dialect has been adopted as standard Punjabi in Pakistan and India for education, media etc. The Majhi dialect originated in the Majha region of the Punjab. The Majha region consists of several eastern districts of Pakistani Punjab and in India around Amritsar, Gurdaspur, and surrounding districts. The two most important cities in this area are Lahore and Amritsar.
  • In India technical words in Standard Punjabi are loaned from Sanskrit similarly to other major Indian languages, but it generously uses Arabic, Persian, and English words also in the official language. In India, Punjabi is written in the Gurmukhī script in offices, schools, and media. Gurmukhi is the official standard script for Punjabi, though it is often unofficially written in the Devanagari or Latin scripts due to influence from Hindi and English, India's two primary official languages at the Union-level.
  • In Pakistan, Punjabi is generally written using the Shahmukhī script, created from a modification of the Persian Nastaʿlīq script. In Pakistan, Punjabi loans technical words from Persian and Arabic languages, just like Urdu does.

Geographic distribution[edit]

Punjabi is the most widely spoken language in Pakistan, the eleventh -most widely spoken in India and spoken Punjabi diaspora in various countries.

Tamil Serial Online

Pakistan[edit]

Punjabi is the most widely spoken language in Pakistan, being the native language of 44% of its population. It is the provincial language in the Punjab Province.

Census history of Punjabi speakers in Pakistan[22]
YearPopulation of PakistanPercentagePunjabi speakers
195133,740,16757.08%22,632,905
196142,880,37856.39%28,468,282
197265,309,34056.11%43,176,004
198184,253,64448.17%40,584,980
1998132,352,27944.15%58,433,431

Beginning with the 1981 census, speakers of Saraiki and Hindko were no longer included in the total numbers for Punjabi, which could explain the apparent decrease.

India[edit]

'Jallianwala Bagh' written in Hindi, Punjabi, and English in Amritsar, India.

Punjabi is spoken as a native language, second language, or third language by about 30 million people in India. Punjabi is the official language of the Indian state of Punjab. It is additional official in Haryana and Delhi. Some of its major urban centres in northern India are Ambala, Ludhiana, Patiala, Amritsar, Chandigarh, Jalandhar, Bathinda and Delhi.

Census history of Punjabi speakers in India[23]
YearPopulation of IndiaPunjabi speakers in IndiaPercentage
1971548,159,65214,108,4432.57%
1981665,287,84919,611,1992.95%
1991838,583,98823,378,7442.79%
20011,028,610,32829,102,4772.83%

Punjabi diaspora[edit]

Signs in Punjabi (along with English and Chinese) of New Democratic Party of British Columbia, Canada during 2009 elections

Punjabi is also spoken as a minority language in several other countries where Punjabi people have emigrated in large numbers, such as the United States, Australia, the United Kingdom, and Canada, where it is the fourth-most-commonly used language.[24]There were 76 million Punjabi speakers in Pakistan in 2008,[25] 33 million in India in 2011,[26] 368,000 in Canada in 2006,[27] and smaller numbers in other countries.

Major dialects[edit]

Majhi (Standard Punjabi)[edit]

Punjabi dialects

The Majhi (ماجھی ਮਾਝੀ /'má:d͡ʒi:/) dialect spoken around Amritsar and Lahore is Punjabi's prestige dialect. Majhi is spoken in the heart of Punjab in the region of Majha, which spans Lahore, Amritsar, Gurdaspur, Kasur, Tarn Taran, Faisalabad, Nankana Sahib, Pathankot, Okara, Pakpattan, Sahiwal, Narowal, Sheikhupura, Sialkot, Chiniot, Gujranwala and Gujrat districts.

Majhi retains the nasal consonants /ŋ/ and /ɲ/, which have been superseded elsewhere by non-nasals /ɡ/ and /d͡ʒ/ respectively.[citation needed]

Shahpuri[edit]

Shahpuri dialect (also known as Sargodha dialect) is mostly spoken in Pakistani Punjab. Its name is derived from former Shahpur District (now Shahpur Tehsil, being part of Sargodha District). It is spoken throughout a widespread area, spoken in Sargodha and Khushab Districts and also spoken in neighbouring Mianwali and Bhakkar Districts. It is mainly spoken on western end of Sindh River to Chennab river crossing Jehlam river.[28]

Malwai[edit]

Malwai is spoken in the southern part of Indian Punjab and also in Bahawalnagar and Vehari districts of Pakistan. Main areas are Barnala, Ludhiana, Patiala, Ambala, Bathinda, Sangrur,[Mansa}, Malerkotla, Fazilka, Ferozepur, Moga. Malwa is the southern and central part of present-day Indian Punjab. It also includes the Punjabi speaking northern areas of Haryana, viz. Ambala, Hissar], Narnaul etc. Not to be confused with the Malvi language, which shares its name.

Doabi[edit]

Doabi is spoken in both the Indian Punjab as well as parts of Pakistan Punjab owing to post-1947 migration of Muslim populace from East Punjab. The word 'Do Aabi' means 'the land between two rivers' and this dialect was historically spoken between the rivers of the Beas and the Sutlej in the region called Doaba. Regions it is presently spoken in include the Jalandhar, Hoshiarpur and Kapurthala districts in Indian Punjab, specifically in the areas known as the Dona and Manjki, as well as the Toba Tek Singh and Faisalabad districts in Pakistan Punjab where the dialect is known as Faisalabadi Punjabi.

Puadhi[edit]

Puadh is a region of Punjab and parts of Haryana between the Satluj and Ghaggar rivers. The part lying south, south-east and east of Rupnagar adjacent to Ambala District (Haryana) is Puadhi. The Puadh extends from that part of the Rupnagar District which lies near Satluj to beyond the Ghaggar river in the east up to Kala Amb, which is at the border of the states of Himachal pradesh and Haryana. Parts of Fatehgarh Sahib district, and parts of Patiala districts like Rajpura are also part of Puadh. The Puadhi dialect is spoken over a large area in present Punjab as well as Haryana. In Punjab, Kharar, Kurali, Ropar, Nurpurbedi, Morinda, Pail, Rajpura and Samrala are areas where Puadhi is spoken and the dialect area also includes Pinjore, Kalka, Ismailabad, Pehowa to Bangar area in Fatehabad district.

Jhangochi/Changvi[edit]

Jhangochi (جھنگوچی) dialect is spoken in Pakistani Punjab throughout a widespread area, starting from Khanewal and Jhang at both ends of Ravi and Chenab to Hafizabad district.

Jangli/Rachnavi[edit]

Jangli is a dialect of former nomad tribes of areas whose names are often suffixed with 'Bar' derived from jungle bar before irrigation system arrived in the start of the 20th century, for example, Sandal Bar, Kirana Bar, Neeli Bar, Ganji Bar. Former Layllpur and western half of Montgomary district used to speak this dialect.

Chenavari[edit]

West of Chenaab river in Jhang district of Pakistani Punjab the dialect of Jhangochi merges with Thalochi and resultant dialect is Chenavari. Name is derived from Chenaab river.

Phonology[edit]

Punjabi has a distinction between peripheral vowels, /i e ɛ a ɔ o u/, which in Gurmukhi script are written as if they were long (and are thus sometimes mistakenly called 'long' vowels), and centralized vowels, /ɪ ə ʊ/, which are written as if they were short.

Vowels
FrontNear-frontCentralNear-backBack
Closeiu
Near-closeɪʊ
Close-mideo
Midə
Open-midɛɔ
Opena

The peripheral vowels have nasal analogues.

Consonants
LabialDental/
Alveolar
RetroflexPalatalVelarGlottal
Nasalmɳɲŋ
Stop/
Affricate
tenuispʈt͡ʃk
aspiratedt̪ʰʈʰt͡ʃʰ
voicedbɖd͡ʒɡ
Fricativevoicelessf ਫ਼sʃ ਸ਼(x ਖ਼)
voicedz ਜ਼(ɣ ਗ਼)
Rhoticɾ~rɽ
Approximantʋlɭ ਲ਼[29][30][31]jɦ

Tone[edit]

Punjabi is a tonal language and in any word there is a choice of three tones, high-falling, low-rising, and level (neutral):[32][33][34]

WordTransliterationToneMeaning
ਘਰkàrhigh-fallinghouse
ਕਰ੍ਹkárlow-risingdandruff
ਕਰkarleveldo
ਘੋੜਾkòṛāhigh-fallinghorse
ਕੋੜ੍ਹਾkóṛālow-risingleper
ਕੋੜਾkoṛālevelwhip

Level tone is found in about 75% of words and is described by some as absence of tone.[32] There are also some words which are said to have rising tone in the first syllable and falling in the second. (Some writers describe this as a fourth tone.)[32] However, a recent acoustic study of six Punjabi speakers in America found no evidence of a separate falling tone following a medial consonant.[35]

  • ਮੋਢਾ móḍà (rising-falling) 'shoulder'
Some Punjabi distinct tones for gh, jh, ḍh, dh, bh

It is considered that these tones arose when voiced aspirated consonants (gh, jh, ḍh, dh, bh) lost their aspiration. At the beginning of a word they became voiceless unaspirated consonants (k, c, ṭ, t, p) followed by a high-falling tone; medially or finally they became voiced unaspirated consonants (g, j, ḍ, d, b), preceded by a low-rising tone. (The development of a high-falling tone apparently did not take place in every word, but only in those which historically had a long vowel.)[34]

The presence of an [h] (although the [h] is now silent or very weakly pronounced except word-initially) word-finally (and sometimes medially) also often causes a rising tone before it, for example cá(h) 'tea'.[36]

The Gurmukhi script which was developed in the 16th century has separate letters for voiced aspirated sounds, so it is thought that the change in pronunciation of the consonants and development of tones may have taken place since that time.[34]

Some other languages in Pakistan have also been found to have tonal distinctions, including Burushaski, Gujari, Hindko, Kalami, Shina, and Torwali.[37]

Grammar[edit]

Gurmukhi alphabet including vowels

Punjabi has a canonical word order of SOV (subject–object–verb).[38] It has postpositions rather than prepositions.[39]

Punjabi distinguishes two genders, two numbers, and five cases of direct, oblique, vocative, ablative, and locative/instrumental. The ablative occurs only in the singular, in free variation with oblique case plus ablative postposition, and the locative/instrumental is usually confined to set adverbial expressions.[40]

Adjectives, when declinable, are marked for the gender, number, and case of the nouns they qualify.[41] There is also a T-V distinction.Upon the inflectionalcase is built a system of particles known as postpositions, which parallel English's prepositions. It is their use with a noun or verb that is what necessitates the noun or verb taking the oblique case, and it is with them that the locus of grammatical function or 'case-marking' then lies. The Punjabi verbal system is largely structured around a combination of aspect and tense/mood. Like the nominal system, the Punjabi verb takes a single inflectional suffix, and is often followed by successive layers of elements like auxiliary verbs and postpositions to the right of the lexical base.[42]

The grammar of the Punjabi language concerns the word order, case marking, verb conjugation, and other morphological and syntactic structures of the Punjabi language.

Writing systems[edit]

Shahmukhi alphabet
Extended Perso-Arabic script

Punjabi has two major writing systems in use: Gurmukhī, which is a Brahmic script derived from the Laṇḍā script,[43] and Shahmukhi, which is an Arabic script. The term Gurmukhī derives from the term for the followers of Sikhism attested in Sikh scriptures, Gurmukhs (literally, those with their faces (mukh) toward the Guru, as opposed to a Manmukh, or facing base desires); the script thus came to be known as Gurmukhī, 'the script of those guided by the Guru.'[44] The word Gurmukhi is often also held to mean 'from the Guru's mouth',[45] and following this precedent, Shahmukhi means 'from the King's mouth'.[46]

In the Punjab province of Pakistan, the script used is Shahmukhī and differs from the Urdu alphabet in having four additional letters.[47] In the Indian states of Punjab, Haryana and Delhi and other parts of India, the Gurmukhī script is generally used for writing Punjabi.[47] Historically, various local Brahmic scripts including Laṇḍā were also in use.[48]

Sample text[edit]

This sample text was taken from the Punjabi Wikipedia article on Lahore.

Gurmukhi:ਲਹੌਰ ਪਾਕਿਸਤਾਨੀ ਪੰਜਾਬ ਦੀ ਰਾਜਧਾਨੀ ਹੈ । ਲੋਕ ਗਿਣਤੀ ਦੇ ਨਾਲ ਕਰਾਚੀ ਤੋਂ ਬਾਅਦ ਲਹੌਰ ਦੂਜਾ ਸਭ ਤੋਂ ਵੱਡਾ ਸ਼ਹਿਰ ਹੈ । ਲਹੌਰ ਪਾਕਿਸਤਾਨ ਦਾ ਸਿਆਸੀ, ਰਹਤਲੀ ਅਤੇ ਪੜ੍ਹਾਈ ਦਾ ਗੜ੍ਹ ਹੈ ਅਤੇ ਇਸੇ ਲਈ ਇਹਨੂੰ ਪਾਕਿਸਤਾਨ ਦਾ ਦਿਲ ਵੀ ਕਿਹਾ ਜਾਂਦਾ ਹੈ । ਲਹੌਰ ਰਾਵੀ ਦਰਿਆ ਦੇ ਕੰਢੇ 'ਤੇ ਵਸਦਾ ਹੈ । ਇਸਦੀ ਲੋਕ ਗਿਣਤੀ ਇੱਕ ਕਰੋੜ ਦੇ ਨੇੜੇ ਹੈ

Shahmukhi:

لہور پاکستانی پنجاب دا دارالحکومت اے۔ لوک گنتی دے نال کراچی توں بعد لہور دوجا سبھ توں وڈا شہر اے۔ لہور پاکستان دا سیاسی، رہتلی اتے پڑھائی دا گڑھ اے اتے، اسے لئی ایھنوں پاکستان دا دل وی کیھا جاندا اے۔ لہور راوی دریا دے کنڈھے تے وسدا ۔ اسدی لوک گنتی اک کروڑ دے نیڑے اے ۔


Transliteration: lahaur pākistānī panjāb dī rājtā̀ni ài. lok giṇtī de nāḷ karācī tõ bāad lahaur dūjā sáb tõ vaḍḍā šáir ài. lahaur pākistān dā siāsī, rátalī ate paṛā̀ī dā gáṛ ài te ise laī ínū̃ pākistān dā dil vī kihā jāndā ài. lahaur rāvī dariā de káṇḍè te vasdā ài. isdī lok giṇtī ikk karoṛ de neṛe ài.

IPA:[ləɦɔːɾᵊ paːkɪst̪aːniː pənd͡ʒaːbᵊ d̪iː ɾaːd͡ʒᵊt̪àːni: ɦɛ̀ː ‖ lo:kᵊ ɡɪɳᵊt̪iː d̪e naːlᵊ kəɾaːt͡ʃiː t̪õ: baːəd̪ᵊ ləɦɔːɾᵊ d̪uːd͡ʒaː sə́bᵊ t̪õ: ʋːəɖ:aː ʃəɦɪɾ ɦɛ̀ː ‖ ləɦɔːɾᵊ paːkɪst̪aːnᵊ d̪aː sɪaːsiː ɾə́ɦt̪əliː ət̪e: pəɽàːiː d̪aː ɡə́ɽ ɦɛ̀ː ət̪e: ɪse: ləiː ɪ́ɦnū̃ paːkɪst̪aːnᵊ d̪aː d̪ɪlᵊ ʋiː kɪɦaː d͡ʒa:nd̪aː ɛ̀ː ‖ ləɦɔːɾᵊ ɾaːʋiː d̪əɾɪa: d̪e: kə́ɳɖe: t̪e: ʋəsᵊd̪iː ɛ̀ː ‖ ɪsᵊd̪iː lo:kᵊ ɡɪɳᵊt̪iː ɪkːᵊ kəɾo:ɽᵊ d̪e: ne:ɽe: ɛ̀ː ‖]

Translation: Lahore is the capital city of Pakistani Punjab. After Karachi, Lahore is the second largest city. Lahore is Pakistan's political, cultural, and educational hub, and so it is also said to be the heart of Pakistan. Lahore lies on the bank of the Ravi River. Its population is close to ten million people.

Literature development[edit]

Medieval era, Mughal and Sikh period[edit]

  • The earliest Punjabi literature is found in the fragments of writings of the 11th Nath yogis (ਨਾਥਯੋਗੀ, ناتھیوگی) Gorakshanath and Charpatnah which is primarily spiritual and mystical in tone.[citation needed]
  • Fariduddin Ganjshakar (1179-1266) is generally recognised as the first major poet of the Punjabi language.[49] Roughly from the 12th century to the 19th century, many great Sufi saints and poets preached in the Punjabi language, the most prominent being Bulleh Shah. Punjabi Sufi poetry also developed under Shah Hussain (1538–1599), Sultan Bahu (1630–1691), Shah Sharaf (1640–1724), Ali Haider (1690–1785), Waris Shah (1722–1798), Saleh Muhammad Safoori (1747-1826), Mian Muhammad Baksh (1830-1907) and Khwaja Ghulam Farid (1845-1901).
Sufi poets have enriched Punjabi literature
  • The Sikh religion originated in the 15th century in the Punjab region and Punjabi is the predominant language spoken by Sikhs.[50] Most portions of the Guru Granth Sahib use the Punjabi language written in Gurmukhi, though Punjabi is not the only language used in Sikh scriptures.
Varan Gyan Ratnavali by 16th-century historian Bhai Gurdas.

The Janamsakhis (ਜਨਮਸਾਖੀ, جنم ساکھی), stories on the life and legend of Guru Nanak (1469–1539), are early examples of Punjabi prose literature.

  • The Punjabi language is famous for its rich literature of qisse (ਕਿੱਸੇ, قصّے), most of the which are about love, passion, betrayal, sacrifice, social values and a common man's revolt against a larger system. The qissa of Heer Ranjha by Waris Shah (1706–1798) is among the most popular of Punjabi qissas. Other popular stories include Sohni Mahiwal by Fazal Shah, Mirza Sahiban by Hafiz Barkhudar (1658–1707), Sassui Punnhun by Hashim Shah (c. 1735–c. 1843), and Qissa Puran Bhagat by Qadaryar (1802–1892).[citation needed]
  • Heroic ballads known as Vaar (ਵਾਰ, وار) enjoy a rich oral tradition in Punjabi. Famous Vaars are Chandi di Var (1666–1708), Nadir Shah Di Vaar by Najabat and the Jangnama of Shah Mohammad (1780–1862).[51]
Panjami

British Raj era and post-independence period[edit]

Ghadar di Gunj 1913, newspaper in Punjabi of Ghadar Party, US-based Indian revolutionary party.

The Victorian novel, Elizabethan drama, free verse and Modernism entered Punjabi literature through the introduction of British education during the Raj. Nanak Singh (1897–1971), Vir Singh, Ishwar Nanda, Amrita Pritam (1919–2005), Puran Singh (1881–1931), Dhani Ram Chatrik (1876–1957), Diwan Singh (1897–1944) and Ustad Daman (1911–1984), Mohan Singh (1905–78) and Shareef Kunjahi are some legendary Punjabi writers of this period.After independence of Pakistan and India Najm Hossein Syed, Fakhar Zaman and Afzal Ahsan Randhawa, Shafqat Tanvir Mirza, Ahmad Salim, and Najm Hosain Syed, Munir Niazi, Pir Hadi abdul Mannan enriched Punjabi literature in Pakistan, whereas Amrita Pritam (1919–2005), Jaswant Singh Rahi (1930–1996), Shiv Kumar Batalvi (1936–1973), Surjit Patar (1944–) and Pash (1950–1988) are some of the more prominent poets and writers from India.

Status[edit]

Despite Punjabi's rich literary history, it was not until 1947 that it would be recognized as an official language. Previous governments in the area of the Punjab had favoured Persian, Hindustani, or even earlier standardised versions of local registers as the language of the court or government. After the annexation of the Sikh Empire by the British East India Company following the Second Anglo-Sikh War in 1849, the British policy of establishing a uniform language for administration was expanded into the Punjab. The British Empire employed Hindi and Urdu in its administration of North-Central and North-West India, while in the North-East of India, Bengali was used as the language of administration. Despite its lack of official sanction, the Punjabi language continued to flourish as an instrument of cultural production, with rich literary traditions continuing until modern times. The Sikh religion, with its Gurmukhi script, played a special role in standardising and providing education in the language via Gurdwaras, while writers of all religions continued to produce poetry, prose, and literature in the language.

In India, Punjabi is one of the 22 scheduled languages of India. It is the first official language of the Indian State of Punjab. Punjabi also has second language official status in Delhi along with Urdu, and in Haryana. In Pakistan, no regional ethnic language has been granted official status at the national level, and as such Punjabi is not an official language at the national level, even though it is the most spoken language in Pakistan after Urdu, the national language of Pakistan. It is, however, the official provincial language of Punjab, Pakistan, the second largest and the most populous province of Pakistan as well as in Islamabad Capital Territory. The only two official national languages in Pakistan are Urdu and English, which are considered the lingua francas of Pakistan.

In Pakistan[edit]

When Pakistan was created in 1947, although Punjabi was the majority language in West Pakistan and Bengali the majority in East Pakistan and Pakistan as whole, English and Urdu were chosen as the national languages. The selection of Urdu was due to its association with South Asian Muslim nationalism and because the leaders of the new nation wanted a unifying national language instead of promoting one ethnic group's language over another. Broadcasting in Punjabi language by Pakistan Broadcasting Corporation decreased on TV and radio after 1947. Article 251 of the Constitution of Pakistan declares that these two languages would be the only official languages at the national level, while provincial governments would be allowed to make provisions for the use of other languages.[52] However, in the 1950s the constitution was amended to include the Bengali language. Eventually, Punjabi was granted status as a provincial language in Punjab Province, while the Sindhi language was given official status in 1972 after 1972 Language violence in Sindh.

Despite gaining official recognition at the provincial level, Punjabi is not a language of instruction for primary or secondary school students in Punjab Province (unlike Sindhi and Pashto in other provinces).[53] Pupils in secondary schools can choose the language as an elective, while Punjabi instruction or study remains rare in higher education. One notable example is the teaching of Punjabi language and literature by the University of the Punjab in Lahore which began in 1970 with the establishment of its Punjabi Department.[54][55]

In the cultural sphere, there are many books, plays, and songs being written or produced in the Punjabi-language in Pakistan. Until the 1970s, there were a large number of Punjabi-language films being produced by the Lollywood film industry, however since then Urdu has become a much more dominant language in film production. Additionally, television channels in Punjab Province (centred on the Lahore area) are broadcast in Urdu. The preeminence of Urdu in both broadcasting and the Lollywood film industry is seen by critics as being detrimental to the health of the language.[56][57]

Language demands in Punjab province[edit]

A demonstration by Punjabis at Lahore, Pakistan, demanding to make Punjabi as official language of instruction in schools of the Punjab.

The use of Urdu and English as the near exclusive languages of broadcasting, the public sector, and formal education have led some to fear that Punjabi in Pakistan is being relegated to a low-status language and that it is being denied an environment where it can flourish. Several prominent educational leaders, researchers, and social commentators have echoed the opinion that the intentional promotion of Urdu and the continued denial of any official sanction or recognition of the Punjabi language amounts to a process of 'Urdu-isation' that is detrimental to the health of the Punjabi language[58][59][60] In August 2015, the Pakistan Academy of Letters, International Writer’s Council (IWC) and World Punjabi Congress (WPC) organised the Khawaja Farid Conference and demanded that a Punjabi-language university should be established in Lahore and that Punjabi language should be declared as the medium of instruction at the primary level.[61][62] In September 2015, a case was filed in Supreme Court of Pakistan against Government of Punjab, Pakistan as it did not take any step to implement the Punjabi language in the province.[63][64] Additionally, several thousand Punjabis gather in Lahore every year on International Mother Language Day.

Hafiz Saeed, chief of Jama'at-ud-Da'wah (JuD) has questioned Pakistan's decision to adopt Urdu as its national language in a country where majority of people speak Punjabi language, citing his interpretation of Islamic doctrine as encouraging education in the mother-tongue.[65] The list of thinktanks, political organisations, cultural projects, and individuals that demand authorities at the national and provincial level to promote the use of the language in the public and official spheres includes:

  • Cultural and research institutes: Punjabi Adabi Board, the Khoj Garh Research Centre, Punjabi Prachar, Institute for Peace and Secular Studies, Adbi Sangat, Khaaksaar Tehreek, Saanjh, Maan Boli Research Centre, Punjabi Sangat Pakistan, Punjabi Markaz, Sver International
  • Trade unions and youth groups: Punjabi Writers Forum, National Students Federation, Punjabi Union-Pakistan, Punjabi National Conference, National Youth Forum, Punjabi Writers Forum, National Students Federation, Punjabi Union, Pakistan, and the Punjabi National Conference.
  • Notable activists include Tariq Jatala, Farhad Iqbal, Diep Saeeda, Khalil Ojla, Tajammul Kaleem, Afzal Sahir, Jamil Ahmad Paul, Mazhar Tirmazi, Mushtaq Sufi, Biya Je, Tohid Ahmad Chattha and Bilal Shaker Kahaloon, Nazeer Kahut[66][67][68]

In India[edit]

At the federal level, Punjabi has official status via the Eighth Schedule to the Indian Constitution,[69] earned after the Punjabi Suba movement of the 1950s.[70] At the state level, Punjabi is the sole official language of the state of Punjab, while it has secondary official status in the states of Haryana and Delhi.[71]

Both federal and state laws specify the use of Punjabi in the field of education. The state of Punjab uses the Three Language Formula, and Punjabi is required to be either the medium of instruction, or one of the three languages learnt in all schools in Punjab.[72] Punjabi is also a compulsory language in Haryana,[73] and other states with a significant Punjabi speaking minority are required to offer Punjabi medium education.[dubious]

There are vibrant Punjabi language movie and news industries in India, however Punjabi serials have had a much smaller presence within the last few decades in television due to market forces.[74] Despite Punjabi having far greater official recognition in India, 'where the Punjabi language is officially admitted in all necessary social functions, while in Pakistan it is used only in a few radio and TV programs,' attitudes of the English-educated elite towards the language are ambivalent as they are in neighboring Pakistan.[69]:37 There are also claims of state apathy towards the language in non-Punjabi majority areas like Haryana and Delhi.[75][76][77]

Advocacy[edit]

  • Punjabi University, It was established on 30 April 1962, and is only the second university in the world to be named after a language, after Hebrew University of Jerusalem. The Research Centre for Punjabi Language Technology, Punjabi University, Patiala.[78] It is working for development of core technologies for Punjabi, Digitisation of basic materials, online Punjabi teaching, developing software for office use in Punjabi, provinding common platform to Punjabi cyber community.[79]Punjabipedia, an online encyclopaedia was also launched by Patiala university in 2014.[80][81]
  • The Dhahan Prize was created award literary works produced in Punjabi around the world. The Prize encourages new writing by awarding $25,000 CDN annually to one 'best book of fiction' published in either of the two Punjabi scripts, Gurmukhi or Shahmukhi. Two second prizes of $5,000 CDN are also awarded, with the provision that both scripts are represented among the three winners. The Dhahan Prize is awarded by Canada India Education Society (CIES).[82]

Governmental academies and institutes[edit]

The Punjabi Sahit academy, Ludhiana, established in 1954[83][84] is supported by the Punjab state government and works exclusively for promotion of the Punjabi language, as does the Punjabi academy in Delhi.[85] The Jammu and Kashmir academy of art, culture and literature[86] in Jammu and Kashmir, India works for Punjabi and other regional languages like Urdu, Dogri, Gojri etc. Institutions in neighboring states[87] as well as in Lahore, Pakistan[88] also advocate for the language.

  • Punjabi Sahit academy, Ludhiana,1954

  • Punjabi academy, Delhi,1981-1982

  • Jammu and Kashmir academy of art, culture and literature

  • Pilac(Punjab Institute of Language, Art and Culture, Lahore,2004

Software[edit]

  • Software are available for Punjabi language for almost all platforms. These software are mainly in Gurmukhi script. Nowadays, nearly all Punjabi newspapers, magazines, journals, and periodicals are composed on computers via various Punjabi software programmes, the most widespread of which is InPage Desktop Publishing package. Microsoft has included Punjabi language support in all new versions of Windows and both Windows Vista, Mircrsoft Office 2007, 2010 and 2013, are available in Punjabi through the Language Interface Pack[89] support. Most Linux Desktop distributions allow the easy installation of Punjabi support and translations as well.[90]Apple implemented the Punjabi language keyboard across Mobile devices.[91]Google also provides many applications in Punjabi, like Google Search,[92] Google Translate[93] and Google Punjabi Input Tools.[94]

Gallery[edit]

  • Guru Granth Sahib in Gurmukhi

  • Punjabi Gurmukhi script

  • Punjabi Shahmukhi script

  • Bhulay Shah poetry in Punjabi (Shahmukhi script)

  • Munir Niazi poetry in Punjabi (Shahmukhi script)

  • Gurmukhi alphabet

  • A sign board in Punjabi language along with Hindi at Hanumangarh, Rajasthan, India

See also[edit]

Notes[edit]

  1. ^Punjabi language at Ethnologue (21st ed., 2018)
  2. ^Office of the Registrar General & Census Commissioner, India. Statement 1: Abstract of speakers' strength of languages and mother tongues - 2011. Retrieved 19 March 2019. Full report available at http://censusindia.gov.in/2011Census/Language_MTs.html
  3. ^ ab'Pakistan Census'. Census.gov.pk. Archived from the original on 12 September 2011. Retrieved 4 January 2014.Cite uses deprecated parameter deadurl= (help)
  4. ^Hammarström, Harald; Forkel, Robert; Haspelmath, Martin, eds. (2017). 'Eastern Panjabi'. Glottolog 3.0. Jena, Germany: Max Planck Institute for the Science of Human History.
  5. ^Laurie Bauer, 2007, The Linguistics Student's Handbook, Edinburgh
  6. ^ abKachru, Braj B.; Kachru, Yamuna; Sridhar, S. N. (27 March 2008). Language in South Asia. Cambridge University Press. p. 128. ISBN978-1-139-46550-2. Archived from the original on 10 June 2016. Retrieved 24 October 2014. Sikhs often write Punjabi in Gurmukhi, Hindus in Devanagari, and Muslims in Perso-Arabic.Cite uses deprecated parameter deadurl= (help)
  7. ^Bhatia, Tej (1999). 'Lexican Anaphors and Pronouns in Punjabi'. In Lust, Barbara; Gair, James (eds.). Lexical Anaphors and Pronouns in Selected South Asian Languages. Walter de Gruyter. p. 637. ISBN978-3-11-014388-1. Other tonal Indo-Aryan languages include Lahnda and Western Pahari.
  8. ^Phonemic Inventory of PunjabiArchived 16 July 2015 at the Wayback Machine[failed verification]
  9. ^Geeti Sen. Crossing Boundaries. Orient Blackswan, 1997. ISBN978-81-250-1341-9. Page 132. Quote: 'Possibly, Punjabi is the only major South Asian language that has this kind of tonal character. There does seem to have been some speculation among scholars about the possible origin of Punjabi's tone-language character but without any final and convincing answer...'
  10. ^Sub accents in Punjabi language in both Indian and Pakistani Punjab
  11. ^Canfield, Robert L. (1991). Persia in Historical Perspective. Cambridge, United Kingdom: Cambridge University Press. p. 1 ('Origins'). ISBN978-0-521-52291-5.
  12. ^Sir, Yule, Henry, (13 August 2018). 'Hobson-Jobson: A glossary of Colloquial Anglo-Indian Words and Phrases, and of Kindred Terms, Etymological, Historical, Geographical and Discursive'. dsalsrv02.uchicago.edu.CS1 maint: extra punctuation (link)
  13. ^Macdonell, Arthur Anthony (13 August 2018). 'A Practical Sanskrit Dictionary with Transliteration, Accentuation, and Etymological Analysis Throughout'.
  14. ^.https://books.google.com/books?id=gqIbJz7vMn0C&pg=PA166&dq=punjabi+prakrit+language&hl=en&sa=X&ved=0ahUKEwie9PGZnrzQAhXMtI8KHay-AfwQ6AEIKTAD#v=onepage&q=punjabi%20prakrit%20language&f=falseArchived 21 January 2017 at the Wayback Machine
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  16. ^ abNational Communication and Language Policy in India By Baldev Raj Nayar. Published by F. A. Praeger, 1969. Page 35. '...Sauraseni Aprabhramsa from which have emerged the modern Western Hindi and Punjabi.'
  17. ^ abThe Sauraseni Prākrit LanguageArchived 23 September 2008 at the Wayback Machine. 'This Middle Indic language originated in Mathura, and was the main language used in drama in Northern India in the mediaeval era. Two of its descendants are Hindi and Punjabi.'
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  19. ^Mir, F. (2010). The Social Space of Language: Vernacular Culture in British Colonial Punjab. University of California Press. p. 35. ISBN9780520262690. Archived from the original on 9 February 2018. Retrieved 13 January 2017.Cite uses deprecated parameter deadurl= (help)
  20. ^Schiffman, H. (2011). Language Policy and Language Conflict in Afghanistan and Its Neighbors: The Changing Politics of Language Choice. Brill. p. 314. ISBN9789004201453. Archived from the original on 9 February 2018. Retrieved 13 January 2017.Cite uses deprecated parameter deadurl= (help)
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  22. ^'Archived copy'. Archived from the original on 26 September 2009. Retrieved 17 September 2009.Cite uses deprecated parameter deadurl= (help)CS1 maint: archived copy as title (link)
  23. ^'Growth of Scheduled Languages-1971, 1981, 1991 and 2001'. Census of India. Ministry of Home Affairs, Government of India. Archived from the original on 20 February 2015. Retrieved 22 February 2015.Cite uses deprecated parameter deadurl= (help)
  24. ^'Punjabi is 4th most spoken language in Canada'. The Times of India. 14 February 2008. Archived from the original on 14 November 2016.Cite uses deprecated parameter deadurl= (help)
  25. ^Pakistan 1998 census – Population by mother tongueArchived 17 February 2006 at the Wayback Machine
  26. ^'Indian Census'. Censusindia.gov.in. Archived from the original on 6 February 2012. Retrieved 4 January 2014.Cite uses deprecated parameter deadurl= (help)
  27. ^'Population by mother tongue in Canada'. 0.statcan.gc.ca. 13 February 2013. Archived from the original on 14 January 2011. Retrieved 4 January 2014.Cite uses deprecated parameter deadurl= (help)
  28. ^'The Art and Culture of the Diaspora Mother Tongue: The Many Dialects of Punjabi'. Sikhchic.com. Retrieved 2 February 2016.
  29. ^Masica (1991:97)
  30. ^Arora, K. K.; Arora, S.; Singla, S. R.; Agrawal, S. S. (2007). 'SAMPA for Hindi and Punjabi based on their Acoustic and Phonetic Characteristics'. Proceedings Oriental COCOSDA: 4–6.
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  32. ^ abcBailey, T.Grahame (1919), English-Punjabi Dictionary, introduction.
  33. ^Singh, Sukhvindar, 'Tone Rules and Tone Sandhi in Punjabi'.
  34. ^ abcBowden, A.L. (2012). 'Punjabi Tonemics and the Gurmukhi Script: A Preliminary Study'.
  35. ^Kanwal, J.; Ritchart, A.V (2015) 'An experimental investigation of tonogenesis in Punjabi'. Proceedings of the 18th International of Phonetic Sciences, 2015
  36. ^Lata, Swaran; Arora, Swati (2013) 'Laryngeal Tonal characteristics of Punjabi: An Experimental Study'
  37. ^Baart, J.L.G. 'Tonal features in languages of northern Pakistan'
  38. ^Gill, Harjeet Singh and Gleason Jr, Henry A. (1969). A Reference Grammar of Panjabi. Patiala: Department of Linguistics, Punjabi University
  39. ^Wals.info
  40. ^Shackle (2003:599)
  41. ^Shackle (2003:601)
  42. ^Masica (1991:257)
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  44. ^George Cardona and Danesh Jain (2003), The Indo-Aryan Languages, Routledge, ISBN978-0415772945, page 594
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  46. ^Saini, Tejinder, Lehal Gurpreet, and Kalra Virinder (2008). Shahmukhi to Gurmukhi Transliteration System. p. 177.
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References[edit]

  • Grierson, George A. 1904–1928. Grierson's Linguistic Survey of India. Calcutta.
  • Masica, Colin (1991), The Indo-Aryan Languages, Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, ISBN978-0-521-29944-2.
  • Shackle, Christopher (2003), 'Panjabi', in Cardona, George; Jain, Dhanesh (eds.), The Indo-Aryan Languages, Routledge, pp. 581–621, ISBN978-0-415-77294-5.

Further reading[edit]

  • Bhatia, Tej. 1993 and 2010. Punjabi : a cognitive-descriptive grammar. London: Routledge. Series: Descriptive grammars.
  • Gill H.S. [Harjit Singh] and Gleason, H.A. 1969. A reference grammar of Punjabi. Revised edition. Patiala, Punjab, India: Languages Department, Punjab University.
  • Chopra, R. M., Perso-Arabic Words in Punjabi, in: Indo-Iranica Vol.53 (1–4).
  • Chopra, R. M.., The Legacy of The Punjab, 1997, Punjabee Bradree, Calcutta.
  • Singh, Chander Shekhar (2004). Punjabi Prosody: The Old Tradition and The New Paradigm. Sri Lanka: Polgasowita: Sikuru Prakasakayo.
  • Singh, Chander Shekhar (2014). Punjabi Intonation: An Experimental Study. Muenchen: LINCOM EUROPA.

External links[edit]

Wikibooks has a book on the topic of: Punjabi
Wikimedia Commons has media related to Punjabi language.
Eastern Punjabi edition of Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Western Punjabi edition of Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
  • Punjabi language at Curlie
  • Punjabi language at Encyclopædia Britannica


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