Proto-South Dravidian language: Difference between revisions

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|ancestor=[[Proto-Dravidian]]
|ancestor=[[Proto-Dravidian]]
|target=[[South Dravidian languages]]
|target=[[South Dravidian languages]]
|era=ca. 2nd-1st m. BCE
|era=ca. 3rd-2nd m. BCE
|region=[[South India]]
|region=[[South India]]
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Revision as of 14:33, 23 April 2024

Proto-South Dravidian
Proto-South Dravidian I
Reconstruction ofSouth Dravidian languages
RegionSouth India
Eraca. 3rd-2nd m. BCE
Reconstructed
ancestor

Proto-South Dravidian is the linguistic reconstruction of the common ancestor of the southern Dravidian languages native to southern India.[1][2] Its descendants include Tamil, Kannada, Malayalam, Tulu, Badaga, Kodava, Irula, Kota and Toda.

South Dravidian is sometimes referred to as South Dravidian I by linguists.[3] Going by attested changes in written documents, the Proto-South Dravidian I (PSD1) language has been hypothesised to have been present in the second half of the first millennium BC.[3] Some linguists infer it to have split from Proto-South Dravidian II (Also know as South Central Dravidian or Telugu-Kui) at the beginning of the first millennium BC.[3] These datings however, have been noted to be vague approximations.[3]

Old Indo-Aryan loans in Proto-South Dravidian

The following Old Indo-Aryan loan words into Proto-South Dravidian have been proposed by linguist Franklin Southworth. The word *accu (axle) was hypothesised to have been loaned into Proto-Dravidian from Rig Vedic akṣa.[4]

Proto-South Dravidian reconstruction Meaning Old Indo-Aryan
*arank stage, platform, veranda ranga
*arac-an king rājan
*argaḷ bar, cross bar argala
*āṇi nail āṇi
*kañc bell metal kamśa
*kaṭṭ stick kāṣṭha
*kump-at gourd, pumpkin kumbha-phala, kumbhanda
*paṇ-i comb phaṇaga, (Marathi phaṇi)
*paṇṭi cart, wagon bhāṇḍa
*pōy member of a spec. tribe/caste, headman bhōgin
*may-aṇ wax madana, mayana, (Marathi men)

Other early borrowings

The following words are attested in both Proto-South Dravidian and Vedic Sanskrit (circa 1400 BC), with uncertainty of which direction the borrowing was from. The Rig Vedic ulukhala (mortar) is proposed to be cognate with PSD *ul-akk ‘pestle’, while Rig Vedic nīla (blue) is proposed to be cognate with PSD *aṇile (ink nut tree).[4]

Other words in the Shatapatha Brahmana (circa 700 BC) include arka (the plant Calatropis gigantea) cognate with PSD *erukku and muñja (‘the grass Saccharum Sara) cognate with PSD *muñci.[4]

References

  1. ^ Krishnamurti, Bhadriraju (2003). The Dravidian Languages. Cambridge University Press. ISBN 978-1-139-43533-8.
  2. ^ Andronov, Mikhail Sergeevich (2003), A Comparative Grammar of the Dravidian Languages, Otto Harrassowitz, p. 299, ISBN 978-3-447-04455-4.
  3. ^ a b c d Southworth, Franklin (2004), Linguistic archaeology of South Asia, Routledge, p. 50-51, ISBN 9780415655446.
  4. ^ a b c Southworth, Franklin (2004), Linguistic archaeology of South Asia, Routledge, p. 79-82, ISBN 9780415655446