SIL International, 2012. ― 52 p. This report describes the findings of a survey of the Dhundari (ISO 639-3: dhd) and Shekhawati (ISO 639: swv) languages spoken in Rajasthan. The fieldwork was carried out during November-December 2004 and February 2005. Hindi Sentence Repetition Testing (SRT) indicated that many people, especially the uneducated and women, are probably not...
[Languages of the World/Materials, 427] München: Lincom Europa, 2004. — 85 p.
Marwari, a standard dialect of Rajasthani language of Indo-Aryan family, is spoken by about thirteen million speakers in western Rajasthan.
München: Lincom. — i+79 p. — (Languages of the World/Materials, 386.) Mewati is an Indo-Aryan language spoken by about five million speakers in the Alwar, Bharatpur and Dholpur districts of Rajasthan, Mewat districts of Haryana. It is popularly called the language of Mewat, the country of Meos.
Language Division Office of the Registrar General & Census Commissioner, India, 2011. — 476 p. Foreword. Preface. Acknowledgement. Abbreviations and Symbols. List of Maps. Introduction – Kakali Mukherjee. Marwari – Kakali Mukherjee. BrajBhasha – N.Gopalkrishnan. Malvi – S.Ganesh Baskaran. Mewati – S.P.Srivastava. Bundeli /Bundelkhandi – S.P.Ahirwal. Jaipuri – P.Edward...
Allahabad, 1898. — १५५ + 33 + 1 + 66 p. His Highness the Maharajah of Jeypore was asked last year to get a survey made of the dialects spoken in the Jeypore State. This survey was to be divided into two parts. First the Government of India wished to ascertain the number of dialects in the State, the names they were locally known by, and the number of people speaking each...
Central Institute of Indian Languages, 1979. — 244 p. — (CIIL Phonetic Reader Series 19). This book is part of the CIIL Phonetic Reader Series and focuses on the Gojri language, which is an Indo-Iranian language spoken by the semi-nomadic Gujjar tribe in Jammu & Kashmir. The reader covers various aspects related to Gojri phonology, including descriptions of sounds, phonetic...
Mysore, [1982]. — 284 p. The organisation of the Grammar is based on grammatical functions rather than on grammatical forms. This will help the new learner to find easily how the different functions, which he already knows and wants to express, are formalised in this language. Since this Grammar is primarily meant for pedagogical purposes, theoretical discussions and...
Indian Antiquary XLIII (1914): 21–26, 55–63, 84–91, 181–186, 213–216, 225–228, 245–252, XLIV (1915): 3–11, 30–36, 52–58, 74–81, 96–105, 119–126, 159–163, XLV (1916): 6–7, 93–99 [108 pp.] The language, which I have termed "Old Western Rajasthani" and propose to describe in these pages, is the immediate offspring of the Çaurasena Apabhramça and the common parent of the modern...
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