Garhwali

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Garhwali
Spoken in: Garhwal Division
Total speakers: 15,000 (2003)
Language family: Indo-European
 Indo-Iranian
  Indo-Aryan
   Northern zone
    Garhwali
Language codes
ISO 639-1: none
ISO 639-2:
ISO 639-3: gbm

The Garhwali are a people of the hilly Garhwal Division of Uttarakhand, India. The Garhwali language belongs to the Pahari (Northern) subgroup of Indo-Aryan.

Bhotiyas living in the north speak Tibeto-Burman dialects that is unintelligible to other Garwhali dialects and Tibetan. The closest language is Kumauni (or Kumaoni) to its immediate east in the Central subgroup of the Pahari chain of dialects stretching from Himachal Pradesh to Nepal. Garhwali, like Kumauni has many regional dialects spoken in different places in Uttarakhand. The Script used for Garhwali is Devanagari.

The Bangani dialect of Garhwali played a certain role in Indo-European studies in the 1980s, when Claus-Peter Zoller announced the discovery of apparent traces of a centum language in it. However, George van Driem and Suhnu Sharma later went there to do further fieldwork [1], and claim that it is in fact a satem language, and that Zoller's data were flawed. Zoller does not accept this [2][3], and claims that their data was flawed.

  • Pahari
    • Tehri/Sailani (Gangapariya) - spoken in Tehri Garhwal.
    • Jaunsari - spoken in Jaunsar-Babar area (strongly related to neighbouring Himachali dialects), only limited mutual intellegibility with the other dialects.
    • Srinagari - classical Garhwali spoken in erstwhile royal capital, similar to Pauri.
    • Badhani
    • Dessaulya
    • Lohbya
    • Majh-Kumaiya
    • Bhattiani
    • Nagpuriya
    • Rathi
    • Salani (Pauri)
    • Ravai
    • Bangani
    • Parvati - reportedly not mutually intelligible with other dialects.
    • Jaunpuri
    • Gangadi (Uttarkashi)
    • Chandpuri
  • Tibeto-Burman

Garhwali is a dialect spoken by four million Garhwali people, mostly living in the Garhwali region of a north Indian state Uttaranchal. Almost all people who can speak and understand Garhwali can speak and understand Hindi also. This is one of the dialects which is shrinking very rapidly and becoming out of fashion. Most of the educated people who live in cities hardly speak Garhwali and in most cases parents still speak and understand Garhwali but their children cannot. Although it is easy to write Garhwali in Hindi (Devnagri) script, there is hardly any literature available in Garhwali. In the last few decades there have been many singers like Narendra Singh Negi who have made people interested in Garhwali by their popular songs & videos. On an average there is one movie in four or five years in Garhwali. If you are planning to visit tourist places of this Middle Himalayan Region (Badrinath, Kedarnath, Uttarkashi, Joshimath etc.) your knowledge of Garhwali can be useful.

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