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Sunuwar, Sunuwar, or Kõinch (कोँइच; kõich; other spellings are Koinch and Koincha), is a Kiranti language spoken in Nepal and India by the Sunuwar people. It was first comprehensively attested by the Himalayan Languages Project. It is also known as Kõits Lo (कोँइच लो ; kõica lo), Kiranti-Kõits (किराँती-कोँइच ; kirā̃tī-kõich), Mukhiya (मुखिया ; mukhiyā).[2][3]

Sunuwar
सुनुवार, कोँइच, किराँती-कोँइच, मुखिया
'Kõica' in Jenticha script; 'Sunuwar' in Tikamuli and Devanagari script
RegionNepal;
India (Sikkim and West Bengal)
EthnicitySunuwar
Native speakers
37,898 (2011)[1]
Language family
Sino-Tibetan
Dialects
  • Surel
Writing system
Devanagari
Sunuwar (Sikkim, India)
Tikamuli (2005)
Official status
Official language in
 India
Language codes
ISO 639-3suz
Glottologsunw1242
ELP
Sunwar greeting

The Sunwar language is one of the smaller members of the Tibeto-Burman language family. About 40,000 speakers are residing in eastern Nepal.


Names


The language is commonly known as Koic, for many ethnic Sunwar and Sunwar speakers also refer to the language as “Sunuwar, Kõinch[4] , Koinch or Koincha (कोँइच); Kõits Lo (कोँइच लो), Kiranti-Kõits (किराँती-कोँइच) or Mukhiya (मुखिया).”

Moreover, most Sunwar speakers have the surname (सुनुवार), Sunuvār in Latin script.[5] Many affiliated Sunwar with Sunar; they share the initial syllable, sun, “gold,” in Nepali, similar to the Sunar community of India, who are goldsmiths. However, the ethnonym Sunuvār is believed to be connected with Sunkosi, a river nearby the Sunwar villages.


Geographic distribution


Small groups of Sunwar speakers located in Nepal
Small groups of Sunwar speakers located in Nepal
Likhu Khola river
Likhu Khola river

The Sunwar language is commonly spoken in a cluster of Sunwar villages, located around the region of the core spoken language. These villages are scattered alongside the river banks of Likhu Khola, in two bordering central-eastern districts of Nepal, distant from the main Nepalese road system:[5] in the Okhaldhū۠ngā District (part of Province No. 1), around the village of Vacul; and in the Rāmechāp District (part of Bagmati Province), around the villages of Pahare and of Kũbhu Kãsthālī for a smaller group of Sunwar speakers. The majority of the Sunwar speakers live on the southern border area of this region, between the villages of Pahare and Vacul.

Located 1,800 meters above sea level, their fields aren’t all fallow from year round cultivation[5] (Borchers, 2008). Therefore, many Sunwar households are farmers, own a small lot of land and livestock. Moreover, each village often visits their neighboring village markets to purchase inaccessible goods such as spices, sugar, tea, and salt. In the winter, they experience no snow but freezing temperatures. In warmer weather, they experience a lot of rainfall, in the summer, monsoon rainfall. Especially between June and August, it is when they experience the most rain, more so monsoon rainfall.

According to Borchers, there are other villages located outside of the core region. The Surel are claimed to be Sunwar speakers however there are no certainties that it is true.


Written language



Sunuwar (or Jenticha, Koĩts, Mukhiya) native alphabet in Sikkim, India


Sunuwar speakers from Sikkim, northeastern India, use the Sunuwar alphabet (ISO 15924 script code: Sunu) for printed materials such as newspapers and literature. The alphabet, also known as Jenticha alphabet, Sunuwar Lipi, Koĩts Lipi or Mukhiya script, or जेँःतिच ब्रेःसे (jẽtica brese), was developed in 1942 by Karna Bahadur Sunuwar (1926-1991), and got official recognition in Sikkim and Eastern Nepal where it is taught in schools. The Sunuwar or Jenticha script, is unrelated to any other scripts (even if some letter shapes have some resemblance to Latin and Limbu letter forms with similar phonetic value), and behaves like an alphabet with 35 base letters, written left-to-right, with syllabic features, extended with combining diacritics. The script also features its own set of decimal digits.

Unlike other Indic scripts derived from Brahmic, the Sunuwar alphabet includes no combining vowel signs: the script was initially a pure alphabet and the base consonants initially did not have any inherent vowel. But a second version of the script modified the orthographic rules to imply its presence, where the inherent vowel would be altered when appending any independent vowel letters, or suppressed by using a virama (or halant) sign in some consonant clusters or for consonants in final position of syllables. The independent letter form for the inherent vowel is now removed in most cases from the normal orthography in the middle of words, only used in isolation (i.e. no longer written when following a leading consonant, unless it is at end of words). A number of glyphic forms (conjuncts using consonants in half forms) were added to the script after this orthographic change for more easily writing consonant clusters, instead of writing multiple consonants with virama signs.[2][6]


Devanagari-based abugida for the Sunwar language in Nepal


Although Sunwar has no traditional written language in Nepal, most literate speakers use the Devanagari abugida,[5][4] also used for writing Nepali.

Independent vowels and diphthongs
a ā i u e o
[ə] [aː] [i] [u] [e] [o]
एउ उइ ओइ
ai au eu ui oi
[ai] [au] [eu] [ui] [oi]
Consonants with inherent vowel
अ्
ka kha ga nga ca ja ṭa ṭha
[kə] [kʰə] [ɡə] [ŋə] [ʔ] [t͡ʃə] [d͡ʒə] [ʈə] [ʈʰə]
द/ड न/ण
ta tha da na pa pha ba ma ya
[tə] [tʰə] [də] [nə] [pə] [pʰə] [bə] [mə] [jə]
/ व्ही/ह्व
ra la va sha sa ha hha
[rə] [lə] [və] [ʃə] [sə] [hə] [ɦə]
Combining diacritics
The sign , known in Sunwar as sangmilu, represents a virama or halant; it is used to silent the inherent vowel after the consonant.[7]
The sign , known in Sunwar as taslathenk, corresponds to the candrabindu in Devanagari; it is used to nasalize the vowel.[7]
sangmilu (virama or halant) taslathenk (cadrabindu)
mutes the inherent vowel indicates nasalization of the vowel

Tikamuli native abugida (since 2005)


In 2005, another syllabic alphabet or abugida was developed for Sunuwar; it is known as Tikamuli.[8]


Phonology


Sunwar phonology is significantly influenced by the language of Nepali.


Consonants


The Sunwar language has a mid-sized arrangement of thirty-two consonantal phonemes:

Labial Dental Alveolar Retroflex Palatal Velar Glottal
Nasal m m n n ŋ
Plosive voiceless p p t ʈ c c k k ʔ ʔ
aspirated ~ɸ ph t̪ʰ th ʈʰ ṭh ( ch) kh
voiced b b d (ɖ ) ɟ j ɡ g
breathy ( bh) (d̪ʱ dh) (ɖʱ ḍh) (ɟʱ jh) (ɡʱ gh)
implosive w~b ɓ
Fricative sibilant s s ʃ ʃ
plain [ç] [x] h h
Approximant w~ w l [ɭ] j y
Tap ɾ r

Vowels


According to Borchers,[5] there are eleven vowel phonemes in Sunwar:

a [a~ɑ], /ā / [aː], /e/ [e~ɛ], /i/ [i], /o/ [o], /u/ [u], / ū/ [uː~y], /ã/ [ã~ɑ̃], /ã̄/ [ãː], /ẽ/ [ẽ~ɛ̃], /ĩ/ [ĩ]

Front Central Back
High /i/ [i], /ū/ [y]
/ĩ/ [ĩ]
/ū/ [uː~y], /u/ [u]
(ũ)
Mid /e/ [e~ɛ]
/ẽ/ [ẽ~ɛ̃]
/o/ [o]
(õ)
Low /a/ [a~ɑ], /ā / [aː]
/ã/ [ã~ɑ̃], /ã̄/ [ãː]

Diphthongs


There are a total of eight diphthongs in Sunwar: /ai/ [aɪ], /aĩ/ [aɪ̃], /au/ [au], /eu/ [eu], /oi/ [oi], /oĩ/ [oĩ], /ui/ [ui], /uĩ/ [uĩ]

According to Borchers,[5] a principled way to distinguish diphthongs from a sequence of two monophthongs does not exist in the Sunwar language.

As exemplified by Borchers,[5] this table consists of examples of contrasts between diphthongs:

/joi/ [ɟoi] ‘tiger’
/joĩ/ [ɟoĩ] ‘younger sister’s husband’
/muicā/ [muicaː] ‘wear shoes’
/puĩcā/ [puĩcaː] ‘ask for, beg’
/goi/ [ɡoi] ‘you’
/gui/ [ɡui] ‘hand’
/reu/ [ɾeu] ‘rain’
/roi/ [ɾoi] ‘ill’

Syllable structure


Syllable Structure of Sunwar: C(C)V(V)(C)(C)


Morphology



Markers



Case-marking suffixes

According to Borchers,[5] “all case markers in the Sunwar language are suffixes.”

As exemplified by Borchers,[5] this table consists of the noun case markers.

Morpheme: Gloss: Marks: Occurs suffixed to denotions of:
-mī ~  

-amī ~-ī

m ~ -m

INS/L  

OC

agents, instruments, locations persons,

things,

locations

-kali ~  

-kal

OBJ patients persons,

animals

-ke POSS possessions of animate beings persons,

animals

-ṅā GEN belongings of inanimate items        things,

locations

-lā/-le FROM place of departure of persons or items that changed places (ABL); time of begin of action locations,

time

-re FROM place of departure of persons or items that changed places (ABL); time of begin of action locations,

time

-au VOC name of person called persons

Dual marker

A dual marker can be associated with dual/pair or the cardinal number ‘two’.[5]

Morpheme: -niʃi
Gloss: Dual (DU)

Example of dual marker by Borchers:[5]

iciṅā

Now

āl.niʃi

child.DU

chan

exist-NPT.3p

iciṅā āl.niʃi chan

Now child.DU exist-NPT.3p

Now I have two children.


Plural marker

In the Sunwar language, both nouns and pronouns can be marked as dual or plural.

In addition items in a group can be marked plural.[5]

Morpheme: -paki ~ -puki ~ -piki
Gloss: Plural (PL)

Examples of the plural marker used to point at items in a group by Borchers:[5]

pujā

worship

dum

happen

pachi

after

rãga

buffalo

po.paki

pig.PL

sai.ni.mī

kill.NPT-23d/-p3.p/Svi

pujā dum pachi rãga po.paki sai.ni.mī

worship happen after buffalo pig.PL kill.NPT-23d/-p3.p/Svi

After worship, they kill the buffalo, pig and so on.

sāg.paki

sāg.PL

acā.paki

pickle.PL

ho.ʃa.ṅāmin

keep.PF.then

ʃam

beer

cai

SNG

thupro

much

dum.ba

happen.NPT+3s

thupro

much

tu.ni.miิ

drink.NPT-23d/-p.3p/Svi

sāg.paki acā.paki ho.ʃa.ṅāmin ʃam cai thupro dum.ba thupro tu.ni.miิ

sāg.PL pickle.PL keep.PF.then beer SNG much happen.NPT+3s much drink.NPT-23d/-p.3p/Svi

Having stored away sāg (green leafy vegetable) and so on and pickle and so on and, there has to be much beer, they drink a lot. Unknown glossing abbreviation(s) (help);


Absent marker

According to Borchers,[5] the Sunwar language does not have a zero morpheme, but it can still indicate the number amount of something through verbal agreement markers or numerals.

Example of the absent marker by Borchers:[5]

go

I

khame

rice

jāʔi.na.sku

eat.NPT-1d.1d

go khame jāʔi.na.sku

I rice eat.NPT-1d.1d

Wed eat rice.


Suffixes



Possessive suffix: -ke (Animate Agent)

According to Borchers,[5] the possessive suffix -ke is attached to a human or animate agent to indicate a possessive relationship.

Morpheme: -ke
Gloss: Possessive (POSS)

Examples of the possessive -ke by Borchers:[5]

nāso.ke

priest.POSS

dui.ta

two.piece

dhol

drum

bā.ba

stay.NPT+3s

dhanu.kan

bow.arrow

nāso.ke

priest.POSS

bā.ba

stay.NPT+3s

nāso.ke dui.ta dhol bā.ba dhanu.kan nāso.ke bā.ba

priest.POSS two.piece drum stay.NPT+3s bow.arrow priest.POSS stay.NPT+3s

The priest has two drums. The priest has bow and arrow.

ne

nose

ʃo.ke

face.POSS

bhāg

part

ho

be-NPT.3s

ne ʃo.ke bhāg ho

nose face.POSS part be-NPT.3s

The nose is part of the face.


Possessive suffix: -ke (inanimate subject)

According to Borchers,[5] inanimate subjects are marked with the possessive suffix -ke to indicate what it is "made of". Example of possessive -ke indicating what it is "made of" by Borchers:[5]

jasi.ke

Jasi.POSS

bā.b

stay.NPT+3s

meko

that

jasi

Jasi

ā.kilā

its.peg

jasi.ke bā.b meko jasi ā.kilā

Jasi.POSS stay.NPT+3s that Jasi its.peg

It is made of Jasi wood. This is a peg made of Jasi wood. (Jasi is the tree Bauhinia variegata)


Quantifiers


Quantifiers in the Sunwar language are loaned from Nepali. Quantifiers are used for amounts or masses.[5] As exemplified by Borchers,[5] this table consists of quantifiers; including some that are loaned from Nepali.

From: Translation:
ac small
besā very much [<Nep. besarī ‘very   much’]
dherei many, very, much [<Nep. dherai]
ekdam very [<Nep. ekdam]
ici a little
imci some, a bit
matra, matrei only [<Nep. mātra]
ʃūʃ ʃūs much, very, expensive
thorei, torei some, little [<Nep. thorai]
thupro, tupro much, a lot [<Nep. thupro]
umcili small

Examples of quantifiers that indicate amounts or masses by Borchers:[5]

go

I

ʃūʃ

much

ma.jai.nu.ṅ

NEG.eat.NPT+1s.1s

go ʃūʃ ma.jai.nu.ṅ

I much NEG.eat.NPT+1s.1s

I don’t eat much.

disā

tomorrow

matrei

only

tui.nu.ṅ

know.NPT+1s.1s

disā matrei tui.nu.ṅ

tomorrow only know.NPT+1s.1s

I won’t know until tomorrow.


Syntax



Adjectives: -ʃo


According to Borchers,[5] adjectives can belong to the verbal noun form, with an attached ʃo. In the Sunwar language, some adjectives are borrowed from Nepali.


Adjectives: Color forms

Borchers also notes that adjectives can belong to the form/term color.[5] As exemplified by Borchers, this table consists of the color form/terms.[5]

Form: Translation:
jirjir colorful
giิk light green, light blue
nilo dark blue [<Nep. nilo]
buʃ white
kher black
lal red
ojela brilliant

Adjectives: Non-verbal nouns without -ʃo attached

The Sunwar language has a category for adjectives under the form ‘others’, that are not verbal nouns. In addition, some adjectives may be interchangeable as an adverb.[5] As exemplified by Borchers, this table consists of the adjectives that are not verbal nouns ending in -ʃo form/terms.[5]

Form: Translation:
umcili/ici small, little
ʃūʃ much, many, very, expensive
theb big, great (idea, thing)
wan far
netha near

Examples of adjectives that are not verbal nouns ending in -ʃo by Borchers:[5]

ɓak

water

besā.n

very-much.REIN

wan

far

cha

exist-NPT.3s

ɓak besā.n wan cha

water very-much.REIN far exist-NPT.3s

Water is far away. Unknown glossing abbreviation(s) (help);

go

I

umcili

small

thiẽ

exist-PT1s

bara

twelve

bars.ṅā

year.GEN

go umcili thiẽ bara bars.ṅā

I small exist-PT1s twelve year.GEN

I was small, twelve years old.

nepāli.puki

Nepali.PL

ʃūʃ

very

choto

small

bā.ni.m

stay.NPT-23d/-p.3p/Svi

nepāli.puki ʃūʃ choto bā.ni.m

Nepali.PL very small stay.NPT-23d/-p.3p/Svi

Nepalese people are very small.


Particles


As exemplified by Borchers, this table consists of particles in correlation to various relationships.[5]

Conjunction: Translation:
de or
hana if
ṅana if
dopā that
meklāpāṅāmin   and then
pāṅāmin   and then
minu -nu and then
mapatke because of

Postpositional particles

According to Borchers, the Sunwar language borrows particles from Nepali that indicate the relationship between clauses.[5] Examples of postpositional particles by Borchers:[5]

Postpotion: Gloss:
<lā> ‘only’
-bhandā: A comparison. ‘than’
<cai>: Singling out or can be seen as “exactly this one”. SNG
<yo>: Inclusive focus. ‘also’
<kõ>: A tag on questions asking for affirmation or negation of a statement. OR
<da ~ ta>: Sunwar focus marker IFOC

My stomach v.s. your stomach


Example by Borchers:[5]

iิ

your

koʔj

stomach

iิ koʔj

your stomach

your stomach

ā

my

koʔj

stomach

ā koʔj

my stomach

my stomach


Order: Subject-object-verb


Examples of order: Subject/Object/Verb by Borchers.[5]

kuṣulanoʔbam.mī

shoemaker.INS/LOC

(Subject) Shoemakers

pani

shoes

(Object) Shoes

pher.ni.m

sew.NPT-23d/-p.3p

(Verb) Sew

kuṣulanoʔbam.mī pani pher.ni.m

shoemaker.INS/LOC shoes sew.NPT-23d/-p.3p

{(Subject) Shoemakers} {(Object) Shoes} {(Verb) Sew}

Shoemakers make shoes.

Kocombo.mī

mongoose.INS/LOC

(Subject) Mongoose

buʔs

snake

(Object) Snake

sāʔī.b

kill.NPT+3s

(Verb) kill

Kocombo.mī buʔs sāʔī.b

mongoose.INS/LOC snake kill.NPT+3s

{(Subject) Mongoose} {(Object) Snake} {(Verb) kill}

The mongoose kills a snake.


Vocabulary


Seu+wa+la (Sewala)

SunwarEnglish
NamsewalHello / Good Bye
Sew(Respect) / (Greeting) / I bow to you
MaahrWhat
DohpachaaHow to
DohshowHow much
DohmohHow big
GoI
GopukiWe are
GeYou (informal)
GepukhiYou are (informal)
Goiwe (formal)
GoiPukiwe are (formal)
DaarshowBeautiful
RimsoGood
MaDarshowUgly

Language structure


In linguistic typology, a subject+object+verb (SOV) language is one in which the subject, object, and verb of a sentence always or usually appear in that order. If English were SOV, "Sam oranges ate" would be an ordinary sentence, as opposed to the actual Standard English "Sam ate oranges". (A Grammar of Sunwar) [9]

LanguageSOV
SunwarGoKhamayJainu
EnglishIRiceEat

Sunwar people called "Khangsa" sign language with voice and direct action, for foreign people who don't understand a sunuwar language.[citation needed][3]

[10]


Numerals (Devanagari)


1 ichi/kaa
2 ni/nishi
3 sa/saam
4 le
5 nga
6 ruku/roku
7 chani
8 sasi
9 van
10 gau

References


  1. 2011 Nepal Census, Social Characteristics Tables
  2. Ager, Simon. "Sunuwar alphabet". Omniglot. Retrieved 8 December 2021.
  3. Borchers, Dörte (2008). A grammar of Sunwar: descriptive grammar, paradigms, texts and glossary ([Online-Ausg.]. ed.). Leiden: Brill. pp. 1–2. ISBN 978-90-04-16709-4.
  4. Ager, Simon. "Sunwar Language and Alphabet". Omniglot. Retrieved 8 December 2021.
  5. Borchers, Dörte (2008). A Grammar of Sunwar: Descriptive Grammar, Paradigms, Texts and Glossary. BRILL. ISBN 978-90-04-16709-4.
  6. "Jenticha". ScriptSource.org. Retrieved 8 December 2021.
  7. https://unicode.org/L2/L2011/11218-n4028-jenticha.pdf [bare URL PDF]
  8. Ager, Simon. "Tikamuli alphabet". Omniglot. Retrieved 8 December 2021.
  9. A Grammar of Sunwar. Dörte Borchers. 2008. ISBN 978-9004167094. Retrieved 27 August 2018.
  10. Pandey, Anshuman (31 May 2011). "Proposal to Encode the Jenticha Script in ISO/IEC 10646" (PDF). Retrieved 18 December 2019.



На других языках


- [en] Sunwar language

[fr] Sunwar

Le sunwar (autonyme, कोँइच koĩts[2]) est une langue tibéto-birmane parlée au Népal.



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