Undukusu: Difference between revisions
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{{Infobox language | {{Infobox language | ||
|name=Ündûkûsû | |||
|nativename=ఉన్దూకూసూ (reformed), ఋన్దుకుసు (classical), Ündûkûsû | |||
|pronounciation=ɯndʊkʊsʊ | |||
|ethnicity=ündûkûsûans | |||
|states=[https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Andhra_Pradesh Andhra Pradesh] | |||
|script1=Telugu | |||
|fam1=[https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Indo-European%20languages Indo-European] | |||
|fam2=Para-Germanic | |||
|fam3=Chlesamnic | |||
|fam4=South-Chlesamnic | |||
|ancestor1=Proto-Chlesamnic | |||
|ancestor2=Classical Ündûkûsû | |||
|familycolor=Indo-European | |||
|era=spoken since about 1800AD. Developed from Middle Ündûkûsû | |||
}} | |||
Ündûkûsû (autonym: ఉన్దూకూసూ, ఋన్దుకుసు | |||
Ündûkûsû (autonym: ఉన్దూకూసూ (reformed), ఋన్దుకుసు (classical), Ündûkûsû [ɯndʊkʊsʊ]) is a South Chlesamnic language spoken primarily in southern India, being a widely spoken language in the modern state of [https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Andhra_Pradesh Andhra Pradesh]. Ündûkûsû, being a [[Chlesamnic |Chlesamnic language]] means it’s part of the “Para-Germanic” language family. Being a Chlesamnic language means its closely related to the other Chlesamnic languages like [[Sishami]], the Pavlovic languages and [[Ancient Tevvic|Tevvic]]. Being a Southern Chlesamnic language it is a descendant of Proto-Southern-Chlesamnic (also known as Classical Ündûkûsû). Being one of the multiple colloquial languages in India it was called a [https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Prakrit Prakrit] even though it isn’t Indo-Aryan. Similar to the other languages of its area it has undergone significant Sanskrit influence, even though they weren’t fully [https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Sanskritisation Sanskritized]. | |||
==History== | ==History== | ||
This language is thought to have been spoken in India since 50 BCE, as that’s when the pre-classical Ündûkûsû people arrived in India. Under the Mughal empire, they had their own Subah. After that under the British they had their own salute state with 15 guns. | This language is thought to have been spoken in India since 50 BCE, as that’s when the pre-classical Ündûkûsû people arrived in India. Under the Mughal empire, they had their own Subah. After that under the British they had their own salute state with 15 guns. | ||