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Adjectives and genitive constructions expressing possession precede nouns.īengali vocabulary is a mixture of native Bengali words, and borrowings from Sanskrit, as well as from neighboring languages such as Hindi, Assamese, Chinese, Burmese, and several indigenous Austroasiatic languages of Bangladesh. The normal word order in Bengali sentences is Subject-Object-Verb. Bengali verbs use a post-verbal negative particle.Verbs have three tenses: present, past, future.Ttwo aspects are distinguished: imperfective and perfective.There are three moods: indicative, imperative, conditional.Markers are combined to produce various mood/aspect/tense combinations Verb stems are derived from verbal monosyllabic or disyllabic verbal bases.There are three status categories in the 2nd person (despective, ordinary, honorific) and two status categories in the 3rd person (ordinary, honorific).There are three persons (1st, 2nd, 3rd).There are three degrees of proximity in the 3rd person: someone who is nearby, someone who is a little further away, and someone who is not present.īengali verbs agree with their subjects in person and status category.There is no gender distinction in the 3rd person.There are three persons: 1st, 2nd, 3rd.There are three degrees of proximity in the 3rd person (someone who is nearby, someone who is a little further away, and someone who is not present.There is no gender distinction in the 3rd person. Bengali uses classifiers when counting nouns (similar to neighboring South Asian languages), e.g., panch- jon-chatro ‘five- human classifier-students’., juta-ţa ‘the shoe ‘, juta-gula ‘the shoes’, and chatro-ţa ‘the student’ and chatro-ra ‘the students’. Definiteness is marked with post-posited -ţa in the singular, and -gula in the plural for inanimate nouns and – ra for animate nouns, e.g.Plural markers are added only to count nouns with animate or definite referents. There are two numbers: singular and plural.Nouns are marked for case: nominative, accusative, genitive, and locative– instrumental.
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Thee are no gender distinctions, but Bengali nouns have the following characteristics: Postpositions require that the noun take a certain case.
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Bengali typically uses postpositions, rather than prepositions. The position of stress alone does not affect word meaning.īengali is an inflected language, i.e., it uses prefixes and suffixes to mark grammatical relations and to form words. Stress in standard Bengali normally falls on the initial syllable of a word. In addition to Bangladesh and India, Bengali is spoken in Nepal, Pakistan, the Middle East, Europe, the U.S., and Canada. It is a s tatutory provincial language in West Bengal, Tripura, and Assam. It is spoken in West Bengal Tripura Jharkhand, Dhanbad, Manbhum, Singhbhum, and Santal Parganas Odisha, Mayar and Bales Bihar Assam, and Goalpara district (Ethnologue). In India, it statutory provincial language in West Bengal, Tripura, Assam states.īengali is one of the 23 official languages of India, where it is spoken by 82.5 million people and the second most-spoken language after Hindi– Urdu. The total number of speakers of Bengali worldwide is 189 million ( Ethnologue), making it the seventh most spoken language in the world after Chinese, Spanish, English, Hindi, Arabic, and Portuguese (Ethnologue).īengali is the national language of Bangladesh where it is spoken as a first language by 106 million, and as a second language by 20 million speakers. The direct ancestors of Bengali are Prakrit, and Sanskrit. In Bengali, the language is called Bangla ( bangla means ‘low’). In English, Bengali refers to both the language and the people who speak it. Along with Assamese, it is the easternmost of all Indo-European languages. Bengali, also called Bangala, Bangla, Bangla-Bhasa, belongs to the Eastern group of the Indo-Aryan branch of the Indo-European language family.