Bhadarwahi language
Native language of the people of Bhaderwah, Jammu and Kashmir / From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
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Bhadarwahi (Bhadrawahi) is an Indo-Aryan language of the Western Pahari group spoken by the Bhadarwahi people of the Bhaderwah region of Indian administered Jammu and Kashmir.
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Bhadarwahi | |
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Bhadrawahi | |
π‘ππΆπ€π¦ππ©π― ΰ€ΰ€¦ΰ₯ΰ€°ΰ€΅ΰ€Ύΰ€Ήΰ₯ Ψ¨ΪΎΨ―Ψ±ΩΨ§ΫΫ | |
Native to | Jammu and Kashmir, Himachal Pradesh |
Region | Bhaderwah, Doda district |
Ethnicity | Bhaderwahis |
Native speakers | 120,000 (2011)[1] |
Dialects |
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Devanagari, Takri, Perso-Arabic script | |
Language codes | |
ISO 639-3 | bhd |
Glottolog | bhad1241 |
ELP | Bhadrawahi |
The name Bhadarwahi can be understood either in a narrow sense as referring to the dialect, locally known as BhiαΈlΔi, native to the Bhadarwah valley, or in a broader sense to cover the group of related dialects spoken in the wider region where Bhadarwahi proper is used as a lingua franca. In addition to Bhadarwahi proper, this group also includes Bhalesi, and Khasali (Khashali) dialect.[2] The Churahi language is closely related.
The name of the language is spelt in the Takri as π‘ππ€π¦ππ©π―. Variants include Bhaderwahi (π‘ππ²π€π¦ππ©π―),[3] Baderwali (π ππ²π€π¦ππ₯π―), Bhadri (π‘ππ€π―), Badrohi (π ππΆπ€π΄π©π―), Bhadlayi (π‘ππ₯ππ£π―), and Bhadlai (π‘ππ₯ππ).