Language
Memons speak a non-written
dialect called
Memoni, a mixture of
Sindhi and
Kutchi which belongs to the
Indic (North-Western Zone) family of languages. While the Sindhi and Kutchi languages are spoken by both
Muslims and non-Muslims,
Memoni refers exclusively to the vernacular of the
Kathiawadi Memons who are
Sunni (Hanafi) Muslims that migrated from
Sindh to the neighbouring regions of
Kutch and
Kathiawar in
Gujarat several centuries ago. In stress, intonation, and everyday speech, Memoni is very similar to Sindhi, but it borrowes extensively from
Gujarati,
Hindustani and lately
English. Like most languages of the
Indian subcontinent the
sentence structure of Memoni generally follows
subject -> object -> verb order.
Nouns
The most nouns has a grammatical gender, either masculine or feminine and often have singular and plural forms. The Memons borrow vast majorities of the nouns from Hindustani (mixture of Urdu & Hindi) languages and lately extensive use of English vocabulary.
Example
| English
| Memoni
| Sindhi
| Kutchi
| Gujarati
| Hindi/Urdu
|
| vegetables
| bakaala (m)s/p
| ?
| ?
| Sabji
| sabzi(f) sabzia |
| bed
| Palang (m)
| ?
| ?
| Khatlo
| chaarpaee (f) |
| mirror
| aariso (m) aarisa (p)
| ?
| ?
| aarisa (m)
| aaena (m) |
| door
| dervajo (m) dervajaa (p)
| ?
| ?
| darwazo
| dervaza (m) dervazey (p) |
| man
| maru (m) maruu (p)
| ?
| ?
| manas/purush
| admi (m) admion (p) |
| boy
| chhokro (m) chokraa (p)
| ?
| ?
| choro/chokra
| larka (m) larkay (p) |
| girl
| chhokree (f) chokriun (p)
| ?
| ?
| chokri (f) chokriun
| lerki (f) lerkiain (p) |
| woman also wife
| byree (f) byreeun (p)
| ?
| ?
| bairi/patni/wavh
| aurat (f) aurtein (p) |
Articles and determine
The is no equivalency for a definite article ‘the’ and indefinite article ‘a’ is further inflected with masculine or feminine with is object.
Pronouns
The
subject pronouns second person (s) ‘You’ is expressed two different way one is polite form ‘aaen’ use for a respect generally for a stranger, elderly and well respected persons including parent and relatives and the second ‘tu’ is informal use among close friends and addressing to subordinate The
object,
possessive and
reflexive pronouns are often
inflected for
masculine and feminine and must agree to its object.
See Urdu:Pronouns
Example
| English
| Memoni
| Sindhi
| Kutchi
| Gujrati
| Hindi/Urdu
| Hindi/Urdu
|
| I
| aaun
| ?
| ?
| hoN
| मैं میں
| mein |
| We
| asaan
| ?
| ?
| ha.may
| हम ہم
| hum |
| You (polite) singular or plural
| aaen
| ?
| ?
| te.may
| आप آپ
| aap |
| you (informal or intimate)
| tu
| ?
| ?
| tu
| तू تو तुम تم
| tu tum |
In most
Indic lanagues the
third person such as, he, she, it and they and the
demonstrative pronouns this, these, that, those same pronouns are used and they are divided into two category one for near object or person and othe for far object or person
Example 2
| English
| Memoni
| Sindhi
| Kutchi
| Gujrati
| Hindi/Urdu
|
| She,He,it,they,this,these (near)
| ee
| ?
| ?
| aa
| ae |
| She,He,it,they,that,those (far)
| ou
| ?
| ?
| pela
| aa |
No significant differences are among the object,
possessive and
reflexive pronouns. In addition these pronouns are further inflected for masculine and feminine and must agree to the object (noun, pronouns, adjective and adverbs)
Verbs
The verbs generally conjugated (in form, according to many factors, including its tense, aspect, mood and voice. It also agree with the person, gender, and/or number of some of its arguments (subject, object, etc). The verb generally appears at the end of the sentence.
Adjectives
Like English, the position of the adjectives nearly always appear immediately before the noun and they are modified and often inflected for masculine and feminine and must be agree to the noun that followed.. the proposition is generally comes after a noun or a verb
Script
In the past there was some attempt to write Memoni dialect in using Gujrati and later in Urdu script with little success. Lately some attempt has been made to write Memoni using roman script.
See also
References
External links
Reference:
Origin of Memoni Language a Memoni Language Project by Siddique Katiya
Sindhi language
Kutchi language