A.tong is one of the Garo dialect
Sino-Tibetan (or Tibeto-Burman) language which is also related to
Koch
Koch may refer to:
People
* Koch (surname), people with this surname
* Koch dynasty, a dynasty in Assam and Bengal, north east India
* Koch family
* Koch people (or Koche), an ethnic group originally from the ancient Koch kingdom in north east ...
,
Rabha,
Bodo Bodo may refer to:
Ethnicity
* Boro people, an ethno-linguistic group mainly from Northwest Assam, India
* Bodo-Kachari people, an umbrella group from Nepal, India and Bangladesh that includes the Bodo people
Culture and language
* Boro cu ...
other than Garo language. It is spoken in the South Garo Hills and West Khasi Hills districts of
Meghalaya state in
Northeast India, southern
Kamrup district in
Assam, and adjacent areas in
Bangladesh. The correct spelling "A.tong" is based on the way the speakers themselves pronounce the name of their language. There is no glottal stop in the name and it is not a tonal language.
A reference grammar of the language has been published by Seino van Breugel.
[van Breugel, Seino. 2014. ''A grammar of Atong''. Leiden, Boston: Brill]
/ref> A dictionary with Atong–English and English-A.tong sections, as well as semantic word lists[van Breugel, Seino. 2021. ''A dictionary of Atong: A Tibeto-Burman language of Northeast India and Bangladesh''. Berlin, Boston: de Gruyter Mouton.] was published in 2021, two years after the publication of an analysis of A.tong stories.[van Breugel, Seino. 2019. Atong Texts: Glossed, translated and annotated narratives in a Tibeto-Burman language of Meghalaya, Northeast India. Leiden, Boston: Brill.] In 2009, a book of stories in A.tong and an Atong-English dictionary[Breugel, Seino van. 2009b. Atong-English Dictionary, 1st edn. Tura: Tura Book Room.] were published by and sold at the Tura Book Room in Tura, Meghalaya, India. It is not certain if those books are still available there. The A.tong spelling system used in those books is explained in the A.tong Spelling Guide,[van Breugel, Seino. 2015]
Atong spelling guide
/ref> available online.
Atong has been classified as an endangered language b
Ethnologue
Atong's situation is most probably due to the influence of Standard Garo, a prestige language in the State of Meghalaya. Many parents are not teaching Atong to their children anymore. However in there are still places in South Garo Hills and West Khasi Hills where Atong is still spoken en also transmitted to the younger generation.
Sociolinguistics
There is no current estimate of the number of speakers available; according to the Linguistic Survey of India, it was spoken by approximately 15,000 people in the 1920s. Since the Atong are considered a subdivision of the Garos, they are not counted as a separate ethnic or linguistic community by the Indian government.
Almost all Atong speakers are bilingual
Multilingualism is the use of more than one language, either by an individual speaker or by a group of speakers. It is believed that multilingual speakers outnumber monolingual speakers in the world's population. More than half of all E ...
in Garo to a greater or lesser extent, and Garo is seen as the more prestigious language. Because there is a Bible translation in Garo, but not in Atong, it is the language used in all churches and most Atong speakers are Christians. Garo is also the language of education in schools in the Atong-speaking area, although some schools provide education in English.
Mutual intelligibility with Garo
In India, the Atongs are considered to belong to the Garo Tribe,[Burling, Robbins. 2004. ''The Language of the Modhupur Mandi (Garo). Vol. I: Grammar''. New Delhi: Bibliophile South Asian in association with Promilla & Co., Publisher]
/ref> however, they speak a distinct language, which, however, has no official status of its own. The Atong people are members of the Garo Scheduled Castes and Scheduled Tribes, Scheduled Tribe, whose official Scheduled tribe language is Garo. Garo has a standardised form of speech used in education, administration, the press and literature. Linguistically speaking, Atong and Standard Garo may be different languages, given that they have different sound systems
In physics, sound is a vibration that propagates as an acoustic wave, through a transmission medium such as a gas, liquid or solid.
In human physiology and psychology, sound is the ''reception'' of such waves and their ''perception'' by ...
, vocabulary and grammar. However, due to the fact that most Atongs are bilingual in Standard Garo to various degrees, intelligibility is one-way: Atong speakers understand Standard Garo but speakers of Standard Garo may not understand Atong.
Phonology
The phonemes of Atong are given in International Phonetic Alphabet
The International Phonetic Alphabet (IPA) is an alphabetic system of phonetic transcription, phonetic notation based primarily on the Latin script. It was devised by the International Phonetic Association in the late 19th century as a standa ...
(IPA) in Table 1. That table also presents how the phonemes are written in the Atong alphabet used for everyday writing by people who are not linguists. As we can see in the table, the glottal stop can be written with either a bullet or an apostrophe. The bullet was used by missionaries to write the glottal stop in Garo when the writing system for that language was created in the 1800s. The apostrophe has since been adopted to write the glottal stop as it is available on all computer keyboards. The vowel phoneme is written in the orthography, as it is in Khasi
Khasi may refer to:
* Khasi people, an ethnic group of Meghalaya, India
* Khasi language, a major Austroasiatic language spoken in Meghalaya, India
* Khāṣi language, an Indo-Aryan language of Jammu and Kashmir, India
See also
* Khasi Hills
* Gh ...
and Welsh
Welsh may refer to:
Related to Wales
* Welsh, referring or related to Wales
* Welsh language, a Brittonic Celtic language spoken in Wales
* Welsh people
People
* Welsh (surname)
* Sometimes used as a synonym for the ancient Britons (Celtic peopl ...
. It was the Welsh Presbyterians that developed the Khasi writing system and used the letter to write the phoneme in Khasi.
The consonant phoneme has aspirated and non-aspirated pronunciations ʰ ~ s
In phonetics, aspiration is the strong burst of breath that accompanies either the release or, in the case of preaspiration, the closure of some obstruents. In English, aspirated consonants are allophones in complementary distribution wi ...
The aspirated allophone , occurs at the beginning of a syllable
A syllable is a unit of organization for a sequence of speech sounds typically made up of a syllable nucleus (most often a vowel) with optional initial and final margins (typically, consonants). Syllables are often considered the phonological "bu ...
, while the unaspirated occurs the end of a syllable. Both phonemes are written with the letter . Aspirated also occurs in other Asian languages such as Burmese
Burmese may refer to:
* Something of, from, or related to Myanmar, a country in Southeast Asia
* Burmese people
* Burmese language
* Burmese alphabet
* Burmese cuisine
* Burmese culture
Animals
* Burmese cat
* Burmese chicken
* Burmese (hor ...
and Korean.
Glottalization
Glottalization in Atong is a feature that operates on the level of the syllable, and that manifests itself as a glottal stop at the end of the syllable. Glottalization only affects open syllables and syllables ending in a continuant or a vowel. In the following examples, glottalized syllables are indicated by a following bullet. The pronunciation is given between square brackets where the symbol represents the glottal stop and the full stop represents the syllable boundary.
In the examples below, the following abbreviations are used: COS 'change of state', CUST 'customary aspect', INCOM 'incompletive aspect', NEG 'negative',
If the glottalized continuant is followed by a consonant, the glottalized phoneme is not released, i.e. ''man’ -khu-cha'' (be.able-INCOM-NEG)‘is not yet possible’.
If the glottalized continuant is followed by a vowel, it is released and the release repeats the continuant so that it can be said to act like the onset of the following syllable, e.g. ''man’ -ok'' (be.able-COS) ‘was able’.
In a glottalized syllable with final the glottal stop usually precedes the oral closure of the when followed by another vowel, e.g. ''mel’ -a'' (be.fat-CUST)‘is fat’. This phenomenon also happens, but less frequently, with syllables ending in , e.g. ''nom’ -a'' (be.soft-CUST) ‘is soft’.
Vowels
Atong has six vowel qualities occurring in the native vocabulary as well as in loanwords: . In addition, there are four long vowels which are only found in loanwords from English and Indic languages. These are usually pronounced longer than the indigenous vowels: /iː/ , /eː/ , /aː/ and /oː/ . In the orthography, long vowels are represented by double letters. Note that /uː/ and /əː/ are not attested.
Examples of minimal pairs and near minimal pairs are given in the table below.
The difference between the loan and the indigenous words is a matter of vowel quality. In closed syllables, where Atong vowels would be pronounced lowered and more retracted, the loan vowels will have the same quality as the Atong vowels in open syllables. Not all loan words that have long vowels in the source language have long vowels in Atong, and not all loans that can be pronounced with a long vowel in Atong have a long vowel in the source language.
Syllable structure
The canonical syllable structure of Atong is (C)V(C), where C stands for any consonant and V for any vowel. This structure can be maintained if words like ''mai'' 'rice', ''askui'' 'star' and ''chokhoi'' 'fishing basket' are analysed as containing a vowel and a final glide (see glide (linguistics)). The glide, presented by the letter i, is the coda of the syllable rather than an element of the nucleus. In phonemic writing the words would look like this: /maj/, /askuj/, /t͡ɕokʰoj/.
There are two glides in the language: /w/ and /j/. The glide /w/ occurs in both syllable initial and syllable final position, e.g. ''wak'' 'pig' and ''saw'' 'rotten, fermented' respectively. The glide /j/ occurs only syllable finally, e.g. ''tyi'' /təj/ 'water'. Traditional words with the structure CVVC do not exist, e.g. *''gaut'' or *''main'' (where the asterisk indicates the non-existence of these words).
If a diphthong
A diphthong ( ; , ), also known as a gliding vowel, is a combination of two adjacent vowel sounds within the same syllable. Technically, a diphthong is a vowel with two different targets: that is, the tongue (and/or other parts of the speech o ...
is defined as ''two vowels that can occur in the nucleus of a syllable'', then Atong has no diphthongs. There are words that are written with two adjacent vowel graphemes or letters, e.g. ''mai'' 'rice', ''askui'' 'star', and ''chokhoi'' 'fishing basket'. However, the letter ''i'' in these words represents a consonant phoneme, viz. the off glide /j/ (see Table 1). The writing system uses the letter ''i'' in this way because the letters ''j'' and ''y'' are both used to represent other phonemes.
Examples
Atong has many loanwords from Assamese language, Bengali, Hindi and English. These loanwords can all easily be spelled in Atong orthography using the Latin script (also called the Roman script). Example of loans from English are: ''redio'' (from the English word 'radio'), ''rens'' (from the English word 'wrench'), ''skul'' (from the English word 'school'), ''miting'' (from the English word 'meeting'). Other examples of loanwords are ''chola'' (from Assamese: চোলা /sʊla/ ‘jacket, tunic, coat’) and ''jama'' (from Assamese জামা /jāmā/ ‘coat, shirt, blouse jacket’).
References
External links
* Atongmorot, educational YouTube Channe
Atong basic lexicon at the Global Lexicostatistical Database
Atong-English Dictionary
Atongmorot Balgaba Golpho
Atong Spelling Guide
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Endangered languages of India
Languages of India
Languages of Meghalaya
Sal languages
Non-tonal languages in tonal families
Endangered Sino-Tibetan languages