Old Telugu (; ) is the earliest attested stage of the Telugu language. It is attested in various inscriptions, labels, and in early loanwords.
Old Telugu later evolved into Middle Telugu around 1000 CE, which then evolved into Modern Telugu around 1600 CE.
In Modern Telugu, the term used for Old Telugu is à °ªà °¾à °¤ à °¤à ±Âà °²à ±Âà °Âà ± . The first word, à °ªà °¾à °¤ ', meaning "old/ancient," is descended from Old Telugu à °ªà ±Âà °´à °¾à °¨à ±Âà °¤ / à °ªà ±Âà °°à °¾à °Âà °¤ , ultimately from the reconstructed Proto-Dravidian word , of the same meaning. The word à °¤à ±Âà °²à ±Âà °Âà ± is descended from Old Telugu à °¤à ±Âà °¨à ±Âà °Âà ±Âà °Âà ± / à °¤à ±Âà °¨à ±Âà °Âà °Âà ± .
The reconstructed Old Telugu term for the Old Telugu language is à °ªà ±Âà °´à °¾à °¨à ±Âà °¦à ±Âà °¨à ±Âà °Âà ±Âà °Âà ± / à °ªà ±Âà °°à °¾à °Âà °¦à ±Âà °¨à ±Âà °Âà °Âà ± . This word was not attested in Old Telugu, but functions as a neologism commonly used for descriptive purposes. The word consisted of the adjectival prefix à °ªà ±Âà °´à °¾à °¨à ±Â- / à °ªà ±Âà °°à °¾à ° , and a sandhi form of the word à °¤à ±Âà °¨à ±Âà °Âà ±Âà °Âà ± / à °¤à ±Âà °¨à ±Âà °Âà °Âà ± . The adjectival prefix is the same morpheme as à °ªà ±Âà °´à °¾à °¨à ±Âà °¤ / à °ªà ±Âà °°à °¾à °Âà °¤ , thus deriving from Proto-Dravidian '.
Some of the earliest attestations of Old Telugu can be found as the loan words in Prakrit inscriptions and literature dating to the early CE, including in Gaha Sattasai where several words like attÃÂ, vÃÂluá¹Âki, pëluÃÂ, pà Âá¹Âá¹Âaá¹Â, vÃÂá¹Âá¹Âa, etc. are said to be of Old Telugu origin. A granite pillar in the Amaravati Stupa bears the Old Telugu word nÃÂgabu dated variously between 2<sup>nd</sup> century BCE and 2<sup>nd</sup> century CE. A label found in Keesaragutta, reading tolacuvÃÂná¸Âru is dated to c. 400 CE. The earliest recorded long inscription was discovered in Kalamalla, dated to 575 CE. Several Old Telugu titles were found in the stone inscriptions issued by Mahendra Pallava dated to c.600 CE. Addanki inscription, laid in 848 CE bears the earliest recorded Telugu poem in taruvà Âja prosody. Pre-Nannaya era of Telugu literature, prior to c.1000 CE is believed to be dominated by Jain poets, including Pampa, Jinavallabha, Malliya RÃÂcana and others, whose works have not survived to the present day.
In Old Telugu, the inherited Proto-Dravidian consonantal system was fairly well preserved except for incorporating the feature of voicing from the earliest known period. Other phonological innovations include:
Old Telugu is an agglutinative language primarily utilizing suffixes to express grammatical relationships. Noun morphology included gender markers and various derivational processes, while verb morphology was highly developed with distinct markers for tense, mood, and aspect.
Old Telugu preserved the two-way masculine vs non-masculine gender pattern intact, which is said to be the original case with Proto-Dravidian and this is also inherited by Modern Telugu.
Telugu branch is evidenced to have inherited all the four distinct plural markers of Dravidian, which are: -ḷ, -(n)k, -kVḷ and -r. By the time of early writings, -kVḷ marker underwent back-stem formation with the root words, losing its status as a distinct plural marker, eg. mrÃÂÃÂ-kulu (< *maran-kVḷ), later getting analyzed as mrÃÂÃÂku-lu, creating a root mrÃÂÃÂku (> Modern mÃÂku). Other examples include goá¸Âugu, ciluka, eluka, ëga.
The noun formative was -ambu, later -ammu >- amu > -am > -aà ©, eg. OTe. paá¹Âá¹Âambu ('authority/power') > MTe./Te. paá¹Âá¹Âamu/paá¹Âá¹Âam > spoken Te. paá¹Âá¹Âaà © (coastal dialects).
Old Telugu and Proto-Dravidian maintained contrast in nominative and oblique forms of masculine singulars; as in wÃÂá¹Âá¸Âu (nom.) vs wÃÂni- (obl.), which is dialectally preserved in Modern Telugu.
Nouns in Old Telugu could be primary or derived, with primary nouns often being free forms and derived nouns formed through suffixation. Gender was signaled by specific suffixes and the overall morphology was influenced by both native Dravidian elements and Indo-Aryan borrowings.
Old Telugu verbs were categorized into finite and non-finite forms, with various suffixes indicating tense, mood, and agreement with subjects.
The language had two primary tense paradigms: past, non-past.
Past and non-past markers in Old Telugu were: -iti- (a combination of PDr past markers *-i- and *-tt-) and -VdV- (< PDr non-past *-t-) respectively. Pure past marker *-iy/*-i appeared in third person. These markers were followed by personal terminations, also varied by number.
Old Telugu causative verb forms are listed as follows:
Imperatives were formed by the addition of stems -umu (tin-umu: 'eat') in singular/non-honorific and -uá¹Âá¸Âu (tin-uá¹Âá¸Âu: 'eat') in plural/honorific usages, which became -àand -aá¹Âá¸Âi in Modern Telugu.
The pronominal system in Old Telugu marked person, number, and gender. Reflexive pronouns and a range of demonstratives, interrogatives, and indefinites were also used.
The structure of Old Telugu sentences typically involved nominative-accusative alignment, with case markers indicating the grammatical roles of nouns. The language employed a variety of case forms and postpositions to express detailed semantic relations.
There are four primary colours in Old Telugu, with the root words being:
Both Old Telugu and Proto-Dravidian had absence of roots which distinguish green and yellow, a feature which still exists in modern spoken Telugu.
The historical place-name suffixes of Telugu-speaking regions were as follows:
-à «r, -pà «á¹Âá¸Âi, -pÃÂḻu, -pÃÂá¹Âa, -paá¹Âá¹Âanambu, -wÃÂá¸Âa, -kal, -cheraḷa, -maraḷa, -sëma, -gà «á¸Âiyam, -guá¹Âá¹Âa, -paḷḷi, -pÃÂḷiyam, -koá¹Âá¸Âa, -vëá¸Âu, -valasa, -pÃÂka, -puḻà Âl, -wÃÂka, -ili, -kuá¹Âá¹Âa, -paá¹Âá¹Âu, -paá¹Âiti, -villi, -kà Âna, -nÃÂá¸Âu, -gaá¸Âá¸Âa, -ÃÂá¹Âu, -kuduru, -baá¹Âá¸Âa, -peá¹Âá¹Âa, -varam, -purambu and -nagarambu
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...oḷana inpuḻà Âli aá¹Âapà Âtulu rÃÂvaá¹ÂakÃÂlu puddaá¹ÂakÃÂlu iccina pannasa pen pÃÂá¹Âa iseá¹ÂÃÂnikin dëni ḻaccina wÃÂá¹Âá¸Âu pañcamahÃÂpatakuá¹Âá¸Âagun asivairuvu likitam...
paá¹Âá¹Âambu gaá¹Âá¹Âina prathamambu nÃÂá¹Âá¸Âu balagarvvaá¹ boppaá¹ ga bai lÃÂci sÃÂna paá¹Âá¹Âambu gaá¹Âá¹Âiñci prabhu baá¹Âá¸Âa raá¹ gu bañcina samatta paá¸Âuvatà  bà Âya koá¹Âá¹Âãbulvaá¹Âá¸Âreá¹Âá¸Âu goá¹Âi vÃÂá¹ gi nÃÂá¸Âin goḷalci (ya) tribhuvanÃÂá¹ kuà Âa bÃÂá¹Âa nilpi kaá¹Âá¹Âepu durggaambu gaá¸Âu bayalsÃÂsi kaá¹Âá¸Âukà «r bejavÃÂá¸Âa gÃÂviñcemecci...
...velayaá¹ ga niyyeá¹Âá¹Âu ḻissi malinurai viá¸Âisina vrà Âla gala tÃÂnapatulunu rÃÂjupaá¹Âá¹Âambu gaá¹Âá¹Âina patiyu naliyaá¹ bayvà «rala velvariñcina naà ÂvamÃÂdhambu phalambu pÃÂká¹£iñcina liá¹ gaá¹ baḻisina pÃÂpambu damaku...