The Sholaga language () is a Dravidian language that is related to Kannada and Tamil and is spoken by the Soliga people. The language is also known as Kadu Sholigar, Sholiga, Sholigar, Solaga, Solega, Soliga, Soligar, Solanayakkans, Sholanayika.
Etymology
The language's name comes from Ã
ÂÃ
Âla "forest" and -ga "people".
Classification
Sholaga is classified as a Dravidian language. The Dravidian languages are split into five main categories, called Southern, South Central, Central, North and Unclassified. Sholaga falls into the Southern category, which has three subcategories: Tamil-Kannada, Macro-Tulu, and unclassified. Sholaga is a Tamil-Kannada language.
Phonology
Here are the vowel and the consonant phonemes of Sholaga:
Vowels
Kamil Zvelebil listed centralized <ä, ÃÂ> in the phonology. The real quality distinguishing <ä, ÃÂ> and <a, ÃÂ> is unclear.
- There are phonemic nasal vowels. All plain vowels have nasal counterparts, mostly from old final nasals: akkã "sister", möÃÂyi "body".
Consonants
- /s/ is in free variation with [ÃÂ] and does not clash with /táÃÂ, dáÃÂ/.
- p- > h- > âÂÂ
-: Sholaga aga, Kannada hoge; Sholaga haá¸Âagu, Kannada haá¸Âagu. Initial p-. also exists like in paá¸Âá¸Âe.
- /ÃÂ, ý/ contrast: nÃ
Âá¹Â- "see", Ã
Âá¸Â- "run".
- /k/ palatalization does not occur unlike in Kannada: Sholaga kimi, Kannada kivi, Tamil cevi.
- Rare /g/ > /á¹Â
/: Sholaga maá¹Â
a, Kannada maganu.
Grammar
Source:
- The formative morpheme *-ay is -a: Tamil iṯappay "eyelid", Kannada rappe, Sholaga á¹Âappa.
- Like Irula and nearby Nilagiri languages, it lacks the oblique form in compounds with a modifier followed by the modified: kÃÂá¸Âu aá¹Âá¸Âi "forest pig", Tamil kÃÂá¹Âá¹Âu (< kÃÂá¹Âu) paá¹Âá¹Âi.
- Unlike Jenu Kuruba, it has a rich use of plural forms. Most take -ga, but most nouns that end with -ã take -diru, but others take -ru.
- Most cases are like in Kannada, but the forms are not identical.
- There are only two tense stems: past/non-past (which is more like verb finished vs unfinished). From the past tense, the preterite tense is frmed, and from the non-past tense, the present-future tense is formed.
Words
References
Sources
External links