Neha Patil (Editor)

Asur language

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Native to
  
India

Native speakers
  
7,000 (2007)

Glottolog
  
asur1254

Ethnicity
  
Asur

ISO 639-3
  
asr

Language family
  
Austroasiatic Munda North Munda Kherwari Mundari Asuri

Asuri is a minor Munda language of India. It is a member of the Austro-Asiatic family, spoken by the Asur people. Asuri has many Dravidian loanwords due to contact with Kurukh.

The majority of Asuri speakers reside in the Gulma district of Chota Nagpur. In addition, there are smaller groups of Asuri speakers in Chhattisgarh, West Bengal, and Odisha.

Ethnologue states that Birjia is a dialect of Asuri, but also that there is a related language Birjia; it is not clear if these refer to the same thing. However, Anderson (2008:195), based on Prasad (1961:314), suggests that Birjia (Binjhia) may be an Indo-Aryan language, although the Birjia are an ethnic subgroup of the Asuri tribe, along with the Asur proper and the Agariya.

Majhwar is unclassified, but based on location and other clues, it may turn out to be a dialect of Asuri. If so, its 35,000 speakers (reported in 1995, out of an ethnic group of 175,000) would make it the most populous form of Asuri.

Asuri is considered to be an endangered language. One important reason for its distinction as endangered is due to a lack of any written form of the language. It exists only as a spoken language. There are a total of 31 phonemes in Asuri, made up of twenty-six "segmental" and five "supra-segmental" phonemes. Of the former, there are twenty-one consonants and five vowels.

Geographical distribution

Ethnologue lists the following districts and states where Asuri is spoken.

  • Jharkhand: southern Palamau district, northern Ranchi district, Gumla district, and Lohardaga district of the Chota Nagpur Plateau
  • Chhattisgarh: Raigarh district and Jashpur district area
  • Maharashtra
  • Odisha: Sambalpur district
  • West Bengal
  • References

    Asur language Wikipedia