Girish Mahajan (Editor)

Juang language

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Native to
  
India

Ethnicity
  
Indian

ISO 639-3
  
jun

Region
  
Odisha

Native speakers
  
24,000 (2001 census)

Language family
  
Austroasiatic Munda Kharia–Juang Juang

The Juang language is a language spoken primarily by the Juang people of Odisha state, eastern India.

Contents

Classification

The Juang language belongs to the Munda language family, the whole of which is classified as a branch of the greater Austroasiatic language family. Among the Munda languages, Juang is considered to be most closely related to Kharia, although Anderson considers Juang and Kharia to have split off from each other relatively early.

Juang can be roughly divided into the Hill and Plains varieties, both of which are spoken in Odisha (Patnaik 2008:508).

  • Hill Juang: Gonasika Hills (in Keonjhar district) and Pallara Hills
  • Plains Juang: about 147 villages in southern Keonjhar district and eastern Dhenkanal district
  • Distribution

    Juang is spoken by about 30,875 people according to the 2001 Indian census. In Odisha state, it is spoken in southern Keonjhar district, northern Angul district, and eastern Dhenkanal district (Patnaik 2008:508).

    Juang is currently an Endangered language and is considered to vulnerable, or (not spoken by children outside of home).

    Juang currently has roughly under 20,000 speakers remaining

    Grammar

    In Juang a number of roots are clearly exempt from the Transitive verb/Intransitive verb opposition, so that the function of the root can be determined only from its co-occurrence with the particular set of tense markers.

    For Example,

    pag- Set I 'to break' -Set II 'to be broken1

    rag- Set I 'to tear' - Set II 'to be torn1

    guj- Set I 'to wash' - Set II 'to be was

    Writing System

    The writing system used by people who speak the Juang language is Oriya script.

    References

    Juang language Wikipedia