The Marathi language reference article from the English Wikipedia on 24-Apr-2004
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Marathi language

Helping orphans the way you would do it
Marathi is one of the many languages of India, and has a long literary history. It is the language spoken in the state of Maharashtra. Marathi is supposed to be derived from Sanskrit (like many other languages in India). It is spoken by about 70 million people and is to have separated from the other languages in its group about a thousand years ago. Other names for the language are Maharashtra, Maharathi, Malhatee, Marthi, and Muruthu.

Marathi (Marathi)
Spoken in: India
Region: Maharashtra and adjacent states
Total speakers: 68 Million native speakers
3 Million second language speakers
Ranking: 17
Genetic
classification:
Indo-European
 Indo-Iranian
  Indo-Aryan
   Southern zone
    Marathi
Official status
Official language of: Maharashtra State, India
Regulated by: --
Language codes
ISO 639-1 mr
ISO 639-2 mar
SIL MRT

Table of contents
1 History
2 Classification
3 Geographic distribution
4 Sounds
5 Grammar
6 Vocabulary
7 Writing system
8 Examples
9 See also
10 External links

History

Probable history of the language. What language(s) it is derived from. Dates of movement of major groups of speakers, etc.

Classification

Marathi is part of the Indo-European family of languages.

Geographic distribution

Marathi is mostly spoken in the Indian state of Maharashtra, but is also spoken in neighboring states. The Ethnologue states that Marathi is also spoken in Israel and Mauritius.

Official status

Marathi is an official language of India.

Dialects

Dialects of Marathi include Konkani, Ahirani, Manadeshi.

Sounds

Grammar

It partly preserves the locative case in noun declension as follows:

Sanskrit:

         prabhaat: dawn         grha: house
         prabhaate: at dawn     grhe: at/in house

Marathi:
         pahaat: dawn            ghar: house
         pahaate: at dawn        ghari: at/in/to house

Vocabulary

Writing system

Marathi uses the Devanagari script for writing.

The oldest evidence of written Marathi is found at the base of a thousand year old gigantic statue in southern Indian town of Shrawana-belagola. The inscription is about the king Gangaraya who funded the effort, and his general Chamundaraya, who erected the statue for the king.

Examples

Marathi has a long literary tradition, and a huge literature has been written in Marathi in the last seven centuries. The saint-poet Dnyaneshwar is considered the first major literateur in the Marathi language. Prominent contemporary Marathi authors include P.L. Deshpande, Jaywant Dalawi, V. P. Kale, Wyankatesh Madgoolkar and D. M. Mirasdar.

See also

External links