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What is ROMANI LANGUAGE?. Description of the Romani language Romani is the language of the Roma, Sinti, Calé and all other ethnic groups in Europe who.

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Presentation on theme: "What is ROMANI LANGUAGE?. Description of the Romani language Romani is the language of the Roma, Sinti, Calé and all other ethnic groups in Europe who."— Presentation transcript:

1 What is ROMANI LANGUAGE?

2

3 Description of the Romani language Romani is the language of the Roma, Sinti, Calé and all other ethnic groups in Europe who speak or spoke an Indic or Indo-Aryan language. Roma call themselves Roma; Non-Roma are usually referred to as gadže – gadžo 'non-Romani man', gadži 'non-Romani woman'. Romani: derived from rom; historical self-designation of speakers of the language; used internationally Romani čhib: Romani language Amari čhib: our language Romanes: Romani way Single Romani varieties are labelled Burgenland Romani, Kalderaš Romani, Lovara Romani, Sepečides Romani, Sinti Romani, Ursari Romani, etc.

4 Roma or Gypsies? The word "Rom" is derived from the Romani language and it means "human being", "someone who belongs to the Roma ethnic group" and "man, husband". Origin and meaning of the word "Gypsy" is still quite unclear; one of the theories says that this word is derived from the Greek word "athinganos", which means untouchable. 1st World Romani Congress – London, April 8th 1971: Roma, flag, anthem and public holiday Reflection question: Which description do you prefer and why?

5 The origin of Romani language August Friedrich Pott: the first who scientifically examined the Romani language and based on linguistic findings found out that India is the original homeland of the Roma people. Fran Miklošič: wrote an important scientific work of the European Roma, in which the first division in several Romani dialects was done. Original homeland of the Roma: India, the valley of the southern Hindu Kush. Linguistic evaluation carried out in the nineteenth century by Pott (1845) and Miklošič (1872–1880) showed that the Romani language is to be a New Indo-Aryan language, not a Middle Indo-Aryan, establishing that the ancestors of the Romani could not have left India significantly earlier than AD 1000.

6 Romani language in Europe According to Miklošič the Roma first deployed in Afghanistan and Persia, where they stayed a long time. Later they went over Iran to Armenia, Turkey, Greece and Byzantium. Another group of Roma traveled to Syria, Egypt, North Africa and Spain. Miklošič divided the European Roma into 13 groups: Greek, Hungarian, German, Russian, Finnish, Spanish, Romanian, Czech-Moravian, Polish- Lithuanian, Scandinavian, Italian, Basque and Anglo-Scottish. According to his classification, there is just as many dialects as groups, for the most original Romani language he established Greek, followed by Hungarian and Romanian Romani dialect.

7 Romani dialects: a brief overview Balkan dialects: Balkan I, Zis dialects Vlax dialects: Southern Vlax dialects, Northern Vlax dialects Central dialects: Southern Central dialects, Northern Central dialects Northern dialects: Northeastern dialects, Northwestern dialects Dialect groups and dialects with independent development

8 Balkan dialects Balkan dialects, also known as Balkan I, are spoken in Albania, Bulgaria, Greece, Iran, Kosovo, Macedonia, Moldova, Romania, Serbia, Turkey and Ukraine. This group includes inter alia Arli Romani (Greece, Kosovo, Macedonia), Sepečides-Romani (Greece, Turkey), Ursari Romani (Moldavia, Romania) and Crimean Romani (Ukraine). Zis dialects, also called Balkan II, are a distinct subdivision within the Balkan group. Bugurdži, Drindari and Kalajdži Romani are spoken in Macedonia, Kosovo and in northern and central Bulgaria.

9 Vlax dialects Southern Vlax dialects are spoken in Albania, Bosnia-Herzegovina, Bulgaria, Greece, Serbia, Croatia, Macedonia, Montenegro, Turkey and in southern Romania. This group includes inter alia the dialects of Gurbet, Kalburdžu and Čergara. Northern Vlax dialects are spoken in Romania, Moldova, Hungary and Serbia, as well as by migrants all over the world. The dialects of the Kalderaš and Lovara are the most widely spread. Mačvaja Romani, which is spoken in the USA, is also well-known.

10 Central dialects Southern Central dialects of Romani are spoken in the former Greater Hungary, northern Slovenia, eastern Austria, Romania, Slovakia, Ukraine and in today's Hungary. These include inter alia Burgenland Romani, Vend Romani in Hungary, Prekmurje Romani in Slovenia and the Romungro dialects of Hungary and Slovakia. Northern Central dialects are spoken in Poland, Slovakia, the Czech Republic and Ukraine. These include East Slovak Romani or Servika and the dialect of the Polish Bergitka Roma.

11 Northern dialects Northeastern dialects are spoken in Estonia, Latvia, Lithuania, Poland, Russia, Ukraine and Belarus. These include the varieties of Polska Romani, North Russian or Xaladitka Romani, Latvian Lotfitka Romani and Lithuanian dialects. Northwestern dialects are mainly spoken in Belgium, Germany, France, Finland, Italy, the Netherlands, Austria and Sweden. This group includes inter alia varieties of the Sinti Manuš cluster in Germany, France and neighbouring countries and regions, as well as the Romani of the Kaale in Finland and Sweden.

12 Dialect groups and dialects with independent development Dialect groups and dialects with independent development include the Romani variety of the Gopti, Hrvati, Dolenjski or Istriani Roma resident in Slovenia and southern Italian dialects Abruzzian and Calabrian Romani. The latter are early splits from the Balkan group. It also includes the varieties Romano and Zargari spoken in Iran. British dialects of which Welsh Romani as described by Sampson (1926) is the best known, but is by now probably extinct, are included in the different varieties of Anglo-Romani. It is a Para-Romani which is seen as their Romani by its users who describe themselves as Gypsies. Iberian dialects of Romani are also only preserved in Para-Romani varieties: in addition to the Basque variety of Errumantxela, Castilian and Catalan ethnolects still exist today and are collectively known as Caló.

13 ? Reflection question: Is communication among Roma, speaking different dialects, possible? Why do you think is that?

14 Activity

15 Lexicon The basic vocabulary of Romani in all its variants has an Indian basis. Thus, parts of the body, natural features, family members, common objects, verbs relating to basic needs and actions, common adjectives, numbers, etc. are almost all of Indian origin. Some 700 Indian roots have been identified which are in general use. There are also different layers of non-Indic words, mostly from Asian languages, which are common to all varieties of Romani. We have borrowings from Iranian languages (perhaps seventy), Armenian (around fourty), Greek (a few hundred) and a few words from Georgian. These are found in all Romani dialects. Apart from these, which are common to all forms of Romani, there are dialects with borrowings from German, Hungarian, Romanian, Turkish and Slavic languages – plus words from countries where the speakers currently reside.

16 Phonology The sound inventory of Romani does not differ significantly from that of other European languages, most of which belong to the Indo- European family. The consonant system of Romani differs in one significant aspect from those of other European languages: it has the aspirated plosives (aspirated stops) characteristic of Indian languages. In the case of Romani, these are the voiceless aspirated plosives /ph, th, kh/, which in the majority of Romani variants, at least at the beginning of a word, have a semantically distinct function. perav: pherav < inc. bharati 'I fall': 'I fill' tav: thav < inc. dhāgga 'cook!': 'thread' ker: kher < inc. ghara 'make!': 'house'

17 Morphology Romani has: -two genders: masculine and feminine -two numbers: singular and plural -eight cases: nominative, genitive, dative, accusative, vocative, ablative, instrumental, locative Romani also distinguishes between beings that are alive („animate“) and things that are not alive („inanimate“). These two types of nouns have different forms when they are the object of an action („I see the snake“ versus „I see the house“). Animate nouns get an accusative ending and inanimate nouns do not, and they have different articles. If one says „I see the dog“ one would say „Me dikhav le džukle“, but for „I see the house“ one would say „Me dikhav o kher“. The word džukel „dog“ has an ending -e, but the word kher „house“ does not.

18 … Romani verbs have different endings, depending on who is performing the action. There is no original infinitive form (to do, to walk, etc.) in Romani. If you want to say „I want to go“ in Romani, you have to say „I want that I go“ (kamav te džal). Like most European languages, Romani has so-called „definite articles“, translatable in English by „the“. The forms of the articles, almost all adjectives and some verbs show different endings depending on the gender of the noun: baro manuš „big/important man“ versus bari rani „big/important“ lady.

19 Syntax Word order in Romani sentences is flexible. Contrary to New Indo-Aryan languages with the verb in the final position or SOV order, Romani generally has (S)VO order in so-called neutral declarative sentences: (me)dikhlomrakľa (S)VO 'I saw a girl.' Romani Isawgirl

20 Resources ROMLEX documents the lexicon of Romani with translations into various languages.ROMLEX ROMAFACTS comprises fact sheets on Romani culture, history, language, literature, etc.ROMAFACTS ROMBASE offers didactically edited information on the socio-cultural and socio-historical situation of the Roma.ROMBASE QUALIROM offers teaching materials for a number of Romani varieties that were developed on the basis of the Curriculum Framework for Romani of the Council of Europe.QUALIROM ROMANE LILA works on Roma and Romani culture, history etc. and their availability in the library.ROMANE LILA ROMANI PROJEKT GRAZ: Romani language research ROMANI PROJECT MANCHESTER: Romani language research

21 What have we learned?

22 ROMANI LANGUAGE is comparable with other languages has its own structure is a „real“ language should be seen as an advantage needs to be explored, preserved and nurtured speakers of Romani are bi- or multilingual

23 References Bakker, P.; Hübschmannova M.; Kalinin, V.; Kenrick, D.; Kyuchov, H.; Matras, Y.; Soravia, G. (2000). What is the Romani language?. UK: Gypsy Research Centre and University of Herdfordshire Press. Halwachs, Dieter W. (1998) Amaro vakeripe Roman hi – Unsere Sprache ist Roman. Texte, Glossar und Grammatik der burgenländischen Romani-Variante. Klagenfurt: Drava. Halwachs, D. W. & Menz, F. 1999. Die Sprache der Roma: Perspektiven der Romani-Forschung in Österreich im interdisziplinären und internationalen Kontext. Klagenfurt: Drava. Matras, Yaron (2002) Romani: A linguistic introduction. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press. Miklosich, Franz (1872–1881) Über die Mundarten und Wanderungen der Zigeuner Europas. XII Teile. Denkschriften der philosophisch-historischen Klasse der kaiserlichen Akademie der Wissenschaften. Wien: Gerold. Miklosisch, Franz (1872) Über die Mundarten und Wanderungen der Zigeuner Europas. III. Sitzungsberichte der philosophisch-historischen Klasse der Kaiserlichen Akademie der Wissenschaften. Wien: Gerold: 1-46. Miklosich, Franz (1874–1878) Beiträge zur Kenntnis der Zigeunermundarten. IV Teile. Sitzungsberichte der philosophisch-historischen Klasse der Kaiserlichen Akademie der Wissenschaften. Wien: Gerold. ROMLEX: http://romani.uni-graz.at/romlex/http://romani.uni-graz.at/romlex/ Romani Projekt Graz: http://romaniprojekt.uni-graz.at//http://romaniprojekt.uni-graz.at// Romani Project Manchester: http://romani.humanities.manchester.ac.uk/http://romani.humanities.manchester.ac.uk/ Štrukelj, P. (2004): Tisočletne podobe nemirnih nomadov. Zgodovina in kultura Romov v Sloveniji. Ljubljana: Družina.


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