释义 |
MarathienUK
Ma·ra·thi also Mah·ra·ti or Mah·rat·ti M0038500 (mə-rä′tē, -răt′ē)n. The principal Indic language of Maharashtra. [Marathi Marāṭhī, from Sanskrit Mahārāṣṭrī, from Mahārāṣṭraḥ, Maharashtra.]Marathi (məˈrɑːtɪ) or Mahrattiadj1. (Placename) of or relating to Maharashtra state in India, its people, or their language2. (Peoples) of or relating to Maharashtra state in India, its people, or their language3. (Languages) of or relating to Maharashtra state in India, its people, or their languagen (Languages) the state language of Maharashtra, belonging to the Indic branch of the Indo-European familyMa•ra•thi or Mah•rat•ti (məˈrɑ ti, -ˈræt i) n. an Indo-Aryan language of Maharashtra. ThesaurusNoun | 1. | Marathi - an Indic language; the state language of Maharashtra in west central India; written in the Devanagari scriptMahrattiSanskrit, Sanskritic language - (Hinduism) an ancient language of India (the language of the Vedas and of Hinduism); an official language of India although it is now used only for religious purposes | TranslationsMarathienUK
Marathi (mərä`tē), language belonging to the Indic group of the Indo-Iranian subfamily of the Indo-European family of languages. See Indo-IranianIndo-Iranian, subfamily of the Indo-European family of languages, spoken by more than a billion people, chiefly in Afghanistan, Bangladesh, India, Iran, Nepal, Pakistan, and Sri Lanka (see The Indo-European Family of Languages, table). ..... Click the link for more information. .Marathi one of the national languages of India. Marathi is spoken mainly in the state of Maharashtra by approximately 47 million people (1971, estimate). Marathi be-longs to the Indie group of the Indo-European language family. Marathi has two principal dialects: Deshi and Konkani. The latter is known as northern, or standard Konkani, as opposed to southern Konkani, an independent language, closely related to Marathi, which is spoken in Goa. The modern Marathi literary language is based on Deshi. Marathi uses the Devanagari writing system. The grammatical structure, vocabulary, and phonetics of Marathi have features that associate Marathi with the Dravidian languages. A specific feature of Marathi phonetics is the presence of two affricate variants: apicodorsal affricates (as in the Telugu language) and mediolingual dorsal affricates. Marathi morphology makes use of agglutinative, inflectional, and analytic forms. Marathi has preserved three genders: masculine, feminine, and neuter. A specific feature of the syntax is the widespread use of participial constructions to express subordinating relations (as in the Dravidian languages). The Marathi vocabulary is characterized by a considerable number of “local” everyday words (in Deshi) of non-Indo-Aryan origin (Dravidian, Munda, Mon-Khmer). REFERENCESKatenina, T. E. Ocherk grammatiki iazyka maratkhi. Moscow, 1963. Lambert, H. M. Marathi Language Course. Calcutta, 1943. Vaze, S. G. The Aryabhushan School Dictionary: Marathi-English. Poona, 1963. Mone, M. S. Mara fhr vyaka ran. Poona, 1959. Bloch, J. The Formation of the Marathi Language. Delhi, 1970. (Translated from French.)L. A. BARKHUDAROVA MarathienUK
Synonyms for Marathinoun an Indic languageSynonymsRelated Words- Sanskrit
- Sanskritic language
|