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Korku (also known as Kurku, or Muwasi) is an Austroasiatic language spoken by the of central , in the states of and Maharashtra. It is isolated in the midst of the , who are Dravidian, while its closest relatives are in eastern India. It is the westernmost Austroasiatic language.

Korkus are also closely associated with the people, many of whom have traditionally lived in special quarters of Korku villages. Korku is spoken by around 700,000 people, mainly in four districts of southern (, , , Narmadapuram) and three districts of northern (Rajura and of Chandrapur district, Manikgarh pahad area near in Chandrapur district) (Amravati, Buldana, ).

The name Korku comes from Koro-ku (- ku is the animate plural), Koro 'person, member of the Korku community' (Zide 2008).Cust, R. N. "Grammatical Note and Vocabulary of the Language of the Kor-ku, a Kolarian Tribe in Central India." The Journal of the Royal Asiatic Society of Great Britain and Ireland. no. 2 (1884): 164 - 179.


Sociolinguistics
The Indian national census of 2011 reported 727,133 people claiming to speak Korku, which contributes to Korku being an unscheduled language according to the Indian system.Sengupta, Papia. "Endangered Languages: Some Concerns." Economic And Political Weekly. no. 32 (2009): 17-19. However, Korku is classified as “vulnerable” by , the least concerning of the levels of language endangerment nonetheless. Most adult men are bilingual in , or multilingual in Hindi and the local Dravidian languages (Zide 2008: 156). in the language is low.

Throughout recent history, the use of the Korku language has been heavily influenced by larger hegemonic languages, especially Hindi. A few Korku-speaking groups have had relative success in increasing the viability of their dialect, specifically the Potharia Korku from the .. "Thirty Korku Dancing Songs." Asian Folklore Studies. no. 1 (2000): 109-140.


Dialects
Zide (2008:256) lists two for Korku, a Western and an Eastern one. The Western Dialect, which has a handful of subdialects is also called Korku. Among the Western varieties, the one spoken in Lahi is notable for its loss of the dual number.
  • Western (aka Korku) dialect: spoken in the districts of , -Narmadapuram, and Narmadapuram.
  • Eastern (aka Muwasi/Mowasi/Mawasi, or Kurku ): spoken in the Chhindwara district of southeastern .
lists four dialects for Korku:

  • Ruma (Korku)
  • Bondoy
  • Bouriya
  • Mawasi


Geographical Distribution
Korku is spoken in the following regions (Zide 2008:256):


Phonology

Vowels
Korku has 10 , which can occur short or long (e.g. /aː/), plus one mid vowel that only occurs as a short segment /ə/.


Consonants
Korku has a large phoneme inventory,
(1999). 9784872977455, Institute for the Study of Languages and Cultures of Asia and Africa, Tokyo University of Foreign Studies. .
in which stops occur in several places of articulation. Like many languages of India, Korku stops distinguish between voiced, plain voiceless, and voiceless aspirated consonants.

Word-finally, all stops are unreleased.


Tone
Korku has two contrastive level tones: low and high. The high tone is unmarked. In many reduplicated verbs, the prefixed element takes the low tone. Only non-initial syllables exhibit tone distinction. In allegro speech, low tone can inject the whole noun phrase, as if there is a low tone in the phrase, every syllable after it will express with low tones. Example iɲ-àʔ sanì kẽᶑe siɽi "my black small goat" → iɲàʔ sànì kẽᶑè sìɽì.


Vowel harmony
Verb suffixes and demonstrative derivatives, particularly stems with a final vowel will trigger in morphology: in-èn > enèn ('here'). Initial vowel is harmonised to match with the stressed final syllable. Verb suffixes with -CV structure contract with and are reduced when preceding suffixes with initial vowels. Eg. kul-ki-èʔ-(n)ej (send-INTNS/TLOC-PST.TR-3.OBJ, 'sent him') becomes kulkhèʔnèj when is spelled.


Morphosyntax
Korku is a highly agglutinating, language. It has postpositions, a case system, a two-gender system, and three numbers. The verb phrase can be complex in Korku; functions that in English and other languages may be encoded in by the use of auxiliary verbs and of prepositions may be expressed in Korku through suffixation.


Word order
Korku, as all , shows a strict Subject-Object-Verb (SOV) .
(2025). 9783110924251, Mouton de Gruyter.
+ !Subject ! colspan="2"Object !Verb
iɲɟdukanaʈensaːkaɾsasaːba
Istore-fromsugarbring.will
“I will bring sugar from the store”
Adjectives are expressed verbally - as intransitive verbs - with the exception of a few cases in which a separate word occurs before the noun they are modifying.
ɖiɟaʔapʰaikenɖesimku
her/histhreeblackchickens
“Her/His three black chickens”


Morphology
Nouns in Korku are assigned one of two grammatical genders: , and inflect for several different .


Grammatical number
Korku distinguishes three grammatical numbers: singular, dual (two of X), and (three or more of X) for nouns in the animate class. Nouns in the inanimate class are rarely marked for number. Final vowels are sometimes deleted before dual or plural endings (see the example at koɾo).
+ !Singular !Dual !Plural
konɟe-Ø ‘daughter’konɟe -kiɲ ‘two daughters’konɟe- ku ‘daughters’
koɾo ‘man’koɾ kiɲ ‘two men’koɾ ku ‘men’
siʈa ‘dog’siʈa kiɲ ‘two dogs’siʈa ku ‘dogs’


Case system
In Korku, the function of participants in a sentence (e.g. agent, patient, etc.) is expressed through grammatical case markings on nouns. Additionally, ideas that are expressed via prepositions in English (e.g. towards, from, with, etc.) are also expressed via case markings in Korku. The table below illustrates the different cases and the suffixes used to express them.

Other directional and time markers include:


Argument marking
Additionally, Korku regularly marks direct object on the verb, as in other Munda languages. In the sentence below, the suffix /eɟ/ on the verb compound /senɖawkʰen/ indicates that it was someone else who was given permission to go.

iɲɟɖikʰeʔsenɖawkʰen -eɟ
Iher/himallowed.to.go-obj
“I allowed her/him to go”

Another example,

Korku has evidence of subject marking in the past, but in modern day subject indexation has been fossilized and restricted to third persons of locative copulas and nominal predicates in the locative case.

Table below lists pronominal markers in Korku that encode person/number for the object arguments.

-laɲ/-lom-buɲ


Tenses/Moods/Aspects/Directionality
Given that the general trend in is the fusion of tenses with voices, Korku stems are subjected to complex stem alternations in tense/aspect marking in regards to , , and augmentation. There are two tenses in Korku: Future/Present and Past. Depending on whether the verb is in active or middle voice, its structures may vary. In Future/Present forms, intransitive stems take intransitive marker -ùʔ except some few verbs such as sen ('go'), hej ('come'), and niɽ ('run, go away').

Korku utilizes partial reduplications of certain monosyllabic stems to create imperfective, habitual, and infinitive forms. In some instances, the reduplicated variant can convey effects and anticipations of an immediate about-to-happen action.

Verb stems can take other markers to express modality/mood/aspects/orientations. Note that many of those suffixes have overlapping functions/fused with other TAM/person categories or assimilated/harmonized with final stressed suffixes. For example, the continuous progressive -lakken that often occurs with reduplicated allomorph to describe unfolding actions contains two elements, the auxiliary -lab and the perfective/unaccomplishment -ken, itself a contracted form of translocative, intensive mode, recent past -ki and intransitive past -en, but are functionally different.

+ TAM/Orientation in Korku (Zide 2008)
-kiIntensive Mode, Translocative, Recent Past, Probabilitative
-lìCislocative
-yaTranslocative, Remote past
-ʈʰàAttemptive, Tentative Mode
-jomDelayed action
-waBenefactive
Past transitive
-ùʔPassive-potential
-kʰùʔDurative mood
-yùʔ < -ya-ùʔPotential, ability
-labContinuous aspect
-kenPrefective, Unaccomplishness
-daːnPast Habitual
-daUnaccomplishness
-kaContinuative aspect
-yeCapabilitive mood
wa-Permissive mood


Pronouns

Personal pronouns
Sources:
(2017). 9780199384655, Oxford University Press. .

Personal pronouns in Korku show different number and gender patterns depending on the person. The first person (“ I, we”) distinguishes not only the three numbers but also whether the hearer is included (“ all of us”) or excluded (“ us, but not you”) in the communicative context. The second person (“ you, you all”) only encodes number, whereas the third person (“ s/he, they”) distinguishes gender, and number for animate nouns.


Demonstratives
In Korku, demonstratives (e.g. “ this, that, those”) encode not only distance (e.g. “here and there”) but also gender and number. Unlike English, which only distinguishes between a single proximal (this) and distal (that) spatial references, Korku demonstratives encode four levels of proximity to the speaker (i.e. ‘very close’ vs. ‘close’ vs. ‘far’ vs. ‘very far’), plus a fifth distinction, when one is pinpointing. The table below illustrates the forms used in Korku.
+ ! rowspan="3"Gender ! rowspan="3"Number ! colspan="5"Distance


Derivation
In Korku, the infix -nV- is sometimes injected into verbs to derive nouns. This method is no longer productive as compared to the Kherwarian languages and other Munda lects.

kaɽub ('to cover') → kanuɽub ('lid, cover')

jukh(V)rij ('to sweep') → junuʔ ('broom')


Lexicon

Numerals
The basic cardinal numbers from 1 to 10 (transcribed in IPA) are:

Numbers after 11 are mainly of Indo-Aryan origin.

(2014). 9789004283572


Kinship terms
As with many Austroasiatic languages, Korku has several words to refer to members of one's family, including the extended family and in-laws. There are often separate terms for people depending on their gender and seniority, for instance /bawan/ “wife's older brother” and /kosɾeʈ/ “elder brother's son”. In the tables below, words that include the suffix -/ʈe/ refer to someone else's family member, so that /kon/ means “my son”, whereas /kon ʈe/ is used when talking about someone else's son, for instance /ɖukriaʔ konʈe/ “the old woman's son”.
+Immediate family ! motheranʈe / maːj

Korku has words to refer to pairs or groups of people in the family.

+Pairs or groups of family members ! parentsanʈebaːʈe

+In-laws (Wife's side)


Writing system
The Korku language uses the of the Devanagari script, which is also used to write the .


Sample text
Korku folklore: Kolia - The Story of a Jackal


Further reading
  • Anderson, Gregory D. S. (ed.), The Munda languages. Routledge Language Family Series 3.New York: Routledge. .
  • Nagaraja, K. S. (1999). Korku language: grammar, texts, and vocabulary. Tokyo: Institute for the Study of Languages and Cultures of Asia and Africa, Tokyo University of Foreign Studies.
  • Zide, Norman H. (1963). Korku noun morphology. [Chicago: South Asian Languages Program, University of Chicago.
  • Zide, Norman H. (1960). Korku verb morphology. S.l:
  • Zide, Norman H. (2008). "Korku". In Gregory D. S. Anderson (ed.), The Munda languages, 256–298. Routledge Language Family Series 3. New York: Routledge. .


External links

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