'Malayalam (മലയാളം ) is the language spoken predominantly in the state of Kerala, in southern India. It is one of the 22 official languages of India, spoken by around 36 million people. A native speaker of Malayalam is called a "Malayalee" (or sometimes a "Keraleeyan" or "Keralite"). Malayalam is also spoken in Union territories of Lakshadweep and Pondicherry.
The language belongs to the family of Dravidian languages. Both the language and its writing system are closely related to Tamil. Malayalam has a script of its own.
Kerala and Lakshadweep Islands are the only places in the world where Malayalam is the main spoken language.
Malayalam colloquial grammar is available at *
Malayalam poetry to the late twentieth century betrays varying degrees of the fusion of the three different strands. The oldest examples of /Pattu/ and Manipravalam respectively are /ramacharitam/ and /vaishikatantram/, both of the twelfth century.
The earliest extant prose work in the language is a commentary in simple Malayalam, Bhashakautaliyam (12th century) on Chanakya's Arthasastra. Adhyathmaramayanam by Thunchaththu Ramanujan Ezhuthachan is one of the most important works in Malyalam Literature. Malayalam prose of different periods exhibit various levels of influence from different languages such as Tamil, Sanskrit, Prakrit, Pali, Hebrew, Hindi, Urdu, Arabic, Persian, Syriac, Portuguese, Dutch, French and English. Modern literature is rich in poetry, fiction, drama, biography, and literary criticism.
| Short | Long | |||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Front | Central | Back | Front | Central | Back | |
| Close | ഇ i | * ŭ | ഉ u | ഈ ī | ഊ ū | |
| Mid | എ e | * a | ഒ o | ഏ ē | ഓ ō | |
| Open | അ a | ആ ā |
Malayalam has also borrowed the Sanskrit diphthongs of (represented in Malayalam as ഔ, au) and (represented in Malayalam as ഐ, ai), although these mostly occur only in Sanskrit loanwords. Traditionally (as in Sanskrit), four vocalic consonants (technically consonants followed by the samvr̥tokāram, which is not officially a vowel) have been classified as vowels : vocalic r (ഋ, ,r̥) , long vocalic r (ൠ, {{IPA|/rɨː/}, r̥̄ ), vocalic l (ഌ, {{IPA|/lɨ˘/}), l̥) and long vocalic l (ൡ, {{IPA|/lɨː/}), l̥̄)
| Bilabial | Labiodental | Dental | Alveolar | Retroflex | Palatal | Velar | Glottal | |||||||||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Stop | Unaspirated | പ p | ബ b | ത t | ദ d | * t | ട ṭ | ഡ ḍ | ച c | ജ j | ക k | ഗ g | ||||||
| Aspirated | ഫ ph | ഭ bh | ഥ th | ധ dh | ഠ ṭh | ഢ ḍh | ഛ ch | ഝ jh | ഖ kh | ഘ gh | ||||||||
| Nasal | മ m | ന n | ന | ണ ṇ | ഞ ñ | ങ ṅ | ||||||||||||
| Approximant | വ v | ഴ l | യ y | |||||||||||||||
| Liquid | റ r | |||||||||||||||||
| Fricative | ഫ | സ s | ഷ ṣ | ശ ś | ഹ h | |||||||||||||
| Tap | ര r | |||||||||||||||||
| Lateral approximant | ല l | ള ḷ | ||||||||||||||||
In the early ninth century /vattezhuthu/ (round writing) traceable through the Grantha script, to the pan-Indian Brahmi script, gave rise to the Malayalam writing system. It is syllabic in the sense that the sequence of graphic elements means that syllables have to be read as units, though in this system the elements representing individual vowels and consonants are for the most part readily identifiable. In the 1960s Malayalam dispensed with many special letters representing less frequent conjunct consonants and combinations of the vowel /u/ with different consonants.
Malayalam now consists of 56 letters including 20 long and short vowels and the rest consonants. The earlier style of writing is now substituted with a new style from 1981. This new script reduces the different letters for typeset from 900 to less than 90. This was mainly done to include Malayalam in the keyboards of typewriters and computers.
In 1999 a group called Rachana Akshara Vedi, led by Chitrajakumar and K.H. Hussein, produced a set of free fonts containing the entire character repertoire of more than 900 glyphs. This was announced and released along with an editor in the same year at Thiruvananthapuram, the capital city of Kerala. In 2004, the fonts were released under the GNU GPL license by Richard Stallman of the Free Software Foundation at the Cochin University of Science and Technology in Kochi, Kerala.
Variations in intonation patterns, vocabulary, and distribution of grammatical and phonological elements are observable along the parameters of region, religion, community, occupation, social stratum, style and register. Influence of Sanskrit is most prominent in the Hindu high caste dialects and least in the lower caste dialects like most other Indian languages. Loan words from English, Syriac, Greek, Hebrew, Latin, and Portuguese abound in the Christian dialects and those from Arabic and Urdu in the Muslim dialects. Malayalam has borrowed from Sanskrit thousands of nouns, hundreds of verbs and some indeclinables. Some items of basic vocabulary also have found their way into Malayalam from Sanskrit. Like in other parts of India, Sanskrit was considered an aristocratic and scholastic language, similar to Latin in European history.
But a greater degree of Sanskrit influence is confined to the Namboothiri dialect of Malayalam which is spoken by people constituting less than 2% of the total Malayali population.
Agglutinative languages | Dravidian languages | Languages of India | Malayalam language | Kerala | Languages_used_in_Tamil_Nadu | Malayalameg | Malayalam | Malayalam | މަލަޔާޅަމް | Malayalam | Malajala lingvo | Malayalam | 말라얄람어 | मलयालम | Bahasa Malayalam | Malayalam | ಮಲಯಾಳಂ | მალაიალამი (ენა) | മലയാളം | Bahasa Malayalam | Malayalam | マラヤーラム語 | Malayalam | Malayalam | Język malajalam | Малаялам | मलयाळम् | Malayalam | Malajalščina | Malayalam | Malayalam | மலையாளம் | మళయాళ భాష | 马拉雅拉姆语
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