Dhimal

Permanent URI for this section

Dhimal (ISO-639-3 code: dhi)

Language and Geography

Dhimal is a Tibeto-Burman language. It is spoken in India and Nepal. In India it is mainly spoken in Darjeeling district of West Bengal. It is spoken in three villages of Naxalbari. Dhimal speakers mainly speak Dhimal, Rajbanshi, Bengali and Hindi. Some of them can even speak Santali, Sadri and Nepali. They work mainly as farmers and government contractors. Females work in Anganbari centres.

Dhimal speakers have Rajbanshi and Bengali neighbours. Many words can be seen to be borrowed in Dhimal from Rajbanshi, Bengali, and Hindi with minor phonological changes like Beard- d̪arih (same in Bengali and Hindi), Finger- aŋuli (aŋul in Bengali), Palm-t̪ala (t̪alu in Bengali). Bengali script is used to write the language.

The language has lost many of its lexical items, like body parts and numbers. Bengali numbers are used for counting. However, it has retained its structural features. Like, the language has an honorific morpheme /su/. Its absence marks the verb as non-honorific. The following examples show the contrast between honorific and non-honorific marking.
1. um ca
rice eat
Eat rice. (-HON)
2. um ca su
rice eat HON
Eat rice. (+HON)
Dhimal, unlike Bengali, has different verbs for eating and drinking. The verb, ‘to eat’ is /ca/ (e.g. 2) while the verb ‘to drink’ is /am/.
3. gora am su
alcohol drink (+HON)
Drink alcohol (Hariya).

Tradition and Religion

Dhimal celebrates a village festival called Pat Puja. They also celebrate Hindu festivals like Diwali and Dussehra. The person who performs the rituals is called Dhami. Dhimal people claim they are followers of the natural religion, which means they mainly worship nature because it provides them with food and shelter. In their festivals, all the community members, including children, drink the locally prepared alcohol called Gora or Iu.

The traditional dress of Dhimal is called Patanighat, made in a combination of red and black. The place where these dresses are made is called Gharelu. Dhimal women wear jewelry called Satia (nose pin), Tisi (neck chain), and Bahi (bangles).

Work in Progress

At present, the Dhimal dictionary is being prepared in SPPEL. Besides Dhimal headwords, this dictionary also contains meanings in English and the regional language, marking parts of speech, semantic domain, sound files, picture files, and example sentences in Dhimal and their meanings in English. Soon, the work of grammar writing will also start. Now, the phonological analysis is in progress.

Browse

Collections of this Section

Now showing 1 - 1 of 1