Dogri | |
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Native to | |
Region |
|
Ethnicity | Dogras |
Native speakers | 1.6 million in India (2011)[1] |
| |
Official status | |
Official language in | Jammu and Kashmir, India[2] |
Language codes | |
ISO 639-2 | doi |
ISO 639-3 | doi – inclusive codeIndividual codes: dgo – Dogri properxnr – Kangri |
Glottolog | indo1311 |
Major Indo-Aryan languages (The Dogra language in the western Pahari branch in bule area mark) |
Dogri (Devanagari: डोगरी; Name Dogra Akkhar: 𑠖𑠵𑠌𑠤𑠮; Nastaliq: ڈوگری; IPA: [ɖoːɡ.ɾiː]) is an Indo-Aryan language of the Western Pahari group,[3] primarily spoken in the Jammu region of Jammu and Kashmir, India, with smaller groups of speakers in the adjoining regions of western Himachal Pradesh, northern Punjab,[4] and north-eastern Pakistani Punjab.[5] It is the ethnic language of the Dogras, and was spoken in the historical region of Duggar. It is currently spoken in the districts of Kathua, Jammu, Samba, Udhampur, and Reasi,[1] Unusually for an Indo-European language, Dogri is tonal,[6] a trait it shares with other Western Pahari languages and Punjabi. It has several varieties, all with greater than 80% lexical similarity.[7]
Dogri is spoken by 2.6 million people in India (as of the 2011 census).[1] It has been among the country's 22 scheduled languages since 2003. It is also one of the five official languages of the union territory of Jammu and Kashmir.
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