Kamarupi Prakrit

http://dbpedia.org/resource/Kamarupi_Prakrit an entity of type: Thing

Kamarupi Prakrit is the postulated Middle Indo-Aryan (MIA) Prakrit language used in ancient Kamarupa (5th–13th century). This language is the historical ancestor of the Kamatapuri lects and the modern Assamese language; and can be dated prior to 1250 CE, when the proto-Kamta language, the parent of the Kamatapuri lects, began to develop. Though not substantially proven, the existence of the language that predated the Kamatapuri lects and modern Assamese is widely believed. rdf:langString
rdf:langString Kamarupi Prakrit
rdf:langString Kamarupi Prakrit
rdf:langString Kamarupi Prakrit
xsd:float 26.14999961853027
xsd:float 90.80999755859375
xsd:integer 1287521
xsd:integer 1118874012
rdf:langString Kamrupi Apabhramsa
rdf:langString First millennium
xsd:string 26.15 90.81
rdf:langString Kamarupi Prakrit is the postulated Middle Indo-Aryan (MIA) Prakrit language used in ancient Kamarupa (5th–13th century). This language is the historical ancestor of the Kamatapuri lects and the modern Assamese language; and can be dated prior to 1250 CE, when the proto-Kamta language, the parent of the Kamatapuri lects, began to develop. Though not substantially proven, the existence of the language that predated the Kamatapuri lects and modern Assamese is widely believed. The evidence of this MIA exist in systematic errors in the Sanskrit language used in the Kamarupa inscriptions. A distinguishing characteristic of Kamarupa inscriptions is the replacement of ś and ṣ by s, which is contrary to Vararuci's rule, the main characteristic of Magadhi Prakrit, which warrants that ṣ and s are replaced by ś. Linguists claim this apabhramsa gave rise to various eastern Indo-European languages like modern Assamese and felt its presence in the form of Kamrupi and Kamatapuri lects.
rdf:langString Indo-European
rdf:langString none
rdf:langString historical
rdf:langString Kāmarūpī Prākrit
xsd:nonNegativeInteger 12719
<Geometry> POINT(90.809997558594 26.14999961853)

data from the linked data cloud