Dakhini | |
---|---|
Deccan دکنی (दख्खनी) |
|
Native to | Telangana, Marathwada region of Maharashtra, Southern part of Andhra Pradesh, Northern Karnataka, Goa, Northern part of Tamil Nadu and Central Karnataka; also significant minority speakers found in the state of Kerala. |
Region | Deccan Plateau |
Native speakers
|
11 million (2007) |
Indo-European
|
|
Urdu alphabet (Nastaʿlīq script), other | |
Language codes | |
ISO 639-3 |
|
Glottolog | decc1239 |
Dakhini also spelled Dakkhani and Deccani, arose as a Muslim court language of the Deccan Plateau ca. 1300 AD in ways similar to Urdu. It is similar to Urdu in its influence from Arabic and Persian with a Hindi base, but differs because of the strong influence of Marathi, Konkani, Telugu, and Kannada spoken in the states of Maharashtra, Telangana, Andhra Pradesh, Karnataka and Tamil Nadu. This dialect has a rich and extensive literary heritage. Despite it being the native language of most Muslims of the erstwhile Princely States of Hyderabad State and the Kingdom of Mysore, it is also the spoken form of Hindi-Urdu for most Hindus and non-Hindus of the region to this day and is the most common "street-language" in several cities including Hyderabad, Bangalore, Aurangabad and Mangalore. Dakhini is the native language of the Dakhini Muslims.
Dakhini is spoken in the Deccan plateau region of India. Just as Urdu developed in Lucknow, Dakhini developed in Deccan plateau parallel to Urdu with Khari Boli. The term Dakhini is perhaps an umbrella for a group of dialects spoken by certain communities of Muslims in the Deccan region.