Korku | |
---|---|
Region | Central India (Madhya Pradesh, Maharashtra) |
Native speakers
|
570,000 (2001 census) |
Austroasiatic
|
|
Balbodh style of the Devanagari script | |
Language codes | |
ISO 639-3 |
|
Glottolog | kork1243 |
The Korku language is the language of the Korku tribe of central India. It belongs to the Kolarian or Munda family, isolated in the midst of a Dravidian (Gondi) population.
Korkus are also closely associated with the Nihali people, many of whom have traditionally lived in special quarters of Korku villages. Korku is spoken by half a million people, mainly in four districts of southern Madhya Pradesh (Khandwa, Harda, Betul, Hoshangabad) and three districts of northern Maharashtra (Rajura and Korpana tahsils of Chandrapur district, Manikgarh pahad area near Gadchandur in Chandrapur district) (Amravati, Buldana, Akola). Korku is spoken in a declining number of villages and is gradually being replaced by Hindi.
The name Korku comes from Koro-ku (-ku is the animate plural), Koro 'person, member of the Korku community' (Zide 2008).
Zide (2008:256) lists the following dialects.
Korku is spoken in the following regions (Zide 2008:256):
Nouns may have either one of the three genders: masculine, feminine, or neuter. Adjectives are placed before the nouns they qualify.
The Korku language uses the Balbodh style of the Devanagari script, which is also used to write the Marathi language.