Correction to Help needed in Marathi spelling and pronunciation

Harry Spier harryspier at HOTMAIL.COM
Sun Jan 30 21:55:10 UTC 2000


Dear list members,

My original message for "help needed in Marathi spelling and pronunciation
has the wrong words in the example.  This message has the correct ones. Also
where a nasalized vowel is indicated in the romanized version bindu (not
chandrabindu is in the devanagari version) Apologies.

A chanting book I have has mostly sanskrit verses but there are some modern
marathi verses.  In the marathi verses there are words with nasalized
vowels.  These are indicated in the romanized chanting book by vowels with a
tilde and in the devanagari version by bindu.

Marathi words with nasalized vowel spelling in the verse:

(a tilde after the vowel indicates tilde over the vowel,
capital vowel indicates a long vowel, M is bindu.

Romanized
transliteration               Devanagari

tithe~                        titheM
aThavItA~                     aThavItAM
mitU~paNAce                   mitUMpaNAce
tU~ci                         tUMci
mAgaNe~ te~                   mAgaNeM teM

The pronunciation guide at the back of the romanized chanting book says
that: "[some hymns] are in Marathi rather than Sanskrit and for this reason
a tilde (~) over a vowel is used to indicate a nasal sound made at the back
of the throat with the mouth open; the sound is similar to the ending of
"hunh" or the nasalized vowels in French."

But in looking through "The Indo-Aryan Languages" by Colin P. Masica I come
across these statements about Marathi spelling and pronunciation.

page 118 of Masica: "Nasalization is absent from ...most Marathi dialects
(although present in Konkani and retained until recently in Marathi
spelling)."

page 437 of Masica: "...[Marathi] recently spelling reformed to bring closer
to pronunciation of colloquial standard, mainly by dropping unpronounced
nasals;"

1) Can someone elaborate what this "recent spelling reform" is.

2) And what would be the pronunciation and spelling of the Marathi words I
listed in view of this "recent spelling reform".

3) Is the Poona dialect considered the standard?  Is it the largest?


Many thanks in advance,

Harry Spier
371 Brickman Rd.
Hurleyville, New York
USA 12747


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