Kusunda
[aka Kusunḍā, Kusanda, Kusūndu]Classification: Isolate
·awakening
Classification: Isolate
·awakening
Kusunḍā, Kusanda, Kusūndu, gilaŋdei mʲahəq, कुसुjडा, |
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Isolate, South Asian |
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Dēvanāgarī |
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ISO 639-3 |
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kgg |
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As csv |
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Information from: “Speak to awaken: Revitalising Kusunda” . Uday Raj Aaley and Timotheus A. Bodt (2023)
"...in 2019, we recorded the [two living] speakers, Gyani Maiya Sen Kusunda and Kamala Khatri, together... In early 2020, Kusunda ceased being spoken in a natural language environment [with the passing of Gyani Maiya]. As one speaker still lives (Kamala), Kusunda does not yet fulfil Leonard’s definition of a ‘sleeping’ (or ‘dormant’) language in the strictest sense... Nonetheless, describing the present efforts to recreate a vibrant speech community as ‘awakening’ Kusunda is apt. because Kusunda was basically dormant for the last 50 to 60 years. There is no active speech community, all new learners have no extant knowledge of the language, and the process of revitalisation is similar in many respects to starting with no speakers at all."
Nepali
Dēvanāgarī-based orthography developed in 2017 by Uday Raj Aaley.
"Kusunda was once spoken across the Middle Hills, the Lower (also: Inner, Lesser) Himalayan Range, the Inner Tarai Valleys, and the Sivalik (Chure) Hills of mid-western and central Nepal and may once have been even more widespread. At present, the Kusunda population is concentrated in the Inner Tarai Valleys of Surkhēt and Dāṅ Dēukhurī districts and the Middle Hills of Pyuṭhān district."
Map point is located in the town of Dharnā, where some of the Kusunda language classes are held.
Information from: “Ethnologue: Languages of the World, 16th Edition (2009)” . M. Paul Lewis · SIL International
164
7 (2005 SIL). 87 reported in 2001 census, living in Pyuthan, Dang and Tanahun. Ethnic population: 164.
Information from: “Nepal's mystery language on the verge of extinction” . Bimal Gautam (2012)
~100
The last fluent speakers are "Gyani Maiya Sen, a 75-year-old woman from western Nepal" and Kamala Khatri, who left Nepal to find work.
"Other Kusunda people... can only speak a few Kusunda words, but can't communicate [fully] in the language."
-- Gyani Maiya Sen
Nepali
There are no governmental programs to support the language.
Western Nepal
Information from: “The World Atlas of Language Structures” . Bernard Comrie and David Gil and Martin Haspelmath and Matthew S. Dryer · Oxford University Press
Information from: “The last word: Kusunda language set to die out because only one speaker is left” . Steve White (2012)
~100
1
“I feel very sad for not being able to speak with people from my own community. They neither understand nor speak the Kusunda language – it will die with me.” -- Gyani Maiya Sen, last fluent speaker
Nepali
Western Nepal
Information from: “Linguistic discrimination and conflict” . Sangmo Yonjan-Tamang (2021)
"Gyani Maya Kusunda, one of the two fluent mother-tongue speakers from a nearly extinct language, died last year in her hometown Lamahi, Dang in western Nepal."
Information from: “Resuscitating dying Kusunda language” . Durgalal KC (2019)
2
"Gyanimaya Kusunda and her sister Kamala Kusunda, who are among the handful of people who can still speak their native language in its original form, were delighted to see a group of people from their community learning their language in a classroom of Aadarsha Secondary School in Lamahi, Dang, on Thursday.
The class, which will be held regularly from now onwards, was organised by the Language Commission in a bid to preserve the dying Kusunda language. The commission has assigned 80-year-old Gyanimaya and 43-year-old Kamala as the resource persons for the language class."
"At the moment, 20 people from the Kusunda community are taking the language course, but Awasthi said the class was open to anyone who wanted to learn the language."