The
Middle Indo-Aryan (
Middle Indic) languages are the early medieval dialects of the
Indo-Aryan languages, the descendants of the Old Indo-Aryan dialects such as
Sanskrit, and the predecessors of the late medieval languages such as
Apabhramsha or
Abahatta, which eventually evolved into the contemporary Indo-Aryan languages, including
Hindustani (
Hindi-Urdu),
Oriya,
Bengali, and
Punjabi. The term
Prakrit is also often applied to these languages (
prakrita literally means "natural" as opposed to
sanskrita, which literally means "constructed" or "refined"). Modern scholars such as Shapiro follow this classification by including all Middle Indo-Aryan languages under the rubric of "Prakrits", while others emphasise the independent development of these languages, often separated from the Sanskrit by social and geographic differences..
History
The
Indo-Aryan languages are commonly assigned to three major groups - Old, Middle and New Indo-Aryan -, a linguistic and not strictly chronological classification, since
Classical Sanskrit co-existed with Middle Indic vernaculars. And a number of their morphophonological and lexical features betray the fact that they are not direct continuations of
Sanskrit, the main base of "Classical" Sanskrit; rather they descend from dialects which, despite many similarities, were different from and in some regards even more archaic.
The Middle Indo-Aryan stage is thought to have spanned more than a millennium between 600 BC - 1000 AD, and is often divided into three or four major subdivisions. The early stage is represented by the inscriptions of
Asoka (c. 250 BC) and by
Pāli (used in
Buddhist scriptures) and
Ardhamāgadhī (used in
Jain scriptures). The middle stage is represented by the various literary
Prakrits, especially
Sauraseni,
Maharashtri and
Magadhi. The late stage is represented by the
Apabhraṃśa dialects of the sixth century AD and later
that preceded early Modern Indo-Aryan languages
[Shapiro, Hindi.] (e.g.
Brij Bhasha).
Phonology and morphology
MIA languages, though individually distinct, share features of phonology and morphology which characterize them as parallel descendants of Old Indo-Aryan. Various sound changes are typical of the MIA phonology:
- The vocalic liquids '' and '' are replaced by 'a', 'i' or 'u';
- the diphthongs 'ai' and 'au' are monophthongized to 'e' and 'o';
- long vowels before two or more consonants are shortened;
- the three sibilants of OIA are reduced to one, either 'ś' or 's';
- the often complex consonant clusters of OIA are reduced to more readily pronounceable forms, either by assimilation or by splitting;
- single intervocalic stops are progressively weakened;
- dentals are palatalized by a following '-y-';
- all final consonants except '' are dropped unless they are retained in 'sandhi' junctions.
The most conspicuous features of the morphological system of these languages are: loss of the dual; thematicization of consonantal stems; merger of the f. 'i-/u-' and 'ī-/ū-' in one 'ī-/ū-' inflexion, elimination of the dative, whose functions are taken over by the genitive, simultaneous use of different case-endings in one paradigm; employment of '' and '' as genitives and 'me' and 'te' as instrumentals; gradual disappearance of the middle voice; coexistence of historical and new verbal forms based on the present stem; and use of active endings for the passive. In the vocabulary, the MIA languages are mostly dependent on Old Indo-Aryan, with addition of a few so-called 'deśī' words of (often) uncertain origin.
Innovation
A Middle Indo-Aryan innovation are the serial verb constructions that have evolved into
complex predicates in modern north Indian languages such as Hindi. For example भाग जा (bhāg jā) 'go run' means run away, पका ले (pakā le) 'take cook' means to cook for oneself, and पका दे (pakā de) 'give cook' means to cook for someone. The second verb restricts the meaning of the main verb or adds a shade of meaning to it.
Subsequently the second verb was
grammaticalised further into what is known as a
light verb,
mainly used to convey
lexical aspect distinctions for the main verb.
Apabhramsa
An
apabhramsa (also:
avahatta) was a language developed from Prakrits. Modern Provincial languages developed from different apabhramsas.
Patanjali was the first to use apabhramsa in his
Mahabhasya (200 B.C.). The term is derived from the Sanskrit word Apabhrasta, means a corrupted form of
Sanskrit. Mostly
Jain religious language and
spiritual literature of
Siddhas was composed in Apabhramsa language.
When the
Romani people migrated from
Rajasthan,
Punjab,
Sindh and
Afganistan in the first century A.D, they were speaking an apabhramsa language pertaining to the Western part of India. They spread in Western countries around the 12 century A.D.
Apabhramsa poets
Literary work in apabhramsa appeared in eighth century A.D. Poets of apabhramsa are as follows:
- Svayambhu - his poem is Pauma Cariu