Indo-Aryan language spoken Nepal
For the closely related language spoken in Bengal and Assam that is sometimes also called Rajbanshi, see
Rangpuri language .
Rajbanshi (also called Tajpuria ) is a Bengali-Assamese language spoken in Nepal . It is related to, but distinct from Rangpuri/Kamta in Bangladesh and India, which is also known by the alternative name "Rajbanshi", with which it forms the KRNB cluster.
Phonology
This section is based on Wilde 2008 .
Consonants
/ts, tsʰ, dz, dzʱ/ can often be heard as post-alveolar [tʃ, tʃʰ, dʒ, dʒʱ] , when following back vowels.
/r/ and /rʱ/ can have allophones of [ɽ ɾ] and [ɽʱ ɾʱ] .
/b/ can have allophones of [β w] .
/pʰ/ can also be realised as [f] .
/s/ can also have an allophone of [ʃ ].
/h/ can be realised as voiceless or voiced [ɦ] in word-initial positions.
/n̪/ can be heard as alveolar [n] before an alveolar consonant, and as a retroflex [ɳ] when preceding a retroflex consonant.
A word-final /r/ may tend to be voiceless [r̥] .
Central approximants [w j] occur, but are deemed allophones of /u i/ .
Vowels
In addition to these vowels, Rangpuri has the following diphthongs: /ie, iæ, iu, iʌ, ui, uæ, uʌ, ei, eu, æi, æu, ʌi, ʌu/ .
Vowels /i, e/ can have shortened allophones of [ɪ, ɛ] .
/æ/ can also be articulated more central as [ɐ, ä] .
/ʌ/ may also be heard as two sounds [ɜ, ə] in free variation.[ 5]
Notes
References
Official language Indigenous languages