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Central Bengali [1] or Raṛhi Bengali (রাঢ়ী বাংলা) is a dialect of the Bengali language spoken in the southeastern part of West Bengal, in and around the Bhagirathi River basin of Nadia district [2] and other districts of the Presidency division in West Bengal, as well as the undivided Kushtia district region of western Bangladesh.
Bangali dialect: Bangali dialect is the most widely spoken dialect of Bengali language. It is spoken across the Khulna, Barisal, Dhaka, Mymensingh, Sylhet and Comilla Divisions of Bangladesh and the State of Tripura in India. 2. Rarhi dialect: Rarhi dialect is spoken across much of Southern West Bengal, India and Southwestern Bangladesh. It is ...
Rarhi may refer to: A person from the Rarh region of eastern India Rarhi dialect or West Bengali dialect, a dialect of the Bengali language spoken in the Rarh region in West Bengal, India
The dialects spoken in Pirojpur and Jhalokati have lots of influence from the Sunderbani dialects. The dialects spoken in Patuakhali and Barguna districts have their own distinct characteristics and the dialect spoken in Bhola district has lots of grammatical influence from the Chittagonian language from dialects like Noakhalia and Chatgaiya.
Kashiram Das from Siddhi village in Burdwan made the Mahabharata in lucid language accessible to the people and Krittibas Ojha did the same with the Ramayana. 15th century Indian saint and social reformer Chaitanya Mahaprabhu, who is the chief proponent of vedantic philosophy of Achintya Bheda Abheda and Gaudiya Vaishnavism, was born in ...
The south-western dialects (Rarhi or Nadia dialect) form the basis of modern standard colloquial Bengali. In the dialects prevalent in much of eastern and south-eastern Bangladesh (Barisal, Chittagong, Dhaka and Sylhet Divisions of Bangladesh), many of the stops and affricates heard in West Bengal and western Bangladesh are pronounced as ...
Standard Bengali based on the Rarhi dialect is the national language of Bangladesh. The majority of Bangladeshis speak an eastern variant of Bengali. [20] Other native languages of Bangladesh include Sylheti, Rangpuri, Noakhailla and Chittagonian, while some ethnic minority groups also speak Tibeto-Burman, Dravidian and Austroasiatic languages ...
Razihi (Rāziḥī), originally known to linguists as "Naẓīri", [3] is a Central Semitic language spoken by at least 62,900 people in the vicinity of Mount Razih (Jabal Razih) in the far northwestern corner of Yemen. [4] Along with Faifi, it is possibly the only surviving descendant of the Old South Arabian languages. [5]