Meitei language explained

Meitei
Nativename: • মৈতৈলোন •
Also Known As:Manipuri
States:Manipur, Assam and Tripura
Region:Northeast India and Neighbouring areas of Bangladesh and Myanmar
Ethnicity:Meitei people
Familycolor:Sino-Tibetan
Fam1:Sino-Tibetan
Fam2:Tibeto-Burman
Fam3:Central Tibeto-Burman
Speakers Label:Total speakers
Speakers:L1 & L2 combined: 3 million[1]
L1 only: million
Date:2003–2011
Ref:e25
Ancestor:Proto-Sino-Tibetan
Ancestor2:Proto-Tibeto-Burman
Script:
Nation:
  • India (scheduled official)
    • Manipur (main official)
    • Assam (additional official)
Agency:Directorate of Language Planning and Implementation, Manipur
Development Body:
Iso2:mni
Lc1:mni
Ld1:Manipuri
Lc2:omp
Ld2:Old Manipuri
Glotto:mani1292
Glottoname:Manipuri
Glotto2:meit1246
Glottoname2:Meitei (standard dialect)
Glotto3:loii1241
Glottoname3:Loi (Chakpa dialect)
Glotto4:pang1284
Glottoname4:Pangal (Muslim dialect)
Notice:IPA
Dialects:
Map:File:Meitei language distribution.png

Meitei,[3] also known as Manipuri, is a Tibeto-Burman language of northeast India. It is the official language and the lingua franca of Manipur and one of the official languages of Assam. It is one of the constitutionally scheduled official languages of the Indian Republic. Meitei is the most widely-spoken Tibeto-Burman language of India and third most widely spoken language of northeast India after Assamese and Bengali.[4] There are million Meitei native speakers in India according to the 2011 census. Most of these, or million, are found in the state of Manipur, where they represent majority of its population. There are smaller communities in neighbouring Indian states, such as Assam, Tripura, Nagaland, and elsewhere in the country . The language is also spoken by smaller groups in neighbouring Myanmar[5] and Bangladesh.

Meitei and Gujarati, hold the third place among the fastest growing languages of India, following Hindi and Kashmiri.[6]

Meitei is not endangered: its status has been assessed as safe by Ethnologue (where it is assigned to EGIDS level 2 "provincial language"), but is considered vulnerable by UNESCO.[7]

Manipuri language is associated with the Ningthouja dynasty (Mangangs), the Khuman dynasty, the Moirangs, the Angoms, the Luwangs, the Chengleis (Sarang-Leishangthems), Khaba-Nganbas, having their respective distinct dialects, and politically independent from one another. Later, all of them get under the dominion of the Ningthouja dynasty, changing their status of being independent "ethnicities" into those of "clans" of the collective Meitei community, with the predominance of the Ningthouja dialect,[8] [9] [10] receiving heavy influences from the speech forms of the other groups.[11] [12] [13]

Meitei is one of the advanced literary languages, recognised by Sahitya Akademi, India's National Academy of Letters.

Classification

Meitei belongs to the Tibeto-Burman branch of the Sino-Tibetan languages.[14] [15]

During the 19th and 20th centuries, different linguists tried to assign Meitei to various sub-groups. Early classifier George Abraham Grierson (1903–1924) put it in Kuki-Chin, Vegelin and Voegelin (1965) in Kuki-Chin-Naga, and Benedict (1972) in Kuki-Naga. Robbins Burling has suggested that Meitei belongs to none those groups.[16] Current academic consensus agrees with James Matisoff in placing Manipuri in its own subdivision of the Kamarupan group—a geographic rather than a genetic grouping.[17] However, some still consider Meitei to be a member of the Kuki-Chin-Naga branch.[18]

History

The Meitei language has existed for at least 2000 years.[19] According to linguist Suniti Kumar Chatterjee, the ancient Meitei literature dates back to 1500 to 2000 years before present.[20]

First Millennium CE

The earliest known Meitei language compositions is the ritual song Ougri, which was used in religious and coronation ceremonies of Kangleipak. It may have existed before the Common Era.[21] Numit Kappa, a religious epic that tells the tale of how the night was divided from the day, was also composed in the first century.[22]

Poireiton Khunthok is a 3rd-century narrative work describing the establishment of a colony in Kangleipak by a group of immigrants led by Poireiton, the younger brother of the god of the underworld.[23] The Yumbanlol, a copper plate manuscript was composed in the 6th century or 7th century CE for the royal family of Kangleipak. It is a rare work of dharmashastra, covering sexuality, the relationships between husbands and wives, and instructions on how to run a household.[24]

The Khencho, an early Meitei work of poetry was composed by the beginning of the 7th century CE.[25] Although it is obscure and unintelligible to present-day Meiteis, it is still recited as part of the Lai Haraoba festival.[26]

One of the best-preserved early Meitei language epigraphic records is a copper plate inscription dating to the reign of King Khongtekcha .[27] During the same time period, Akoijam Tombi composed the Panthoibi Khonggul ({{Script|Mtei|ꯄꯥꯟꯊꯣꯏꯄꯤ ꯈꯣꯡꯀꯨꯜ), an account of the romantic adventures of the deified Meitei princess Panthoibi.[28]

Second Millennium CE

In 1100 CE, a written constitution,, was finalised by King Loiyumba of Kangleipak. It was a codification of the proto-constitution drafted by King Naophangba in 429 CE.[29] [30]

Before 1675 CE, the Meitei language experienced no significant influence from any other languages.[31] Beginning in the late 17th century, Hindu influence on Meitei culture increased, and the Meitei language experienced some influences from other languages, on its phonology, morphology (linguistics), syntax and semantics. At the same time, the Hinduised King Pamheiba ordered that the Meitei script be replaced by the Bengali-Assamese script.[31]

In 1725 CE, Pamheiba wrote Parikshit, possibly the first piece of Meitei-language Hindu literature, based on the story of the eponymous king Parikshit of the Mahabharata.[32]

Geographical distribution

The majority of Meitei speakers, about 1.5 million[33] live in the Indian state of Manupur. Meitei is the official language of the Government of Manipur as well as its lingua franca.[34] There are nearly 170,000 Meitei-speakers in Assam,[35] mainly in the Barak Valley, where it is the third most commonly-used language after Bengali and Hindi.[36] Manipuri is also spoken by about 9500 people in Nagaland, in communities such as Dimapur, Kohima, Peren and Phek.[2] [33] Meitei is a second language for various Naga and Kuki-Chin ethnic groups.[2]

There are around 15,000 Meitei speakers in Bangladesh[37] mainly are in the districts of Sylhet, Moulvibazar, Sunamganj and Habiganj in the Sylhet Division of Bangladesh. In the past, there was a Meitei speaking population in Dhaka, Mymensingh and Comilla also.[38] Manipuri is used as a second language by the Bishnupriya Manipuri people.[2]

Myanmar has a significant Meitei speaking population in the states of Kachin and Shan and the regions of Yangon, Sagaing, and Ayeyarwady, among others.[39]

Name

According to the Ethnologue, the alternative names of Meitei language are Kathe, Kathi, Manipuri, Meetei, Meeteilon, Meiteilon, Meiteiron, Meithe, Meithei, Menipuri, Mitei, Mithe, Ponna.[2]

The name Meitei or its alternate spelling Meithei is preferred by many native speakers of Meitei over Manipuri.[40] The term is derived from the Meitei word for the language Meitheirón (Meithei + -lon 'language', pronounced pronounced as //mə́i.təi.lón//).[40] [41] Meithei may be a compound from 'man' + they 'separate'.[40] This term is used by most Western linguistic scholarship.[40] Meitei scholars use the term Meit(h)ei when writing in English and the term Meitheirón when writing in Meitei.[40] Chelliah (2015: 89) notes that the Meitei spelling has replaced the earlier Meithei spelling.[42]

The language (and people) is also referred to by the loconym Manipuri.[40] The term is derived from the name of the state of Manipur.[40] Manipuri is the official name of the language for the Indian government and is used by government institutions and non-Meitei authors.[40] The term Manipuri is also used to refer to the different languages of Manipur and to the people.[40] Additionally, Manipuri, being a loconym, can refer to anything pertaining to the Manipur state.

Speakers of Meitei language are known as "Kathe" by the Burmese people, "Moglie" or "Mekhlee" by the people of Cachar, Assam (Dimasas and Assamese) and "Cassay" by the Shan people and the other peoples living in the east of the Ningthee River (or Khyendwen River). "Ponna" is the Burmese term used to refer to the Meiteis living inside Burma.[43]

Dialects

The Meitei language exhibits a degree of regional variation; however, in recent years the broadening of communication, as well as intermarriage, has caused the dialectal differences to become relatively insignificant. The only exceptions to this occurrence are the speech differences of the dialects found in Tripura, Bangladesh and Myanmar.[44] The exact number of dialects of Meitei is unknown.[45]

The three main dialects of Meitei are: Meitei proper, Loi and Pangal. Differences between these dialects are primarily characterised by the extensions of new sounds and tonal shifts. Meitei proper is considered to be the standard variety—and is viewed as more dynamic than the other two dialects.[46] The brief table below compares some words in these three dialects:[47]

Standard Meitei Loi Pangal English translation
chaaba chaapachaabato eat
kappakapmakappato weep
saabibasaapipasaabibato make
thambathampathambato put
chuppibachuppipachuppibato kiss

Devi (2002)[48] compares the Imphal, Andro, Koutruk, and Kakching dialects of Meitei.

Status

Meitei is the sole official language of the Government of Manipur, and has been an official language of India since 1992.[49]

Meitei language was the court language of the historic Manipur Kingdom,[50] and before it merged into the Indian Republic.[51] The Sahitya Akademi, India's National Academy of Letters, recognised Meitei as one of the major advanced Indian literary languages in 1972, long before it became an official language in 1992.In 1950, the Government of India did not include Meitei in its list of 14 official languages.[52] A language movement, spearheaded by organisations including the Manipuri Sahitya Parishad and the All Manipur Students' Union demanded that Meitei be made an official language for more than 40 years, until Meitei was finally added to the Eighth Schedule to the Constitution of India in 1992.[53] [54]

Meitei became an associate official language of Assam in 2024,[55] following several years of effort by the Meitei associate official language movement to protect the identity, history, culture and tradition of Manipuris in Assam.[56] [57] [58]

The Meitei language is one of the 13 official languages of the India used to administer police, armed services, and civil service recruitment exams.[59] [60]

The Press Information Bureau of the Indian Ministry of Information and Broadcasting publishes in 14 languages, including Meitei.[61]

Education

Meitei is a language of instruction in all in the educational institutions in Manipur. It is one of the 40 instructional languages offered by the Central Board of Secondary Education (CBSE), controlled and managed by the Ministry of Education.[62] Meitei is taught as a subject up to the post-graduate level in Indian universities, including Jawaharlal Nehru University, Delhi University, Gauhati University, the University of North Bengal.[63] [64] Indira Gandhi National Open University teaches Meitei to undergraduates.[65]

Assam

Meitei language instruction has been offered in the lower primary schools of Assam since 1956.[66] The Board of Secondary Education, Assam offers secondary education in Manipuri.[67] The Assam Higher Secondary Education Council of Assam offers both Meitei-language schooling and instruction in Meitei as a second language.[68]

Since 2020, the Assam Government has made an annual grant of to the Manipuri Sahitya Parishad (Manipuri Language Council). It also invested in the creation of a corpus for the development of the Meitei language.

The Department of Manipuri of Assam University offers education up to the Ph.D. level in Meitei language.[69] [70] [71]

Tripura

Since 1998, the Government of Tripura has offered Meitei language as a "first language" subject at primary level in 24 schools throughout the state.[72]

In December 2021, Tripura University proposed to the Indian Ministry of Education and the University Grants Council (UGC), regarding the introduction of diploma courses in Meitei, along with international languages like Japanese, Korean and Nepali.[73]

Phonology

The exact classification of the Meitei language within Sino-Tibetan remains unclear. It has lexical resemblances to Kuki and Tangkhul.[74]

Tone

The Meitei language is a tonal language. There is a controversy over whether there are two or three tones.[75]

Segments

Meitei distinguishes the following phonemes:[76]

Consonants

LabialDental/AlveolarPalatalVelarGlottal
Nasalpronounced as /link/pronounced as /link/pronounced as /link/
Stoppronounced as /link/pronounced as /link/pronounced as /link/pronounced as /link/pronounced as /link/
pronounced as /link/pronounced as /link/pronounced as /link/
pronounced as /link/pronounced as /link/pronounced as /link/pronounced as /link/
pronounced as /link/pronounced as /link/pronounced as /link/
Fricativepronounced as /link/pronounced as /link/
Flappronounced as /link/
Lateralpronounced as /l/
Approximantpronounced as /link/pronounced as /link/

Vowels

FrontCentralBack
Highpronounced as /link/pronounced as /link/
Midpronounced as /link/pronounced as /link/pronounced as /link/
Lowpronounced as /link/

Note: the central vowel /ɐ/ is transcribed as <ə> in recent linguistic work on Meitei. However, phonetically it is never [ə], but more usually [ɐ]. It is assimilated to a following approximant: /ɐw/ = /ow/, /ɐj/ = [ej].

Phonological processes

A velar deletion is noted to occur on the suffix -lək when following a syllable ending with a /k/ phoneme.[75]

Meitei has a dissimilatory process similar to Grassmann's law found in Ancient Greek and Sanskrit, though occurring on the second aspirate.[77] Here, an aspirated consonant is deaspirated if preceded by an aspirated consonant (including pronounced as //h/, /s//) in the previous syllable. The deaspirated consonants are then voiced between sonorants.

Writing systems

Meitei script

The Meitei script (Manipuri: {{Script|Mtei|ꯃꯩꯇꯩ ꯃꯌꯦꯛ)[78] is one of the official scripts of the Indian Republic. Meitei mayek is also known as Kanglei script [79] or kok sam lai script, after its first three letters.[80] [81] Its earliest known appearance is on 6th century coins.[82] It was used until the 18th century, when it was replaced by the Bengali script, and then revived in again massively in the 20th.[83] In 2021, the use of Meetei Mayek to write Manipuri was officially adopted by the Government of Manipur, alongside Bengali script.[84]

The Roman alphabet has been used in medium for teaching basic Meitei as a second language teaching by the Board of Secondary Education, Manipur.[85] [86] More recently, the Board has issued a directive that no more Manipuri textbooks using the Latin alphabet be published.[87] Meitei language editions of the Bible in Roman script are very commonly used by the Christians in Manipur.[88]

The Naoriya Phulo script is a constructed script, invented by Laininghan Naoriya Phulo (1888–1941). It shares many similarities with Devanagari and Bengali script.[89] It was championed by Apokpa Marup, but never widely adopted.[90]

Grammar

Sentences in the Meitei language use the subject–object–verb word order (SOV). For example, in the sentence Ei chak chai (ꯑꯩ ꯆꯥꯛ ꯆꯥꯢ), which translates to I eat rice, the gloss is "ei" (I), "chak" (rice), "chai" (eat).

Nouns

Nouns and pronouns are marked for number in Meitei. The plural is indicated by the suffixes -khoi (for personal pronouns and human proper nouns) and -sing (for all other nouns). Verbs associated with the pluralised nouns are unaffected. Examples are demonstrated below:[91]

Noun (Meitei) Noun (English) Example (Meitei) Example (English)
angaang baby angaang kappiBaby cries.
angaangsing babies angaangsing kappi Babies cry.

When adjectives are used to be more clear, Meitei utilises separate words and does not add a suffix to the noun. Examples are show in the chart below:

Adjective (Meitei) Adjective (English) Example (Meitei) Example (English)
ama one mi ama laak’i A person comes.
khara some mi khara laak’i Some persons come.
mayaam many mi mayaam laak’i Many persons come.

Compound verbs

Compound verbs are created by combining root verbs each ending with aspect markers. While the variety of suffixes is high, all compound verbs utilise one of two:[92]

Suffix English translation
-thokout/ come out
-ningTo wish/ want/ desire

Aspect markers appear as suffixes that clarify verb tense and appear at the end of the compound verb. Overall, the formula to construct a compound verb becomes [root verb] + [suffix] + [aspect marker]:

Language Root verb Suffix Aspect marker Combined form
Meitei tum -thok -le tumthokle
English sleep out/ come out perfect aspect has started sleeping
Meitei tum -ning -le tumningle
English sleep want perfect aspect has felt sleepy

Compound verbs can also be formed utilising both compound suffixes as well, allowing utterances such as pithokningle meaning "want to give out".

Number words

Numeral Word EtymologyMeitei Script
1a-ma ~ a-maa"1"
2a-niProto-Tibeto-Burman *ni
3a-húmPTB *sum
4ma-riPTB *li
5ma-ngaaPTB *ŋa
6ta-rukPTB *luk
7ta-retPTB *let
8ni-paan"2-less"
9maa-pan"1-less"
10ta-raa"10"
11taraa-maa-thoi"ten + 1-more"
12taraa-ni-thoi"ten + 2-more"
13taraa-húm-doi"ten + 3-more"
14taraa-mari"ten +4"
15taraa-mangaa"ten +5"
16taraa-taruk"ten +6"
17taraa-taret"ten +7"
18taraa-nipaan"ten +8"
19taraa-maapan"ten +9"
20kun ~ kul"score"
30
  • kun-taraa > kun-thraa
"score ten"
40ni-phú"two score"
50yaang-khéi"half hundred"
60hum-phú"three score"
70hum-phú-taraa"three score ten"
80mari-phú"four score"
90mari-phú-taraa"four score ten"
100chaama"one hundred"
200cha-ni"two hundreds"
300cha-hum"three hundreds"
400cha-mri"four hundreds"
500cha-mangaa"five hundreds"
1,000lisíng ama"one thousand"
10,000lisīng-taraa"ten thousands"
1,00,000licha"one hundred-thousand"
10,00,000licha-taraa"ten hundred-thousands"
1,00,00,000leepun"one ten-million"
10,00,00,000leepun-taraa"ten ten-millions"
1,00,00,00,000leepot"one billion"
10,00,00,00,000leepot-taraa"ten billions"
1,00,00,00,00,000leekei"one hundred-billion"
10,00,00,00,00,000leekei-taraa"ten hundred-billions"
1,00,00,00,00,00,000pu-ama"one ten-trillion"

Literature

See main article: Ancient Meitei literature and Meitei literature. The Khamba Thoibi Sheireng, a poem of 39,000 verses composed by Hijam Anganghal Singh and first published in 1940 (Manipuri: {{Script|Mtei|[[ꯈꯝꯕ ꯊꯣꯏꯕꯤ ꯁꯩꯔꯦꯡ]]) [93]) is regarded as the national epic of the Manipuris.[94] [95] It is a classical Meitei language epic poem based on the ancient romantic adventure tale of Khamba and Thoibi of Moirang. It is regarded as the greatest of all Meitei epic poems.[96] [97] [98]

The Meitei classical language movement seeks to gain recognition for Meitei as one of the Classical Languages of India.[99] [100] [101]

Annual events

Various annual events are organised to promote, protect and develop Meitei language, in the sovereign states of India and Bangladesh in particular as well as in other parts of the world in general.

Software

In 2021, Rudali Huidrom, a Manipuri researcher of the EBMT/NLP laboratory, Waseda University, Japan, created a text corpus named "EM Corpus" (shortened form of "Emalon Manipuri Corpus"). It is the first comparable text to text corpus built for Meitei language (mni) and English language (eng) pair from sentences. The writing system used for Meitei language in this corpus is Bengali script. It was crawled and collected from thesangaiexpress.com – the news website of "The Sangai Express", a daily newspaper of Manipur from August 2020 to 2021. In version 1, she created the monolingual data, having 1,034,715 Meitei language sentences and 846,796 English language sentences. In version 2, she created the monolingual data, having 1,880,035 Meitei language sentences and 1,450,053 English language sentences.[110] [111]

EM-ALBERT is the first ALBERT model available for Meitei language. EM-FT is also FastText word embedding available for Meitei language. These resources were created by Rudali Huidrom and are now available at free of cost at the European Language Resources Association catalogue (ELRA catalogue) under CC-BY-NC-4.0 licence.

On 11 May 2022, Google Translate added Meitei-language (under the name "Meiteilon (Manipuri)") during its addition of 24 new languages to the translation tool. The writing system used for Meitei language in this tool is Meitei script.[112] [113] [114]

Sample text

The following is a sample text in Modern Meitei of the Article 1 of the Universal Declaration of Human Rights (by the United Nations):[115]

See also

Further reading

Culture

Language

External links

Notes and References

  1. Web site: Chelliah . Shobhana Lakshmi . Shobhana Chelliah . Ray . Sohini . Sohini Ray . 23 June 2000 . University of North Texas (UNT) . Discovering Tibeto-Burman Linguistic History Through Pre 20th Century Meithei Manuscripts . 18 November 2023 . . . English.
  2. Web site: Meitei Ethnologue . 3 May 2023 . . https://web.archive.org/web/20190724203234/https://www.ethnologue.com/language/mni/ . 24 July 2019 . en.
  3. 14 October 2022.
  4. Web site: Language – India, States and Union Territories . Census of India 2011 . Office of the Registrar General . 13–14 . 30 April 2019 . https://web.archive.org/web/20181114073412/http://www.censusindia.gov.in/2011Census/C-16_25062018_NEW.pdf . 14 November 2018 . live .
  5. Web site: Manipuris in Mandalay see ray of hope in Modi. Sunil. Oinam. 14 July 2015. The Times of India. en.
  6. News: R . Aishwaryaa . 6 June 2019 . What census data reveals about use of Indian languages . . 16 November 2023.
  7. Book: Moseley . C. . Atlas of the world's languages in danger (3rd ed) . 2010 . UNESCO Publishing . Paris. 4445 and elsewhere.
  8. Book: Singh, Dr Th Suresh . The Endless Kabaw Valley: British Created Visious Cycle of Manipur, Burma and India . 2014-06-02 . Quills Ink Publishing . 978-93-84318-00-0 . 23 . en.
  9. Book: Sanajaoba, Naorem . Manipur, Past and Present: The Heritage and Ordeals of a Civilization . 1988 . Mittal Publications . 978-81-7099-853-2 . 10 . en.
  10. Book: Miri, Mrinal . Linguistic Situation in North-East India . 2003 . Concept Publishing Company . 978-81-8069-026-6 . 77 . en.
  11. Book: Singh, Chungkham Yashwanta . Manipuri Grammar . 2000 . Rajesh Publications . 978-81-85891-33-0 . 2, 202 . en.
  12. Book: Ayyappappanikkar . Medieval Indian Literature: Surveys and selections . 1997 . Sahitya Akademi . 978-81-260-0365-5 . 333 . en.
  13. Web site: Aspects of Manipuri language and its literary traditions By Ahanthem Homen . 2024-05-22 . e-pao.net.
  14. Web site: Meitei Ethnologue Free . 2023-11-18 . Ethnologue (Free All) . en.
  15. Web site: Manipuri language Manipuri language Meitei, India, Tibeto-Burman Britannica . 2023-11-18 . www.britannica.com . en.
  16. Web site: A History of Manipuri Language – Indian Institute of Advanced Study . 2023-11-18 . iias.ac.in . Indian Institute of Advanced Study (IIAS), Ministry of Education (MoE), Government of India . en-US.
  17. Web site: Manipuri language Manipuri language Meitei, India, Tibeto-Burman Britannica . 2023-11-18 . www.britannica.com . en.
  18. Web site: Glottolog 4.8 – Manipuri . 2023-11-18 . glottolog.org.
  19. Web site: A History of Manipuri Language – Indian Institute of Advanced Study . 17 November 2023 . iias.ac.in . Indian Institute of Advanced Study (IIAS), Ministry of Education (MoE), Government of India . en-US.
  20. Book: Chatterji, Suniti Kumar . Suniti Kumar Chatterji . Kirata-jana-krti . 1951 . . Kolkata . 1951 . 157, 158 . en . ... The beginnings of this Old Manipuri literature (as in the case of Newari) may go back to 1500 years, or even 2000 years, from now. ....
  21. Book: Ayyappappanikkar . Medieval Indian Literature: Surveys and selections . 1997 . . 978-81-260-0365-5 . 326–329 . en . Ayyappa Paniker.
  22. Book: Wouters . Jelle J. P. . The Routledge Companion to Northeast India . Subba . Tanka B. . 30 September 2022 . . 978-1-000-63699-4 . 473 . en.
  23. Book: Singh, Khelchandra Ningthoukhongjam . https://archive.org/details/in.ernet.dli.2015.466183/page/n121/mode/2up?view=theater . History Of Old Manipuri Literature . . Manipur University Library, Imphal . India . 121, 122 . en, mni . Poireiton Khunthokpa.
  24. Web site: . Vijñānanidhi: National Mission of Manuscripts . 2024-04-29 . Yumpu . 88, 89 . en.
  25. Book: Singh, Khelchandra Ningthoukhongjam . https://archive.org/details/in.ernet.dli.2015.466183/page/n97/mode/2up . History Of Old Manipuri Literature . Digital Library of India. Manipur University Library; North Eastern States Libraries . India . 97, 98 . mni . Khencho . Ningthoukhongjam Khelchandra.
  26. Book: Singh, Ch Manihar . A History of Manipuri Literature . . 1996 . 978-81-260-0086-9 . India . 14, 15 . en, mni . The Early Period (Ritual Songs).
  27. Book: Devi, Yumlembam Gopi . Glimpses of Manipuri Culture . 16 June 2019 . 978-0-359-72919-7 . 25 . LP . en.
  28. Book: Devi, Dr Yumlembam Gopi . Glimpses of Manipuri Culture . 16 June 2019 . Lulu.com. 978-0-359-72919-7 . 119 . en.
  29. Book: Sanajaoba, Naorem . Manipur: Treatise & Documents . 1993 . Mittal Publications . 978-81-7099-399-5 . 2 . en .
  30. Book: Sanajaoba, Naorem . Law and Society: Strategy for Public Choice, 2001 . 1991 . Mittal Publications . 978-81-7099-271-4 . 304 . en.
  31. Web site: A History of Manipuri Language – Indian Institute of Advanced Study . 17 November 2023 . iias.ac.in . Indian Institute of Advanced Study (IIAS), Ministry of Education (MoE), Government of India . en-US.
  32. Book: Singh, Ch Manihar . A History of Manipuri Literature . 1996 . . 978-81-260-0086-9 . India . 135 . en.
  33. Web site: Census Tables . Census of India . Office of the Registrar General & Census Commissioner, India . 15 February 2024 . 2011.
  34. Web site: Manipuri language . 14 March 2023 . Britannica . en.
  35. Web site: Census Tables . Census of India . Office of the Registrar General & Census Commissioner, India . 15 February 2024 . 2011.
  36. Mishra . Awadesh . 1 January 1999 . The Manipuris in the Barak Valley: A Case Study of Language Maintenance' . Linguistics of the Tibeto-Burman Area.
  37. Web site: What Languages do People Speak in Bangladesh? . worldpopulationreview.com . 10 February 2024.
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  59. Web site: Union Minister Dr Jitendra Singh lauds SSC for deciding to conduct the Multi-Tasking (Non-Technical) Staff examination 2022 in 13 regional languages in addition to Hindi and English for the first time . 25 January 2023 . www.pib.gov.in . en.
  60. Web site: Manipuri among 13 regional languages approved for CAPF exam . 19 April 2023 . . en.
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  67. Web site: 17 March 2023 . Assam HSLC Exam Routine 2023 Revised: SEBA To Conduct All Class 10 Language Papers Including English On April 1 . 18 March 2023 . India.com . en . In addition to Assamese, the other MIL subjects are Bengali, Bodo, Hindi, Manipuri, Hmar, Nepali, Mizo, Khasi, Garo, Karbi and Urdu..
  68. Web site: AHSEC complete syllabus for HS 2nd year . ahsec.assam.gov.in.
  69. Web site: Manipuri Department . 18 March 2023 . en-US.
  70. Web site: 5 literary bodies bat for Manipuri language in Assam . 18 March 2023 . www.thesangaiexpress.com . en . Moreover, Manipuri in MA and PhD courses are offered at Assam University, Silchar..
  71. Web site: AAMSU demands Associate Official Language status to Manipuri language . www.time8.in . Several universities, notably Assam University and Silchar University, provide Manipuri language courses..
  72. Web site: MANIPURI DIRECTORATE OF KOKBOROK & OTHER MINORITY LANGUAGES . 18 March 2023 . kokborokoml.tripura.gov.in.
  73. Web site: 23 December 2021 . Tripura University proposes introduction of diploma courses in Japanese, Korean, Nepali and Manipuri languages . 18 March 2023 . India Today NE . hi.
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  75. LaPolla . Randy J. . Randy LaPolla . 2000 . Book review: A grammar of Meitei, by S. L. Chelliah . Lingua . Elsevier . 110 . 4 . 299–304 . 10.1016/s0024-3841(99)00037-6.
  76. Book: Chelliah . S. L. . Meitei Phonology . 1997 . Mouton de Gruyter . 17–21.
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  78. Khuman . Yanglem Loijing Khomba . Devi . Salam Dickeeta . Singh . Ch. Ponykumar . Devi . H. Mamata . Singh . N. Ajith . 1 December 2022 . A benchmark dataset for printed Meitei/Meetei script character recognition . Data in Brief . en . 45 . 108585 . 10.1016/j.dib.2022.108585 . 36426059 . 9679442 . 2022DIB....4508585K . 2352-3409 .
  79. Book: Noni . Arambam . Colonialism and Resistance: Society and State in Manipur . Sanatomba . Kangujam . 16 October 2015 . . 978-1-317-27066-9 . 223, 235, 237 . en.
  80. Web site: মণিপুরদা লোলয়ান চঙলকপা অমদি মীতৈ ইয়েক্না থোঙজিন্দা ৱারৌজনা লেপ্লরবদা ! . hueiyenlanpao.com . mni.
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  83. News: Laithangbam. Iboyaima. 23 September 2017. Banished Manipuri script stages a comeback. en-IN. The Hindu. 6 March 2023. 0971-751X.
  84. Web site: GAZETTE TITLE: The Manipur Official Language (Amendment) Act, 2021 . 6 March 2023 . manipurgovtpress.nic.in.
  85. News: 25 January 2023 . Manipur HSLC Date Sheet 2023: BSEM Class 10 time table released, exam begins March 16 . . 6 March 2023 . 0971-8257.
  86. Web site: SNS . 10 January 2019 . Manipur Board Class 12 (HSC) and Class 10 (HSLC) Timetable 2019 available online at manipureducation.gov.in Check now . 6 March 2023 . . en-US.
  87. Web site: MEELAL lauds BSEM order : 04th feb24 ~ E-Pao! Headlines . e-pao.net . 15 February 2024.
  88. Web site: The Birth of Jesus Manipuri Roman Mayek CB . bibleforchildren.org.
  89. Web site: নাওরিয়া ফুলো : ঋষি অমা - এলাংম দীনমনী . hueiyenlanpao.com . mni . India.
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  91. Singh . S. Indrakumar . November 2013 . Agreements in Manipuri . Language in India . 13 . 11 . 216–231.
  92. Devi . M. Bidyarani . May 2014 . Compound Verbs in Manipuri . Language in India . 14 . 5 . 66–70.
  93. Book: George, K. M. . Modern Indian Literature, an Anthology: Surveys and poems . . 1992 . 978-81-7201-324-0 . India . 29 . en.
  94. Book: George, K. M. . Modern Indian Literature, an Anthology: Surveys and poems . 1992 . . 978-81-7201-324-0 . India . 258 . en . H. Anganghal Singh's Khamba Thoibi Sheireng (Poem on Khamba Thoibi, 1940) is a national epic of the Manipuris based on the story of Khamba and Thoibi of Moirang. The poet composes the whole epic in the Pena Saisak style of folk ballads sung by minstrels or bards popular in Manipur..
  95. Book: Datta, Amaresh . Encyclopaedia of Indian Literature: Devraj to Jyoti . . 1988 . 978-81-260-1194-0 . India . 1186 . en.
  96. Book: Datta, Amaresh . Encyclopaedia of Indian Literature: Devraj to Jyoti . . 1988 . 978-81-260-1194-0 . India . 1573 . en . His best work, Khamba Thoibi sheireng, in 39,000 lines on the story of 'Khamba and Thoibi' was started in 1939 and the composition was completed in 1940..
  97. Book: Das, Sisir Kumar . A History of Indian Literature: 1911–1956, struggle for freedom : triumph and tragedy . . 2005 . 978-81-7201-798-9 . 190 . en . His epic Singel Indu was published in 1938 which was followed by his magnum opus Khamba Thoibi Sheireng (1940), a poem of 39000 lines, considered to be the 'national' epic of the Manipuris, written in the Pena Saisak style of folk ballads..
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  99. Web site: Government must take concrete step for recognition of Manipuri as classical language . Imphal Free Press . en.
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  102. Book: Singh, Th Suresh . The Endless Kabaw Valley: British Created Visious Cycle of Manipur, Burma and India. 24~25 . 2 June 2014 . Quills Ink Publishing . 978-93-84318-00-0 . en.
  103. Book: Coleman . Daniel . Countering Displacements: The Creativity and Resilience of Indigenous and Refugee-ed Peoples . Glanville . Erin Goheen . Hasan . Wafaa . Kramer-Hamstra . Agnes . 26 April 2012 . University of Alberta . 978-0-88864-592-0 . 131 . en.
  104. Web site: St Joseph University, Nagaland observes Manipuri Poetry Day 2022 . 9 March 2023 . . en.
  105. Web site: Manipuri Poetry Day 2021 celebrated : 22nd oct21 ~ E-Pao! Headlines . 9 March 2023 . e-pao.net.
  106. Web site: Ajit . Sh . Manipuri in Kolkata observes "Manipuri Poetry Day" – Imphal Times . 9 March 2023 . www.imphaltimes.com . en-gb.
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  108. Web site: Paul . Jibon . 14 May 2022 . কমলগঞ্জে মণিপুরি ভাষা ও সংস্কৃতি উৎসব . 11 March 2023 . দৈনিক জালালাবাদ Daily Jalalabad . en-US.
  109. Web site: কমলগঞ্জে মনিপুরী ভাষা উৎসব উদযাপিত . 12 March 2023 . www.bangla-times.com . en-US.
  110. Web site: Machine translation of English-Manipuri made possible : 13th oct21 ~ E-Pao! Headlines . 11 August 2022 . e-pao.net.
  111. Web site: Ema-lon Manipuri Corpus (including word embedding and language model) – ELRA Catalogue . 11 August 2022 . catalog.elra.info.
  112. Web site: 12 May 2022 . Assamese, Meiteilon (Manipuri) and Mizo language has been added to Google translate, moment of pride for Northeastern India! – NE India Broadcast . 11 August 2022 . en-US.
  113. Web site: 11 May 2022 . Google Translate adds support for Assamese, Mizo and Manipuri languages – Eastern Mirror . 11 August 2022 . easternmirrornagaland.com . en-GB.
  114. News: 12 May 2022 . Google Translate gets support for 24 new languages including Assamese, Mizo and Manipuri . 11 August 2022 . TIME8 . en-US .
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