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Encyclopedia > Bengali grammar

Bengali grammar is the study of This article is about grammar from a linguistic perspective. ...grammar in the This article is about the Bengali language. ...Bengali language. Although Bengali uses a separate alphabet (see The Bengali script is an Abugida system of writing belonging to the Brahmic family of scripts whose use is associated with the Bengali, Assamese, Manipuri and Sylheti languages. ...Bengali script), a transliteration scheme is used here to suggest the pronunciation.

Contents

Pronouns

Bengali pronouns are somewhat similar to English pronouns, having different words for first, second, and third person, and also for singular and plural (unlike for verbs, below). Bengali pronouns, unlike their English counterparts, do not differentiate for gender; that is, the same pronoun may be used for "he" or "she". However, Bengali has different third-person pronouns for proximity. The first are used for someone who is nearby, and the second are for those who are a little further away. The third are usually for those who are not present. In addition, each of the second- and third-person pronouns have different forms for the familiar and polite forms; the second person also has a "very familiar" form. In the following tables, the abbreviations used are as follows: VF=very familiar, F=familiar, and P=polite (honor); H=here, T=there, and E=elsewhere (proximity).


The nominative case is used for pronouns that are the subject of the sentence, such as "I already did that" or "Will you please stop making that noise?"

Personal pronouns (nominative case)
Subject Proximity Honor Singular Plural
1 āmi (I) āmrā (we)
2 VF tui (you) torā (you)
F tumi (you) tomrā (you)
P āpni (you) āpnārā (you)
3 H F e (he/she) erā (they)
P ini (he/she) ẽrā (they)
T F o (he/she) orā (they)
P uni (he/she) őrā (they)
E F she (he/she) tārā (they)
P tini (he/she) tãrā (they)

The objective case is used for pronouns serving as the direct or indirect objects, such as "I told him to wash the dishes" or "The teacher gave me the homework assignment."

Personal pronouns (objective case)
Subject Proximity Honor Singular Plural
1 āmāke (me) āmāder (us)
2 VF toke (you) toder (you)
F tomāke (you) tomāder (you)
P āpnāke (you) āpnāder (you)
3 H F eke (him/her) eder (them)
P ẽke (him/her) ẽder (them)
T F oke (him/her) oder (them)
P õke (him/her) őder (them)
E F tāke (him/her) tāder (them)
P tãke (him/her) tãder (them)

The possessive case is used to show possession, such as "Where is your coat?" or "Let's go to our house." Note that the plural forms are identical to those for the objective case.

Personal pronouns (possessive case)
Subject Proximity Honor Singular Plural
1 āmār (my) āmāder (our)
2 VF tor (your) toder (your)
F tomār (your) tomāder (your)
P āpnār (your) āpnāder (your)
3 H F er (his/her) eder (their)
P ẽr (his/her) ẽder (their)
T F or (his/her) oder (their)
P õr (his/her) őder (their)
E F tār (his/her) tāder (their)
P tãr (his/her) tãder (their)

Verbs

Bengali verbs are highly This article is in need of attention. ...inflected and are regular with only few exceptions. They consist of a stem and an ending; they are traditionally listed in Bengali dictionaries in their "verbal noun" form, which is usually formed by adding to the stem (for instance, rākhā = "to put or place"). The stem can end in either a vowel or a consonant. Verbs are conjugated for Grammatical tense is a way languages express the time at which an event described by a sentence occurs. ...tense and Grammatical person, in linguistics, is used for the grammatical categories a language uses to describe the relationship between the speaker and the persons or things she is talking about. ...person by changing the endings, which are largely the same for all verbs. However, the stem vowel can often change as part of the phenomenon known as "vowel harmony", whereby one vowel can be influenced by other vowels in the word to sound more harmonious. An example would be the verb "to write", with stem lekh-: tomrā lekho (you [pl.] write) but āmrā likhi (we write). In general, the following transformations take place: ôo, ou, æe, ei, and ae, where the verbal noun features the first vowel but certain conjugations use the second. In addition, the verbs deoya (to give) and neoya (to take) switch between e, i, a, and æ. If verbs are classified by stem vowel and if the stem ends in a consonant or vowel, there are nine basic classes in which most verbs can be placed; all verbs in a class will follow the same pattern. A prototype verb from each of these classes will be used to demonstrate conjugation for that class; bold will be used to indicate mutation of the stem vowel.


Person

Verbs are inflected for person and An honorific is a term used to convey esteem or respect. ...honour, but not for number. There are five forms: first person, second person (very familiar), second person (familiar), third person (familiar), and second/third person (polite). The same sample subject pronouns will be used for all the example conjugation paradigms: āmi ( This is a disambiguation page — a navigational aid which lists other pages that might otherwise share the same title. ...Bengali:আমি), tui (তুই), tumi (তুমি), she (সে) and apni (আপনি). These have the following plurals respectively āmrā (আমরা), torā (তোরা), tomrā (তোমরা), tara (তারা) and āpnārā (আপনারা).


Mood

There are two moods for Bengali verbs: the In linguistics, many grammars have the concept of grammatical mood, which describes the relationship of a verb with reality and intent. ...indicative and the In linguistics, many grammars have the concept of grammatical mood, which describes the relationship of a verb with reality and intent. ...imperative. The imperative mood is used to give commands. The indicative mood is used for statements of fact; its various tenses are given below.


Tense

Bengali has four simple tenses: the present tense, the simple past tense, the conditional or habitual past tense, and the simple future tense. It also has several compound tenses.


Simple present tense

The present tense in Bengali is similar to that of English: I eat, you run, he reads. The endings are -i, -ish, -o, -e (or -y for vowel stems, pronounced the same), and -en (or -n after vowel stems).

Verb 1 2 (VF) 2 (F) 3 (F) 2/3 (P)
bǒlā āmi boli tui bolish tumi bǒlo she bǒle āpni bǒlen
বলা আমি বলি তুই বলিস তুমি বলো সে বলে আপনি বলেন
kholā āmi khuli tui khulish tumi kholo she khole āpni kholen
খোলা আমি খুলি তুই খুলিস তুমি খোলো সে খোলে আপনি খোলেন
khælā āmi kheli tui khelish tumi khælo she khæle āpni khælen
খেলা আমি খেলি তুই খেলিস তুমি খেলো সে খেলে আপনি খেলেন
chenā āmi chini tui chinish tumi cheno she chene āpni chenen
চেনা আমি চিনি তুই চিনিস তুমি চেনো সে চেনে আপনি চেনেন
jānā āmi jāni tui jānish tumi jāno she jāne āpni jānen
জানা আমি জানি তুই জানিস তুমি জানো সে জানে আপনি জানেন
hôowā āmi hoi tui hosh tumi hôo she hôy āpni hôn
হওয়া আমি হই তুই হোস তুমি হও সে হয় আপনি হন
dhowā ধোযা tui dhush tumi dhou she dhoy āpni dhon
ধোয়া আমি ধুই তুই ধু্স তুমি ধোও সে ধোয় আপনি ধোন
khāoā āmi khāi tui khāsh tumi khāo she khāy āpni khān
খাওয়া আমি খাই তুই খাস তুমি খাও সে খায় আপনি খান
deoā āmi dii tui dish tumi dao she dæy āpni dæn
দেওয়া আমি দি তুই দিস তুমি দাও সে দেয় আপনি দেন

Simple past tense

The (simple) past tense differs from its use in English in that it is usually reserved for events that have occurred recently; for instance, less than a day ago. It would be translated into the English simple past tense: I ate, you ran, he read. The endings are -lām, -li, -le, -lo, -len (notice that the vowels for the second and third [familiar] persons are the reverse of those in the present tense). For example: āmi dekhlām, tui dekhli, tumi dekhle, se dekhlo, apni dekhlen.

Verb 1 2 (VF) 2 (F) 3 (F) 2/3 (P)
bǒla āmi bollām tui bolli tumi bolle she bollo āpni bollen
বলা আমি বল্লাম তুই বল্লি তুমি বল্লে সে বল্লো আপনি বল্লেন
kholā āmi khullām tui khulli tumi khulle she khullo āpni khullen
খোলা আমি খুল্লাম তুই খুল্লি তুমি খুল্লে সে খুল্লো আপনি খুল্লেন
khælā āmi khellām tui khelli tumi khelle she khello āpni khellen
খেলে আমি খেল্লাম তুই খেল্লি তুমি খেল্লে সে খেল্লো আপনি খেল্লেন
chenā āmi chinlām tui chinli tumi chinle she chinlo āpni chinlen
চেনা আমি চিনলাম তুই চিনলি তুমি চিনলে সে চিনলো আপনি চিনলেন
jānā āmi jānlām tui jānli tumi jānle she jānlo āpni jānlen
জানা আমি জানলাম তুই জানলি তুমি জানলে সে জানলে আপনি জানলেন
hôowā āmi holām tui holi tumi hole she holo āpni holen
হওয়া আমি হলাম তুই হলি তুমি হলে সে হল আপনি হলেন
dhowā āmi dhulām tui dhuli tumi dhule she dhulo āpni dhulen
ধোওয়া আমি ধুলাম তুই ধুলি তুমি ধুলে সে ধুলো আপনি ধুলেন
khāoā āmi khelām tui kheli tumi khelo she khele āpni khelen
খাওয়া আমি খেলাম তুই খেলি তুমি খেলে সে খেলো আপনি খেলেন
deoā āmi dilām tui dili tumi dile she dilo āpni dilen
দেওয়া আমি দিলাম তুই দিলি তুমি দিলে সে দিলো আপনি দিলেন

Postpositions

Whereas English features prepositions, Bengali uses postpositions. That is, in English, these modifying words occur before their object (beside him, inside the house). In Bengali, they occur after their object (or pāśe, bāŗir bhitore). Some postpositions require their object noun to take the possessive case, others don't; this distinction must be memorized.


References

  • Chatterji, Suniti Kumar. Bengali Self-Taught. Calcutta: Rupa & Co., 1991.
  • Radice, William. Teach Yourself Bengali. Chicago: NTC Publishing Group, 1994.

  Results from FactBites:
 
BENGALI - Online Information article about BENGALI (4858 words)
Its grammar preserves numerous archaic or pseudo-archaic forms, which are invariably contracted in the colloquial speech of even the most highly educated.
North-eastern Bengali and in A. a medial r is commonly dropped; thus, Bg.
Carey (Grammar, Serampore, 18o1 ; Dictionary, ib., 1825).
  More results at FactBites »


 

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