Authors :
Prakash Nayak T
Volume/Issue :
Volume 2 - 2017, Issue 10 - October
Google Scholar :
https://goo.gl/DF9R4u
Scribd :
https://goo.gl/dWKma2
Thomson Reuters ResearcherID :
https://goo.gl/3bkzwv
Abstract :
Language contact is the social and linguistics phenomenon. By which speakers of different languages interact with each other. This a transfer of linguistics features from generation to generation. And it would be happened in a language and that leads to change a language in a boarder. And prolonged contacts may lead to bilingualism and multilingualism. Language may happen within a family of language or a language too. Kannada language in boarders have been changing by the near language where a Kannadiga living people nearby other languages called Malayalam, Tamil, Maharashtra, Andrapradesh and Goa so obviously the language of Kannada got influenced by other language. And obviously language has a dynamic character called change. If it doesn’t change according to the necessity of the people, then it wouldn’t be a living language rather it’s a dead language (Shankarabhat, D.N, 2011).
Keywords :
Contact, Synchronic, Social, Changes, Historical, Borrowing, Phonology and Lexical.
Language contact is the social and linguistics phenomenon. By which speakers of different languages interact with each other. This a transfer of linguistics features from generation to generation. And it would be happened in a language and that leads to change a language in a boarder. And prolonged contacts may lead to bilingualism and multilingualism. Language may happen within a family of language or a language too. Kannada language in boarders have been changing by the near language where a Kannadiga living people nearby other languages called Malayalam, Tamil, Maharashtra, Andrapradesh and Goa so obviously the language of Kannada got influenced by other language. And obviously language has a dynamic character called change. If it doesn’t change according to the necessity of the people, then it wouldn’t be a living language rather it’s a dead language (Shankarabhat, D.N, 2011).
Keywords :
Contact, Synchronic, Social, Changes, Historical, Borrowing, Phonology and Lexical.