Abstract:
Thesis title: Language Shift and the Speech Community: A Sociolinguistic Study
of Tarawara Community in Bandi Shungli
Language shift is the course by which a speech community in a contact situation (i.e.
comprising bilingual speakers) progressively discontinues employing one of its two languages
in favor of the other. Attitudes of speakers of a language and existing domain have been taken
as vital indicators of vitality and endangerment. Mankiyali, a minority language, spoken in the
village of Dana in the Mansehra District of Khyber Pakhtunkhwa (KP), faces looming threat
of extinction. The present research has revealed that the use of the language in different
domains is gradually decreasing, and total number of fluent speakers of Mankiyali has
reduced to less than 500 individuals.
The present study aimed to establish genealogical relationship with Hindko, Gujari
and Ushojo, Gowro and Bateri. It analyzed the phonological overview of Mankiyali. It also
explored existing domains, factors of maintenance of this language, and causes of looming
language shift using ethnographic field qualitative methods. Cross sectional procedures were
selected for quantitative paradigm.
The lexical comparison of Mankiyali with other languages shows that this language
belongs to “Dardic” group of Indo-Aryan languages. It shares higher lexical similarity with
Bateri than any other language within the “Dardic “group. According to the lexical similarity
analysis, field observation and interviews, Mankiyali is not mutually intelligible with any
other neighboring languages including Bateri. This study also presented a preliminary
analysis of syllable structures, consonants and vowels of Mankiyali language. The thematic
analysis revealed seven domains of Mankiyali in Dana village: family, friendship,
neighborhood, religion, cricket ground, education and market. This analysis showed that
although Mankiyali language has been transmitted to the next generations but this language
group was reportedly in contact situation in all the existing domains. This analysis also
explored causes of maintenance and shift of Mankiyali language emerged from the qualitative
data. The results have shown that it was mainly the geographic isolation, which maintained
this language in this hilly village. However, with abolition of the rule of the Amb state and
opening up of various possibilities Tarawara community have led to impending language
shift. Quantitative part of the study tested nine hypotheses. First two hypotheses included
relationship of the variables of the questionnaire. These variables were exploring language
attitudes and the existing domains of this language. The next seven assumptions were
comparing very crucial demographic variables such as gender, age, marriage pattern, bilingual
and multilingual speakers, education, family systems, and mobility with variable of
questionnaire. Most of the hypotheses were found statistically meaningful, moreover, all the
assumptions were found in line with the existing literature and qualitative data.