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1

Proto-new Indo-Aryan. Kolkata: ShreeBalaram Prakasani, 2007.

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2

Central Institute of Indian Languages, ed. Indo-aryan linguistics. Mysore: Central Institute of Indian Languages, Ministry of Human Resource Development, Dept. of HIgher Education, Govt. of India, 2011.

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3

Singh, Rajendra. Annual review of South Asian languages and linguistics 2010. Berlin: De Gruyter, 2010.

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4

Teoẏārī, Rāmabahāla. Rabīndranātha o pūrbāñcalīẏa cāra bhāshāra chanda: Ādhunika Bāṃlā-Asamīẏā-Oṛiẏā, o Hindī chandera tulanātmaka ālocanā. Kalikātā: Paścimabaṅga Rājya Pustaka Parshat̲, 1993.

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5

Hercus, L. A. Collected articles of LA Schwarzschild on Indo-Aryan 1953-1979. Canberra: Faculty of Asian Studies, Australian National University, 1991.

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6

Hoernle, A. F. Rudolf. A comparative grammar of the Gaudian languages: With special reference to the Eastern Hindi : accompanied by a language-map, and a table of alphabetes. New Delhi: Asian Educational Services, 1991.

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7

Aspect and meaning in Slavic and Indic. Amsterdam: J. Benjamins Pub. Co., 1988.

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8

Janajātiyoṃ kī bolī, samāja, aura saṃskr̥ti. Kānapura: Ārādhanā Bradarsa, 2000.

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9

Padhi, Pitambara. Reference sources in modern Indian languages: A study on Oriya language. Bhubaneswar: Gayatridevi Publications, 1994.

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10

Khan, Mohammad Aslam. Vīzhahʹnāmah-i farhang-i Fārsī dar Hind az dīdgāh-i zabān va adabīyat va hunar. Dihlī: Bakhsh-i Zabān va Adabīyāt-i Fārsī, Dānishgāh-i Dihlī, 1997.

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11

Liperovskiĭ, V. P. Posessivnye konstrukt͡s︡ii v indoariĭskikh i͡a︡zykakh--khindi, urdu, pandzhabi, bengalʹskiĭ. Moskva: IV RAN, 2002.

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12

W, Entwistle A., ed. Studies in early modern Indo-Aryan languages, literature, and culture: Research papers, 1992-1994, presented at the Sixth Conference on Devotional Literature in New Indo-Aryan Languages, held at Seattle, University of Washington, 7-9 July 1994. New Delhi: Manohar Publishers & Distributors, 1999.

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13

Ramaiah, L. S. Tribal linguistics in India: A bibliographical survey of international resources. Madras: T.R. Publications, 1990.

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14

Rajeev, Sangal, Bendre S. M, Singh, Udaya Narayana, of Central Institute of Indian Languages., NLP Association of India, International Institute of Information Technology (Hyderabad, India), and Central Institute of Indian Languages., eds. Recent advances in natural language processing: Proceedings of the International Conference on Natural Language Processing, ICON-2003. Mysore: Central Institute of Indian Languages, 2003.

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15

Languages of the Himalayas: An ethnolinguistic handbook of the greater Himalayan Region : containing an introduction to the symbiotic theory of language. Leiden: Brill, 2001.

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16

Beames, John. Comparative Grammar of the Modern Aryan Languages of India: On Sounds. HardPress, 2020.

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17

Beames, John. Comparative Grammar of the Modern Aryan Languages of India: To Wit, Hindi, Panjabi, Sindhi, Gujarati, Marathi, Oriya, and Bangali. University of Cambridge ESOL Examinations, 2012.

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18

Singh, Rajendra. Annual Review of South Asian Languages and Linguistics; 2010. De Gruyter, Inc., 2010.

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19

Bailey, Thomas Grahame. Languages of the Northern Himalayas: Being Studies in the Grammar of Twenty-Six Himalayan Dialects. University of Cambridge ESOL Examinations, 2013.

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20

1914-, Gupta Parmeshwari Lal, and Verma Thakur Prasad 1933-, eds. Modern Indian script =: Ādhunika Bhāratīya lipiyām̐. Delhi: All India Educational Supply Co., 1988.

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21

Indic Across the Millennia. from the Rigveda to Modern Indo-aryan: 14th World Sanskrit Conference Kyoto, Japan. Hempen Verlag, 2012.

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22

1966-, Butt Miriam, King Tracy Holloway 1966-, and Ramchand Gillian 1965-, eds. Theoretical perspectives on word order in South Asian languages. Stanford, Calif: CSLI Publications, 1994.

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23

Vineet, Chaitanya, Sangal Rajeev, and Akshar Bharati (Group), eds. Natural language processing: A Paninian perspective. New Delhi: Prentice-Hall of India, 1996.

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24

Bharati, Ashkar, Vineet Chaitanua, and Rajeev Sangal. Natural Language Processing. Prentice-Hall of India Pvt.Ltd, 2004.

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25

Lowe, John J. Transitive Nouns and Adjectives. Oxford University Press, 2017. http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/oso/9780198793571.001.0001.

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This book explores the wealth of evidence from early Indo-Aryan for the existence of transitive nouns and adjectives, a rare linguistic phenomenon which, according to some categorizations of word classes, should not occur. The author shows that most transitive nouns and adjectives attested in early Indo-Aryan cannot be analysed as belonging to a type of non-finite verb category, but must be acknowledged as a distinct constructional type. The volume provides a detailed introduction to transitivity (verbal and adpositional), the categories of agent and action noun, and early Indo-Aryan. Four periods of early Indo-Aryan are selected for study: Rigvedic Sanskrit, the earliest Indo-Aryan; Vedic Prose, a slightly later form of Sanskrit; Epic Sanskrit, a form of Sanskrit close to the standardized ‘Classical’ Sanskrit; and Pali, the early Middle Indo-Aryan language of the Buddhist scriptures. The author shows that while each linguistic stage is different, there are shared features of transitive nouns and adjectives which apply throughout the history of early Indo-Aryan. The data is set in the wider historical context, from Proto-Indo-European to Modern Indo-Aryan, and a formal linguistic analysis of transitive nouns and adjectives is provided in the framework of Lexical-Functional Grammar.
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26

Lowe, John J. Diachrony. Oxford University Press, 2017. http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/oso/9780198793571.003.0006.

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In this chapter the data for transitive nouns and adjectives in early Indo-Aryan is brought together and considered in a wider historical context. Evidence for transitive nouns and adjectives in other old Indo-European languages is presented, and possibilities of Proto-Indo-European reconstruction are considered. The evidence of early Indo-Aryan is analysed as a whole, and it is shown that there are clear syntactic patterns observable throughout the period, which distinguish transitive nouns and adjectives from other categories of word. The evidence from the four linguistic periods under consideration is then compared with the prescriptions of Panini, the authoritative ancient Sanskrit grammarian; it is shown that while there is overlap, none of the periods investigated precisely match the Sanskrit described by Panini. Finally, the later history of transitivity in nouns and adjectives in Indo-Aryan is discussed, through the later Middle Indo-Aryan period into Modern Indo-Aryan.
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27

Driem, George Van. Languages of the Himalayas: An Ethnolinguistic Handbook of the Greater Himalayan Region (Handbook of Oriental Studies / Handbuch Der Orientalistik - Part ... Der Orientalistik Zweite Abteilung, Indien). Brill Academic Publishers, 2002.

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28

Dyson, Tim. Prehistory and Early History. Oxford University Press, 2018. http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/oso/9780198829058.003.0002.

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This chapter discusses the population of the Indus valley civilization and the possible reasons for its decline. It considers the ingress of Indo-Aryan influences into the north of the Indian subcontinent, and the opening-up of the Ganges river basin. Population expansion in the basin was accompanied by the spread of agriculture, the emergence of city-state ‘kingdoms’ and, eventually, establishment of the Mauryan ‘Empire’ centred on Pataliputra (now modern-day Patna). The chapter examines what linguistic and genetic evidence can tell us about India’s people in early historical times. It discusses the tendency of influences to enter through the north-west, and the development of the system of coastal settlements. The chapter concludes by considering the general course of the population in the period to c.200 BCE—by which time a majority of the subcontinent’s perhaps 15–30 million people lived in the Ganges basin.
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