Assamese to english dictionary

  1. ‎Lachit Dictionary on the App Store
  2. Assamese dictionary, language, grammar LEXILOGOS
  3. Ahom language
  4. ‎Axomi : Assamese Dictionary on the App Store
  5. Best English to Assamese Dictionary App for 2021
  6. Digital Dictionaries of South Asia


Download: Assamese to english dictionary
Size: 1.42 MB

‎Lachit Dictionary on the App Store

An All-In-One Dictionary for the Assamese Community. You can even find Assamese meanings of Scientific Terminologies! An All-in-One Dictionary for Assamese People. Lachit Dictionary is a collection of an Assamese-Assamese-English dictionary; an Anglo-Assamese dictionary; a Scientific Terminologies Dictionary, and an Administrative Terminologies Dictionary. Database courtesy: xobdo dot org and Paribhasha Likhan Got (Asomiyat Kotha Botora)

Assamese dictionary, language, grammar LEXILOGOS

Assamese language → r and w) • Assamese language • Journal of Acharaya Narendra Dev Research Institute (2019) • "Tongue has no bone" (1800-1930), by Bodhisattva Kar, in Studies in History (2008) • th-century Assam: war of words, by Madhumita Sengupta, in Indian Historical Review (2012) • ideologies of grammar and the question of linguistic boundaries, in A multilingual nation translation and language dynamic in India (2017) • a brief account, by Biswadip Gogoi, in History of Translation in India (2017) • comprehending the dynamics in 19 th-century Assam (2016) • the American Baptist Mission and Orunodoi, by Arnab Dasgupta, in Rupkatha journal on interdisciplinary studies in humanities (2021) • Indian Journal of Language and Linguistics (2020) • • Assam • possession/dispossession, homecoming/homelessness in contemporary Assam, by Parag Moni Sarma, in Studies of transition states and societies (2011) • the cultural politics of writing religion in colonial Assam, by Madhumita Sengupta, in Contributions to Indian Sociology (2021) • papers and discussions, American Baptist Missionary Union (1886)

Ahom language

Language codes The Ahom language or Tai-Ahom language is a The Ahom people established the Classification [ ] Tai-Ahom is classified in a Northwestern subgrouping of Description [ ] Ahom has characteristics typical of Tai languages, such as: • Subject Verb Object (SVO) word order • Tonality • Monosyllabic roots • Each syllable is tonal, and begins with a consonant or consonant cluster. A vowel or diphthong follows. A final consonant may be added, but is not necessary. • Lack of inflection • Analytic syntax When speaking and writing Ahom, much is dependent upon context and the audience interpretation. Multiple parts of the sentence can be left out; verb and adjectives will remain, but other parts of speech, especially pronouns, can be dropped. Verbs do not have tenses, and nouns do not have plurals. Time periods can be identified by adverbs, strings of verbs, or auxiliaries placed before the verb. It has its own script, the History [ ] Main article: The In the 16th and 17th centuries, the small Ahom community expanded their rule dramatically toward the west and they successfully saw off challenges from the Bar Amra preserves the lexical forms of the language towards the end of the [ citation needed] The language today is used chiefly for liturgical purposes, and is no longer used in daily life. While the written language (and ritualistic chants) survive in a vast number of written manuscripts, Ahom is therefore usually regarded as a dead language. Translation efforts [ ] Un...

‎Axomi : Assamese Dictionary on the App Store

Almost every language has its Dictionary app on every platform today. However, Assamese is the only language that didn't have a dictionary app. This is the first-ever English-Assamese Dictionary app which is a contribution to our homeland Assam, a place of diversity and a hub of multiple cultures. Though there are many languages spoken in the region, the most common is Assamese. Axomi is the World's first ever English-Assamese Dictionary App. It does the simplest dictionary operation from 'English to Assamese' and from 'Assamese to English'. The database used has been provided by xobdo.org and is completely for offline usage. In the 'Assamese to English' tab, you may type in English, i.e. using Roman transliteration or typing in Assamese Unicode. If you have trouble understanding Roman transliteration, the Phonetic Chart included in the App will help you. Further, to type in Assamese, you need to have an Assamese Keyboard installed on your device. Just click Search and select the word from the list displayed. Please rate and review the app on AppStore and our facebook page. For any further queries, please contact us by email at [email protected]

Best English to Assamese Dictionary App for 2021

The other day one of my friends was asking me for the best English to Assamese Dictionary App. I quickly hoped to Play Store and download some apps that popped in the search result. But I kept installing and uninstalling most of them. Because, most of them didn’t contain most of the words or had only a few basic features and were full of ads. So, I researched for several hours and found few Best English to Assamese Dictionary App for 2021. It meets most of the features a dictionary app should have. To list, they are Glosbe, Luka Bhaku, Aakhor Dictionary, Axomi and Assamese Dictionary by One Horned Rhino. History of the Assamese Dictionary goes back to the 18th Century. To be precise 1795, 18th century. But the popular belief is that Hemkosh (1900) was the first Assamese dictionary. To some, the first was Miles Bronson’s A dictionary of Assamese and English (1867). To clear up the misconception, Hemkosh was the 10th Assamese dictionary. Bar Amra and Lati Amra were the first Assamese dictionary. They were compiled by two Tail scholars Tengai Mohon and Romakanta Molagharia individually in the 18th century (1795). Bar Amra by Tengai Mohan and Lati Amara by Romakanta Molagharia was the first As Timeline of History of Assamese Dictionary • Bar Amra by Tengai Mohan (1795) • Lati Amara by Romakanta Molagharia (1795) • Assamese Lexicon by Ruchinath Buragohain (1810) • 10 Language Vocabulary by Raja Brajanath Singha (1814) • Missing DIctionary by Jaduram Dekabarua (1836) • 4 Languag...

Digital Dictionaries of South Asia

Hornby, Albert Sydney. Oxford advanced learner's dictionary of current English. 5th ed. / with a special supplement of Indian English. Oxford, England: Oxford University Press, 1996. Indian English supplement (p. 1429-1475) compiled by Indira Chowdhury Sengupta. License agreements for Web use need to be negotiated. Madras (India: Presidency) Manual of the administration of the Madras Presidency in illustration of the records of government & the yearly administration reports. Madras: Printed by E. Keys, at the government press, 1885-1893. This title is being entered by our collegues in Koln, Germany. Yule, Henry. Bahri, Hardev. Caturvedi, Mahendra. Dasa, Syamasundara. McGregor, R. S. The Oxford Hindi-English dictionary. Oxford [England] ; New York : Oxford University Press, 1993. License agreements for Web use need to be negotiated. Nespital, Helmut. Lokabharati Hindi kriya-kosa = Dictionary of Hindi verbs. Allahabad : Lokbharti Prakashan, 1997. License agreements for Web use need to be negotiated. Grierson, George Abraham. Perso-Arabic characters are being added to the data file and will be displayed on this site by September 2023. Hassan, Sheeba. Tośah Khānī, Es. Ke. Kāśir ḍikśnarī. Srīnagar : Jammūn ainḍ Kaśmīr Ikāḍamī āf Ārṭ Kalcar, ainḍ Langvejiz, 1972-1979. License agreements for Web use need to be negotiated. Ghanekara, Damodara. Rajahasa Konkanī sacitra astangī abhyasakosa. Granthalaya avrttī. Panaji : Rajahasa Vitarana, 2009. License agreements for Web use need to ...