mb444
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Where is racial comment.
Mymensinghia is ethnicity and geda means boy.
So what problem?
Yeah i was born yesterday. Not all of us are dumb hindutva turds.
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Where is racial comment.
Mymensinghia is ethnicity and geda means boy.
So what problem?
What you saying?Yeah i was born yesterday. Not all of us are dumb hindutva turds.
Believe me friend, before i joined this forum had no feelings of animosity for the average BD citizen, in fact in my early days here engaged in fruitful discussions too with the likes of Homo Sapiens, ,Neptune, Mage etc.What you saying?
Where he speak racial comment answer?
You are a racist yourself. And it is like joke because you living in white people country for money and say other people racist words
Eku bujiye pua nasilu,, dictionary sai he bujilu.Believe me friend, before i joined this forum had no feelings of animosity for the average BD citizen, in fact in my early days here engaged in fruitful discussions too with the likes of Homo Sapiens, ,Neptune, Mage etc.
Gradually the scene became clear, how they wish ill of my state, people and country. How can one be friends with such rabid hordes. As Nilgiri rightly says, these overseas Bangladeshis function as an echo chamber of disinformation. Probably, they are not the true representatives of their country.
Is this Assamese?Iyar dwara PDF t thoka Jamati xokolor bikrito manoxikota r porisoy ami gom pau, xeujia sosma logai loi jimane duskriti nakare kio xodai bifol e hobo. Bolia hol be ihote, mulla r daur masjid loike..
Yes, it is.Is this Assamese?
Are Assamese, Nepali and Bengali related? I have heard Nepali when I watched Nepali cricket games (also had Nepali advertisements) on YT, I have heard Bengali as well (Bengali is actually quite common to hear) but I hadn't heard Assamese. But just reading the Assamese on this thread, I assume these 3 are related.Yes, it is.
Assamese, Bengali and Odia originated from the same source. Odia differentiated much earlier and is considered as a classical language. The timeline of Assamese-Bengali seperation is hazy, based on some research it is said that Assamese developed earlier (some may deny). Assamese developed from the Kamrupi branch of the Prakrit and it has imbibed a significant chunk of words from our old Sutia-Deori language. Sylhet being a contiguous region of Assam(and being under our control prior to the Islamization and people from Bengal moving in) has more resemblance to Assamese.Are Assamese, Nepali and Bengali related? I have heard Nepali when I watched Nepali cricket games (also had Nepali advertisements) on YT, I had a Bengali colleague so I have heard Bengali as well (Bengali is actually quite common to hear) but I hadn't heard Assamese. But just reading the Assamese on this thread, I assume these 3 are related.
Very interesting. And what about Odia? Do you partially understand Odia and vice versa?Assamese, Bengali and Odia originated from the same source. Odia differentiated much earlier and is considered as a classical language. The timeline of Assamese-Bengali seperation is hazy, based on some research it is said that Assamese developed earlier (some may deny). Assamese developed from the Kamrupi branch of the Prakrit and it has imbibed a significant chunk of words from our old Sutia-Deori language. Sylhet being a contiguous region of Assam(and being under our control prior to the Islamization and people from Bengal moving in) has more resemblance to Assamese.
Present day literary Assamese developed in Assam near my birth place and is the version we use mostly. Lower Assam language has minor tonal and words variation.
Script is mostly the same with a couple of differences. Most of us do understand Bengali in fact and converse in broken tidbits, however it is difficult for a Bengali from WB/BD to speak in Assamese. Other major language group here is the Bodo-Garo-Twipra family with lots of similarities amongst them.
Understand Nepali a bit, but struggle to speak.
It's 'I' not 'L'.Your last name should be in banned words too
Unfortunately no, may be around 10 pc of the words, but i think a Bengali would be able to understand more.Very interesting. And what about Odia? Do you partially understand Odia and vice versa?
It is indeed a 'L'. It means a young male in Assamese, young at heart in my case!It's 'I' not 'L'.
He was a Sanskit pandit, novelist, journalist. His literature is known for heavy Sanskrit tilt. He is NOT Ishwar Chandra Bidyasagar. They were quite different personality as well. While Bidyasagar was a great social reformer and a life long activist of Hindu widow remarriage. Ishwar Chandra Gupta opposed widow remarriage.Who was Iswar Chandra Gupta?
He was a Sanskit pandit, novelist, journalist. His literature is known for heavy Sanskrit tilt. He is NOT Ishwar Chandra Bidyasagar. They were quite different personality as well. While Bidyasagar was a great social reformer and a life long activist of Hindu widow remarriage. Ishwar Chandra Gupta opposed widow remarriage.
He was a Sanskit pandit, novelist, journalist. His literature is known for heavy Sanskrit tilt. He is NOT Ishwar Chandra Bidyasagar. They were quite different personality as well. While Bidyasagar was a great social reformer and a life long activist of Hindu widow remarriage. Ishwar Chandra Gupta opposed widow remarriage.
Assamese, Bengali and Odia originated from the same source. Odia differentiated much earlier and is considered as a classical language. The timeline of Assamese-Bengali seperation is hazy, based on some research it is said that Assamese developed earlier (some may deny). Assamese developed from the Kamrupi branch of the Prakrit and it has imbibed a significant chunk of words from our old Sutia-Deori language. Sylhet being a contiguous region of Assam(and being under our control prior to the Islamization and people from Bengal moving in) has more resemblance to Assamese.
Present day literary Assamese developed in Assam near my birth place and is the version we use mostly. Lower Assam language has minor tonal and words variation.
Script is mostly the same with a couple of differences. Most of us do understand Bengali in fact and converse in broken tidbits, however it is difficult for a Bengali from WB/BD to speak in Assamese. Other major language group here is the Bodo-Garo-Twipra family with lots of similarities amongst them.
Understand Nepali a bit, but struggle to speak.