- Powadh
Powadh (or Puadh or Powadha) is a region of Punjab and parts of Haryana between the
Satluj andGhaggar rivers. The part lying south, south-east and east ofRupnagar adjacent toAmbala District (Haryana) is Powadhi. The Powadh extends from that part of the Rupnagar District which lies near Satluj up to the Ghaggar river in the east, which separates the states of Punjab andHaryana . Parts ofFatehgarh Sahib district, and parts of Patiala districts likeRajpura are also part of Powadh. The language is spoken over a large area in present Punjab as well as Haryana. In Punjab,Kharar ,Kurali ,Ropar ,Nurpurbedi ,Morinda ,Pail ,Rajpura andSamrala are the areas where the Puadhi language is spoken and the area itself is claimed as including fromPinjore ,Kalka toBangar area inHisar district which includes evenNabha andPatiala in it.Poadh is a vast region, consisting of all of and
Panchkula district inHaryana andChandigarh and a big area of south eastMalwa , consisting ofPatiala ,Mohali , andRopar districts. The majority of population is Sikh, and unlike most other areas in Punjab the majority is notJat . It had its own poets even at Akbar's court such as Mai Banno of Banur and more recentlyBhagat Asa Ram Baidwan ofSohana . The Dhadd Sarangi and Kavishri way of singing are said to have originated here only and also different types ofAkhara s such as that of famous Rabbi Bhaironpuri.Compared to
Majha (comprising ofAmritsar andGurdaspur andTarn Taran districts) andDoaba (comprising ofJalandhar ,Hoshiarpur ,Kapurthala andNawanshahr districts),Malwa (comprisingBarnala ,Bathinda ,Faridkot ,Firozpur ,Ludhiana ,Mansa ,Moga ,Muktsar ,Patiala , andSangrur ), Powadh comprises the districts ofRupnagar ,Mohali , part ofPatiala district around theGhaggar river and parts ofFatehgarh Sahib district as well asChandigarh .The people of the region are known as Powadhis. The dialect of Punjabi spoken in powadh is called Powadhi.
Dialect of the area
The characteristics of the Powadhi dialect within the
Rupnagar District are the pronunciation of vice as bice, 'in'; the insertion of an aspiration/tone in words like balad (pbd) 'ox'; the frequent dropping of the first syllable as in khu; con (y{ju'A) instead of khu : biccon (T [BK u'A) instead of 'unha ; n biccon (T [B{K ftZu') 'from among them' ; and frequent transposition of high tona as in unu : n (T [Bz{) for unu : n (UB{) A 'to him'; oda : (T [dk) for oda : (Udk) 'of him'; jera (i/VQk) for jera (i/jVk) 'who'.In certain cases, even the initial h (j) sound is replaced by tone as in neri : (B/oh) 'storm' from haneri : (jB/oh). The oblique forms of pronouns like minnu : n (fwB{z) 'to me'; ma : nu : n (wkjB{z) 'to us' : tinnu : n (fsB/) 'to you: thuanu : n E [nkB{z) 'to you' (pl) ; onu : n (T [jB{z) 'to him' etc. are characteristic of this area. Since the Powadh area of Rupnagar District lies on the border of
Bangru speaking area, some influence of Bangru on its vocabulary is quite natural. Thus we find hamen ( ) 'we ' thamen ( ) 'you' (pl) the : ra : ( ) 'Yours along with asi: n ( ) tera : ( ) respectively; ma as locative postposition; ka ke ki: ki: an as postpositions of genitive , ets. These forms are more common with elderly folk. The post position of accusative case is nu: n ( ) although ko ( )is also spoken in some parts in some parts of this district.The consonant conjuncts are almost absent. The conjuncts which appear in words like pa: njs : ( ) 'sister's son' ; carda: ( ) 'East' , chipda: ( ) ' West', nambarda : 'headman', etc., are very loose clusters because in these fall in different syllables.
A select list of words and phrases in common use in the area include ba :i ( ) 'ploughing', barga : ( ) ' like ' jua:k ( ) ' child', ga:e ( ) ' cow', nia: ne ( ) 'children',vagda: ( ) ' following ( water) , a: va: tia: hoya :ya:,( ) cak nai: n hunda ( ) dubane te darda ( ) rakhde hunde the ( ) etc
See also
*
Doaba
*Malwa(Punjab)
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