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Malayalam WordNet is a crowd sourced project. IndoWordNet is publicly browsable, but it is not available to edit. Malayalam WordNet allows users to add data to the WordNet in a controlled crowd sourcing manner. Either a set of experts or users itself could review the entries added by other members which helps in maintaining consistent data ...
The first Malayalam translation of the Kural text, and the very first translation of the Kural text into any language, appeared in 1595. [2] Written by an unknown author, it was titled Tirukkural Bhasha and was a prose rendering of the entire Kural, written closely to the spoken Malayalam of that time. [ 3 ]
However, the Term-I examination was criticised by many for having wrong answer keys, tough question papers and wrong or controversial questions, with a question being dropped in Sociology exam of class 12 and a paragraph in the English Language and Literature exam for class 10 by CBSE following which CBSE dropped the experts who set the ...
English loans are mostly related to trade, science and technology while Arabic loans are mostly religious as Arabic is the liturgical language of Islam, the religion of the majority of Malay speakers. However, many key words such as surga/syurga (heaven) and the word for "religion" itself (agama) have origins in Sanskrit.
Samakalika Malayalam Vaarika: Weekly Print The New Indian Express: Risala Weekly: Weekly Print Islamic Publishing Bureau Sunni Students Federation: Ezhuthu Chinthikkunna Hrudayangalkku: Monthly Print Loyola Research Institute of Peace and International Relations Vachakam : Weekly Print & Online Vachakam News Ltd.
Malayalam is an agglutinative language, and words can be joined in many ways. These ways are called sandhi (literally 'junction'). There are basically two genres of Sandhi used in Malayalam – one group unique to Malayalam (based originally on Old Tamil phonological rules, and in essence common with Tamil), and the other one common with Sanskrit.
Malayalam has a canonical word order of SOV (subject–object–verb), as do other Dravidian languages. [112] A rare OSV word order occurs in interrogative clauses when the interrogative word is the subject. [113] Both adjectives and possessive adjectives precede the nouns they modify. Malayalam has 6 [114] or 7 [115] [unreliable source ...
The source cited for ginger, for example, traces the word back to Sanskrit and then speculates that the Sanskrit word "may be from an ancient Dravidian name that also produced the Malayalam name for the spice". That is a far, far cry from suggesting the English word comes from Malayalam. Cnilep 00:14, 6 March 2014 (UTC)