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Arwi - Wikipedia Arwi (أَرْوِيُّ ʾArwīyyu) or Arabu-Tamil (Tamil: அரபுத்தமிழ், عَرَبُ تَّمِۻْ Araputtamiḻ) is an Arabic -influenced dialect of the Tamil language written with an extension of the Arabic alphabet, with extensive lexical and phonetic influences from the Arabic language
Arwi: The lost Arabic-Tamil Language of Tamil Muslims - Substack In some cases, the Arabic words were written without translating to Tamil to guard the original essence As a result, today Tamil lexicon has words of Arabic origin which the common native speakers believe to be inherently part of the Tamil language
The ORGIN AND DEVELEPMENT OF ARBU TAMIL ARAWI ZUBIER The Arabs of Tamil Nadu wanted to learn Tamil, which was also an ancient language like Arabic They started learning Tamil with the help of their own Arabic script
Arwi: The Arab-Tamil Language Lost To Time | Madras Courier The Arabs were experts in picking up new languages; however, the rise of Arabised Tamil, Malayalam or Melayu may have been the result of native efforts—although it is no coincidence that the three languages rose and fell in the same period in history
The (consciously) forgotten worlds of Arabic-Malayalam and Arabic-Tamil . . . Scholars of Arabic-Tamil, however, suggest that the genesis of the script could be traced to the centuries before the rise of Islam when there were frequent contacts between the Arabian Peninsula and the Tamil-speaking region, mainly for commercial purposes
Arwi: The Lost Language of the Arab-Tamils – Ilankai Tamil . . . - Sangam The Arabic that the traders spoke intermingled with the local language of Tamil to create what scholars call Arabu Tamil, or Arwi The script employs a modified alphabet of Arabic, but the actual words and their meanings are borrowed from the local Tamil dialect
Arwi Language (Arabic Tamil) - Sailan Muslim Foundation Arwi was used extensively by the Muslim minority of Tamil Nadu state of India and Sri Lanka As a spoken language it is extinct, though a few madrasas still teach the basics of the language as part of their curricula