Kodava language

Kodava
Coorg, Kodagu
ಕೊಡವ ತಕ್ಕ್ Koḍava takkï
Pronunciation[koɖɐʋɐ t̪ɐkːɨ]
Native toIndia
RegionKodagu
EthnicityKodava
Native speakers
113,857 (2011 census)
Dravidian
Muthanna script, Kannada script, Coorgi-Cox alphabet, Tamil script, Malayalam script, Thirke script (archaic)
Official status
Regulated byKarnataka Kodava Sahitya Academy
Language codes
ISO 639-3kfa
Glottologkoda1255
ELPKodagu
Kodava is classified as Definitively Endangered by the UNESCO Atlas of the World's Languages in Danger
PersonKoḍavanï
PeopleKoḍavarï
LanguageKoḍava takkï
CountryKoḍagï

The Kodava (Kodava: [koɖɐʋɐ], natively: Koḍava takkï, Kodava: [koɖɐʋɐ t̪ɐkːɨ], meaning 'speech of Kodavas', Angloid name: Codava, Coorgi) is a Dravidian language spoken in Kodagu district (Coorg) in Southern Karnataka, India. It is an endangered language. The term Kodava has two related usages. Firstly, it is the name of the Kodava language and culture followed by a number of communities from Kodagu. Secondly, within the Kodava-speaking communities and region (Kodagu), it is a demonym for the dominant Kodava people. Hence, the Kodava language is not only the primary language of the Kodavas but also of many other castes and tribes in Kodagu. The language has two dialects: Mendele (spoken in Northern and Central Kodagu, i.e. outside Kodagu's Kiggat naadu) and Kiggat (spoken in Kiggat naadu, in Southern Kodagu).

Historically, it has been associated to Old Canarese or Hale Kannada However, it has been re-analysed as a language by early 20th century academics. Now it is considered as an intermediate language between Kannada, Malayalam, Tamil, and Tulu in comparative linguistics.

It is traditionally written using the thirke script which is an abugida. The 2011 Census of India reports 96,918 persons who returned Kodava as their mother tongue and 16,939 who returned Coorgi/Kodagu, for a total of 113,857 persons coming under the parent group which is again identified as Coorgi/Kodagu (another name for Kodava) as the mother tongue.