Bengali is an eastern Indo-Aryan language and the mother tongue of most Bangladeshis and a major population in West Bengal. Its literary tradition, headed by Rabindranath Tagore, anchors South Asian cultural identity.

Bengali
Bengali · bengali · Dhaka, Dhaka Division, Bangladesh · 23.8103, 90.4125 · Bangladesh · India

Historical Evolution

Bengali emerged from Magadhi Prakrit in the medieval period, with the Charyapada hymns among the earliest attestations. Sultanate and Mughal patronage fostered literature in Brahmic script, while the Bengali Renaissance modernized prose. After Partition, Bengali became the symbol of Bangladeshi independence (1971), with distinct standardization bodies in Dhaka and Kolkata.

Phonology

Bengali contrasts aspirated and unaspirated stops, retroflexes, and nasalized vowels in some dialects. Word-final stress is common, and consonant clusters are often simplified or epenthesized. The language lacks grammatical tone, unlike some neighboring Sinitic languages.

Syntax

Bengali is SOV with postpositions and split-ergativity in the perfective past. Verbs inflect for person, tense, aspect, and honorific level (তুই/তুমি/আপনি paradigms). Relativization and complementation use finite clauses; adjectives generally precede nouns without agreement in gender.

Attributes

Total Speakers270 M
L1 Native Speakers230 M
Number of Countries2 countries
Language Vitality Index10 scale
Web Domain Share (%)0.1 %
Language FamilyIndo-European / Indo-Iranian / Indo-Aryan
Standard ScriptBengali abugida
Grammatical TypologySOV, Split-ergative
UNESCO Risk CategorySafe
Clear