Vrtha janama gamayalun: Difference between revisions

Jump to navigation Jump to search
m (Edited the lead)
m (Moved info to Note)
Line 16: Line 16:
}}
}}
'''''Vrtha janama gamayalun''''' is the [[List of songs of Prabhat Samgiita|340<sup>th</sup> song]] of [[Prabhat Ranjan Sarkar]]'s [[Prabhat Samgiita]].<ref name="PRS Vol1">{{cite book|last=Sarkar|first=Prabhat Ranjan|title=Prabhat Samgiita Volume 1|location=Kolkata|year=1994|publisher=Ananda Marga Publications|editor=Acarya Vijayananda Avadhuta|language=Bengali|isbn=81-7252-082-4}}</ref>  
'''''Vrtha janama gamayalun''''' is the [[List of songs of Prabhat Samgiita|340<sup>th</sup> song]] of [[Prabhat Ranjan Sarkar]]'s [[Prabhat Samgiita]].<ref name="PRS Vol1">{{cite book|last=Sarkar|first=Prabhat Ranjan|title=Prabhat Samgiita Volume 1|location=Kolkata|year=1994|publisher=Ananda Marga Publications|editor=Acarya Vijayananda Avadhuta|language=Bengali|isbn=81-7252-082-4}}</ref>  
While the second and third verses of this song are in [[:wikipedia:Bengali language|Bengali]], the language of the first verse is uncertain. It might be a [[:wikipedia:Bhojpuri language|Bhojpuri]] dialect. It might also be [[:wikipedia:Braj Bhasha|Braj Bhasha]], a Hindi offshoot spoken in the broad area of India known as [[:wikipedia:Braj|Braj or Vrajabhumi]]. Perhaps most likely, it is either the [[:wikipedia:Brajavali dialect|Brajavali dialect]] of [[:wikipedia:Assamese language|Assamese]] or [[:wikipedia:Brajabuli|Brajabuli]], both having a strong [[:wikipedia:Maithili language|Maithili]] composition.


== Lyrics ==
== Lyrics ==
Line 23: Line 21:
|-
|-
! Roman script{{#tag:ref|For details on the notation, see [[Roman Bengali transliteration]].|group="nb"}}
! Roman script{{#tag:ref|For details on the notation, see [[Roman Bengali transliteration]].|group="nb"}}
! Bengali script
! Bengali script{{#tag:ref|While the second and third verses of this song are in [[:wikipedia:Bengali language|Bengali]], the language of the first verse is uncertain. It might be a [[:wikipedia:Bhojpuri language|Bhojpuri]] dialect. It might also be [[:wikipedia:Braj Bhasha|Braj Bhasha]], a Hindi offshoot spoken in the broad area of India known as [[:wikipedia:Braj|Braj or Brajabhumi]]. Perhaps most likely, it is either the [[:wikipedia:Brajavali dialect|Brajavali dialect]] of [[:wikipedia:Assamese language|Assamese]] or [[:wikipedia:Brajabuli|Brajabuli]], both having a strong [[:wikipedia:Maithili language|Maithili]] composition.
|group="nb"}}
! Translation
! Translation
|-
|-