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Bodo-Kachari people : ウィキペディア英語版 | Bodo-Kachari people
Dimasa-Kachari, or just Kachari, is a generic term applied to a number of ethnic groups, predominantly in Assam, speaking Tibeto-Burman languages or claiming a common ancestry. The name Dimasa-Kachari was used in the past to refer to the Dimasa people, one of the constituents of this umbrella group. ==Etymology== The term Bodo was first used by B H Hodgson in 1847, to denote a group of languages,〔(Hodgson) took the word 'Bodo' from the Meches(Bodos) of Darjeeling district in 1846 while he was writing about them."〕〔Grierson (1903) "Linguistic Survey of India" Vol III Part II p1.〕 Grierson took this term to denote a section of the Assam-Burma group of the Tibeto-Burman speakers of the Sino-Tibetan speech family, which included the languages of (1) Mech; (2) Rabha; (3) Lalung; (4) Dimasa (Hills Kachari); (5) Garo (6) Tiprasa and (7) Sutiya.〔Grierson (1903) "Linguistic Survey of India" Vol III Part II p2.〕 The term 'Bodo' is used to denote a large number of tribes.〔"The term Bodo is also used to denote a large number of tribes— The Bodo people, The Garos of Meghalaya, Tiprasa of Tripura, Koch, Rabha, Lalung, Dimasa, Hajong, Chitia, Deuri and Moran of Assam and other parts of Northeast (M N Brahma, "The Bodo-Kacharis of Assam---A brief Introduction) 1:1 (1983) p52" 〕 In recent times, the tribe that was originally called Bodo Kachari, are now being called Bodo.〔"In present-day socio-political terminology the Bodo means the plain tribes of the Brahmaputra Valley known earlier as Bodo-Kachari." 〕 This contraction, from Bodo-kachari to Bodo, is widely accepted now.〔"The media at the regional and national level; officials at the Centre and the state political parties of all hues and the people in general have accepted what may be termed as a contraction of the original denotion." 〕
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