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Domba
The Domba or Dom (Sanskrit ', dialectally also ''Domaki, Dombo, Domra, Domaka, Dombar, Dombari'' and variants) are an ethnic or social group, or groups, scattered across India. In North India, the preferred self-designation is Dom.〔Tribes and Castes of the North Western Provinces and Oudh Volume II by William Crook〕 The form ' Prakrit, while ' and ' are encountered in Kashmiri Sanskrit texts. Derived from ' is ', the name of a language spoken in a small enclave in Gilgit-Baltistan, Pakistan. It is also believed that the Dom or Domi people of the Middle East, in addition to the Roma of Europe, are descendants of Domba, who were taken, or traveled, to Sassanid Persia as servants and musicians. The term ' or ' is extensively used in Indian Hindu and Buddhist literature for a segregated and enslaved population. ==Origin of the word Dom== Its presumed root, ''ḍom'', which is connected with drumming, is linked to ''damara'' and ''damaru'', Sanskrit terms for "drum" and the Sanskrit verbal root डम् ''ḍam-'' 'to sound (as a drum)', perhaps a loan from Dravidian, e.g. Kannada ''ḍamāra'' 'a pair of kettle-drums', and Telugu ''ṭamaṭama'' 'a drum, tomtom'.〔T. Burrow and M.B. Emeneau, ''A Dravidian Etymological Dictionary'' 2nd ed. (Oxford: Clarendon Press, 1984), p. 257, entry #2949.〕
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