Kashmiri proverbs are proverbs in the Kashmiri language, spoken Kashmir. The best available source for the study of these proverbs is a book by Sh. Omkar N. Koul, A Dictionary of Kashmiri Proverbs. It was first published in 1992, then a second edition was published in 2005, and is now available online.[1]
Kashmiri proverbs come in a variety of grammatical forms, such as:
- simple statements: "An apple gets its colour from another apple."
- conjoined phrases: "(She) came to visit the shopkeeper but went to visit a baker instead."
- dialogues: "Mother, no one abuses me." "Son, go and sit on the road."[2]
- wellerism: "The horse has said, “I will help you to go up the steep, but you lead me down the slope."[3]
- rhetorical question: "How will a lamp help a blind person in the dark?" [4]
- sentence fragments: "With short hands and long tongue."[5]
- ^ A Dictionary of Kashmiri Proverbs ISBN 81-86323-21-X
- ^ p. 5. Sh. Omkar N. Koul. 2005. A Dictionary of Kashmiri Proverbs. Delhi: Indian Institute of Language Studies.
- ^ p. 68. Sh. Omkar N. Koul. 2005. A Dictionary of Kashmiri Proverbs. Delhi: Indian Institute of Language Studies.
- ^ p. 12. Sh. Omkar N. Koul. 2005. A Dictionary of Kashmiri Proverbs. Delhi: Indian Institute of Language Studies.
- ^ p. 24. Sh. Omkar N. Koul. 2005. A Dictionary of Kashmiri Proverbs. Delhi: Indian Institute of Language Studies.