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🎵 Song Description (with Lyrics + Translation) Title: “Kāla Nīrattin Mūlam” (“Source of the Ancient Waters”) Language: A poetic reconstruction inspired by Proto‑Dravidian phonology and root vocabulary. Lyrics (Reconstructed‑Style Dravidian Poetic Form) Ār maṇ ār → water, river, flood maṇ → earth, soil “the water‑soaked earth” / “river‑land” por‑aḷai tū‑rum por‑aḷai → waves, ripples, movement tū‑rum → pushing through, stirring, moving “where ripples move” / “where waves stir the soil” nār aḷ nār → reeds, fibrous plants aḷ → place, abundance “the place of reeds” / “reedy wetlands” ti‑ru‑nīr pā‑yum ti‑ru‑nīr → sacred water, pure water pā‑yum → flowing, spreading “where sacred water flows” pāl va‑yal pāl → milk, pale, fertile va‑yal → field, cultivated land “the fertile pale fields” / “milk‑rich fields” tu‑ḷa‑vi nā‑dum tu‑ḷa‑vi → wandering, moving through nā‑dum → land, region “wandering through the land” ēl u‑ru ēl → young, new, tender u‑ru → form, body, figure “a young form” / “a new figure” pā‑ṭu nā‑dum pā‑ṭu → song, chant nā‑dum → sounding, spreading, going forth “the song that goes forth” / “the chant that moves through the land” This style draws on reconstructed Proto‑Dravidian roots such as nīr (“water”), amma (“mother”), uyir (“life”), and nāṭu (“land”), which are attested across the Dravidian family and trace back to the proto‑language through comparative reconstruction. Malayalam is part of the South Dravidian branch, which descends from Proto‑South‑Dravidian, which itself descends from Proto‑Dravidian. Because of this: Many Proto‑Dravidian roots survive unchanged in Malayalam. Malayalam and Tamil share a particularly close relationship, preserving many ancient forms. It is inevitable that some words will look Malayalam, Tamil, or Kannada — because they all inherited them. Words like nīr, amma, nāṭu, uyir are pan‑Dravidian, not uniquely Malayalam. 🧭 The Dravidian Family: What Linguists Agree On Modern Dravidian languages fall into four major branches, not three: 1. South Dravidian This is the branch that eventually produces: Tamil Kannada Malayalam Tulu Kodava Badaga Irula Toda Kota Proto‑Dravidian → Proto‑South Dravidian → Proto‑Tamil‑Kannada → Tamil → Malayalam (later split) So Malayalam is not a Proto‑Dravidian branch. It is a descendant of Tamil, which is itself a descendant of Proto‑South Dravidian. 2. Central Dravidian Includes: Kolami Naiki Parji Gadaba Ollari Koya These languages are spoken in central India. 3. North Dravidian Includes: Kurukh Malto Brahui (spoken in Pakistan) These are the most geographically distant Dravidian languages. 4. South‑Central Dravidian (sometimes grouped with South Dravidian) Includes: Telugu Gondi Konda Kui Kuvi Some classifications treat this as a sub‑branch of South Dravidian; others treat it as its own major branch. 🧬 Where Proto‑Dravidian fits Proto‑Dravidian is the hypothetical ancestor of all Dravidian languages. It is reconstructed through comparative linguistics, not directly attested. Time period: 4000–3000 BCE (supported by linguistic and archaeological correlations). From Proto‑Dravidian, the family splits into the branches above. Don't forget to like, share, and subscribe if you enjoyed the video! Hashtags: #ProtoDravidian, #DravidianHistory, #AncientSouthIndia, #PrehistoricIndia, #RiverCivilizations, #MythicRealism, #CinematicWorldbuilding, #AIArtVideo, #AIVideoArt, #SouthIndianWildlife, #WaterBuffalo, #RiverLife, #AncientSong, #WorldMusic, #LinguisticReconstruction Thank you for watching! 🎥🕺