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India is a fine country after all, as Brits found
Hindustan Times Rajasthan
|January 12, 2025
Wild Woodbine, a cigarette that used to be made by W.D. & H.O. Wills, once issued a handbook with guidelines for British soldiers arriving in India. It was intended to ease their sojourn in our land. Last week, I found it in an antique shop on London's Portobello Road. It's a delightful read.
It begins with how large India is. "Great Britain would fit into India twenty times". Then, there are instructions about the local currency. 1 Anna equals 1 Penny, 11 Annas is 1 Shilling, (on the basis there are 16 Annas to the rupee) 1 rupee equals 1 Shilling and 5 Pence and 13 Rupees 6 Annas makes 1 Pound.
Much of the handbook is a collection of important words a soldier would need to know and how to pronounce them. For instance, mouse is Chew-ha, road is Rust-er, sea is Some-under, shirt is Come-ease, sugar is Chee-knee, water is Parknee and woman is Awe-rut.
There are also a few short sentences for everyday use when he has to speak to the natives.
When the soldier wants to know where you're going he says "Kid-her jar-ta high?" If he hasn't understood, "Tomb key-ah bowl-ta high?" If he's in search of the post office, it's "Dark-car-ner kid-her high?" And if the price a shopkeeper is charging is too much he should say "Darm jars-tea high".
Denne historien er fra January 12, 2025-utgaven av Hindustan Times Rajasthan.
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