Mumbaikar

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Lua error in package.lua at line 80: module 'strict' not found. Mumbaikar is the Marathi word to identify a resident of Mumbai. The term has been in use for quite some time but it gained popularity after the official name change to Mumbai in November 1995.[1] The change in name and rise in the popularity of the term led to common adoption of the term Mumbaikar. Generally speaking, the term encompasses a whole range of ethnicities and cultures because Mumbai is a[according to whom?] "melting pot"[clarification needed][citation needed]

Marathi "Kar" in development of place and family names

It is a general practice in the Marathi language to add kar (which means resident of) to the end of an individuals' village of origin/place of residence in order to refer to those people from there. Based on this general rule, natives of Pune city are called Punekar, Nashik city Nashikkar and so on. It is also fairly common to find people who have their last name based on this rule, so some natives of Goregaon (a large area in Mumbai) have Goregaonkar as their last name, similarly Chiplunkar from Chiplun and so on. Surnames based on profession with kar at the end are also very common.

Notes

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External links

  • How Polite Are We? Reader's Digest survey article
  • Bachi Karkaria, Mumbai the Red-faced Rude-deer Erratica column in Times of India, June 24, 2006. Retrieved July 18, 2006: comment on Readers' Digest survey story
  • Mumbaikar- a community resource for Mumbai with blogs, news and events.