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Indian Languages INTRODUCTION Indian Languages, the indigenous languages spoken on the Indian subcontinent, the vast majority of which belong either to the Indo-Iranian branch of the Indo-European language family (see Indo-European Languages) or to the non-Indo-European Dravidian family. A much smaller representation of languages belongs to the Austro-Asiatic and Sino-Tibetan language families. The number of languages varies depending on how they are counted. The government of India recognizes 112 mother tongues that have 10,000 more speakers. From 179 to 188 languages have been tabulated, and as many as 544 dialects identified. II
OFFICIAL LANGUAGES III
INDO-IRANIAN LANGUAGES
Vedic Sanskrit, the language used in the Vedas, the sacred Hindu scriptures, is the earliest form of Sanskrit, dating from about 1500 BC to about 200 BC. A later variety of the language, classical Sanskrit (from about 500 BC), was a language of literary and technical works. Even today, it is still widely studied in India and functions as a sacred and learned language. The Middle Indo-Aryan Prakrits existed in many regional varieties, which eventually developed literatures of their own. Pali, the language of the Buddhist canonical writings, is the oldest literary Prakrit. It remains in liturgical use in Sri Lanka, Myanmar (formerly known as Burma), and Thailand.
Despite their separate names, Hindi and Urdu are actually slightly different dialects of the same language. The main differences lie in their vocabulary sources, scripts, and religious traditions. Hindi vocabulary derives mainly from Sanskrit, while Urdu contains many words of Persian and Arabic origin; Hindi is written in the Devanagari script, and Urdu in a Persian Arabic script. Hindi is spoken mainly by Hindus; Urdu is used predominantly by Muslimsin India as well as throughout Pakistan. Two major varieties of Hindi are spoken; together they have more than 400 million speakers in India alone. Western Hindi, which originated in the area around Delhi, includes literary Hindi and Urdu. Eastern Hindi is spoken mainly in central Uttar Pradesh and eastern Madhya Pradesh; its most important literary works are in the Awadhi dialect. (Hindustani is an older term, used less and less frequently since partition in 1947. It referred to the mixed Western Hindi-Urdu language that developed in the camps and marketplaces around Delhi, was spread throughout India from the 16th to 18th century, and functioned as a lingua franca among the different language groups.) Bengali is spoken in Bangla and by almost the entire population of Bangladesh. Like Hindi, it is descended from Sanskrit. It is the language of the poet Rabindranath Tagore, winner of the Nobel Prize in literature (1913), and has the most extensive literature of any modern Indian language.
Bihâri is actually the name of a group of three related languagesBhojpuri, Maithili, and Magahispoken mainly in northeastern India in Bihâr. Despite its large number of speakers, Bihâri is not a constitutionally recognized language of India. Even in Bihâr, Hindi is the language used for educational and official matters. Other significant Indo-Aryan languages include Sinhalese, the official language of Sri Lanka; and Romani, the language of the Roma (Gypsies), which originated in India and was spread throughout the world. The Sanskrit origin of Romani is apparent in its sounds and grammar. The origin of most scripts for the Indo-Aryan languages can ultimately be traced to Brahmi, which is of North Semitic derivation. Devanagari, a development of Brahmi, is used for Nepali, Marathi, and Kashmiri (by Hindus), as well as for Hindi, Sanskrit, and the Prakrits. Gujarati, Bengali, Assamese, and Oriya all have individual writing systems derived from Devanagari. A Persian Arabic script is used for Urdu, Sindhi (also written in Devanagari), and Punjabi. IV DRAVIDIAN LANGUAGES About 23 Dravidian languages are spoken by an estimated 169 million people, mainly in southern India. The 4 major Dravidian tongues are recognized as official state languagesTamil in Tamil Nâdu, Telugu in Andhra Pradesh, Kannada (Kanarese) in Mysore, and Malayalam in Kerala. They have long literary histories and are written in their own scripts. Telugu is spoken by the largest number of people; Tamil has the richest literature, which was once thought to be extremely ancient but is now believed to date from about the 1st to the 5th century AD, and it is spoken over the widest area, including northwestern Sri Lanka. Other Dravidian languages have fewer speakers and are, for the most part, not written. The Dravidian languages have acquired many loanwords from the Indo-Aryan languages, especially from Sanskrit. Conversely, the Indo-Aryan languages have borrowed Dravidian sounds and grammatical structures. V
OTHER LANGUAGE GROUPS
This map depicts the areas in the Indian subcontinent in which various language families are spoken. Languages belonging to the Indo-Iranian group (a branch of the Indo-European language family), such as Bengali, Hindi-Urdu, Gujarâti, Persian, and Punjabi, are prevalent in northern and central India and most of Pakistan, Nepal, Sri Lanka, and Bangladesh. In southern India, Dravidian languages are more common, the most widely spoken being Tamil, Telugu, Kannada, and Malayalam. Other languages spoken in the region belong to the Sino-Tibetan and Austro-Asiatic language families, and English is often used as a trade language.
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