India Languages Information
Many widely divergent languages with varied dialects in a multi-hued
cultural set-up is part of the kaleidoscope of India. In a country
with so much regional variation, where in several cases state boundaries
have been drawn on linguistic lines, it is but inevitable that fifteen
national languages are recognized by the Indian constitution. These
are spoken now in over 1600 dialects
While India's official language is Hindi in the Devnagri script,
English continues to be the official working language. Most Indians
living in urban and semi-urban towns are multi-lingual. For many
in the metro cities of India, English is virtually their first language,
and for many more, it is the second language. Sanskrit, one of the
oldest languages of the world, is the language in which the great
Indian epics and classical literature have been written. .
Hindi is spoken as a mother tongue by about 40 percent of the population,
mainly in the area known as the Hindi belt. It is the official language
of the Indian Union and of Bihar, Madhya Pradesh, Rajasthan, Uttar
Pradesh., Haryana and Himachal Pradesh.
Assamese is the state language of Assam and is spoken by nearly
60 percent of the State's population. The origin of this language
dates back to the 13th century. Bengali, also developed in the 13th
century, is the official state language of West Bengal. It is spoken
by nearly 200 million people worldwide, and is used in neighbouring
Bangladesh also. Oriya, the state language of Orissa is spoken by
nearly 87 percent of its population.
In the south India, Kannada is the State language of Karnataka
and is spoken by 65 percent of the state's population. Malayalam,
spoken in Kerala, is an ancient Dravidian language with it's origin
dating thousands of years. Tamil, an ancient Dravidian language
at least 2000 years old, is the state language of Tamil Nadu and
is spoken by at least 65 million people. Telugu, also a Dravidian
language, is spoken by the people of Andhra Pradesh.
Marathi is an Indic language dating back to the 13th century, and
is the official language of the western state of Maharashtra. Gujarati,
Indic in origin, is the state language of Gujarat and is spoken
by 70 percent of the State's population. Konkani, principally based
on classical Sanskrit, belongs to the southwestern branch of Indo-Aryan
languages and is spoken in the Konkan region covering Goa and parts
of the coastal regions of Karnataka, Kerala and Maharashtra.
Urdu is the state language of Jammu and Kashmi. It is also the
language used by the majority of Muslims in India. Written in the
Persio-Arabic script, it contains many words from Persian. Kashmiri
is a language written in both Persio-Arabic and Devnagri script
and is spoken by 55 percent of the population of Jammu and Kashmir.
Sindhi is spoken by many in the North-west frontier of the Indian
sub-continent comprising both India and Pakistan. In Pakistan, the
language is written in the Persio-Arabic script, while in India
the Devnagri script is used. Punjabi is an Indic language spoken
in the state of Punjab. Although based on the Devnagri script, it
is written in Gurmukhi, a script created by the Sikh Guru, Angad
in the 16th century.
|