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India
a land as large as a sub continent is bound to have many languages and the number
of languages in India justifies its size. There are 15 official languages and
hundreds of local dialects. Such a plethora of languages make an average Indian
a linguist. On an average every Indian speaks two languages and in Cosmopolitan
cities like Mumbai, Delhi and Bangalore people can speak up to three languages.
Indian
languages are grouped under two families, Dravidian and Indo-European. All the
south Indian languages are grouped under Dravidian family. Tamil, Telugu, Malayalam
and Kannada are spoken in the states of Tamil Nadu, Andhra Pradesh, Kerala and
Karnataka respectively. The languages are different but resemble in having rounded
alphabets. They have many Sanskrit words in their vocabulary, but their grammar
is entirely different. On
the other hand Hindi, the language spoken all over north India and in some parts
of east India, belongs to the Indo European family of languages. It has evolved
from various transitional forms of Sanskrit over a long period of time. Being
the national language it is widely spoken all over India, but it is more prominent
in the northern parts of the country. Other languages like Punjabi, Gujarati,
Garhwali, etc are modified forms of Hindi which evolved by mixing the local dialects.
Apart
from the widely spoken Indo-European and Dravidian languages there are lesser-spoken
Mon-Khmer and Sino-Tibetan languages which account for 2% of the total population.
These are mostly spoken in the Northeastern India. One
will be surprised to see so many languages existing together. More surprising
are the common factors in these languages. Many languages not only share vocabulary
with each other but also share the script. Hindi and Marathi (spoken in Maharashtra)
have a common script. Bengali and Assamese too share a common script. All
the Indian languages are written lefts to right except those written in Persian
scripts (Urdu & Kashmiri). A
list of languages as spoken in the respective States -
| Andhra
Pradesh | Telugu
& Urdu (in Hyderabad) | |
Assam |
Assamese |
| Bihar
| Hindi,
Bhojpuri, Maithili, Santhali & Bengali | |
Delhi |
Hindi, Punjabi & English
| | Goa
| Konkani,
Marathi , Hindi, English & Portuguese | |
Gujarat |
Gujarati |
| Punjab
& Haryana | Hindi,
Punjabi, Haryanvi & Urdu | |
Himachal Pradesh |
Hindi & Pahari |
| Jammu
& Kashmir | Dogri,
Kashmiri, Ladakhi, Punjabi, Urdu, Hindi & Tibetan | |
Karnataka |
Kannada |
| Kerala
| Malayalam
| | Madhya
Pradesh | Hindi
& Urdu | | Maharashtra
| Marathi,
Gujarati & Hindi | | Orissa
| Oriya
| | Rajasthan
| Hindi,
Rajasthani, Marwari & Urdu | |
Sikkim |
Sikkimese, Nepalese |
| Tamil
Nadu | Tamil
| | Uttar
Pradesh | Hindi,
Brijbhasha, Avadhi, Bhojpuri & Urdu | |
Uttaranchal |
Garhwali, Kumaoni & Hindi
| | West
Bengal | Bengali,
Urdu & Nepalese |
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