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Languages
In different parts of India, different languages
are spoken. Most of the languages of India belong to two families,
Aryan and Dravidian. Languages spoken in the five states of
South India belong to the Dravidian family and most of the
languages spoken in the North India are of Aryan family. The
general script of the Aryan languages is different from the
general script of Dravidian languages. The Indians also distinguish
between the general north Indian accent and general south
Indian accent. Along with these two main language families,
there are other languages from the Sini - Mongoloid family
spoken in East India.
The languages spoken in present India, evolved
in different phases of Indian history. In the earlier stage
of Indian history other languages were spoken. The holy books
of different religions that developed in ancient India are
written in different languages. The holy books of Hinduism
were written Sanskrit. The holy books of Buddhism were written
in Pali. The holy books of Jainism were written in Ardhamaghadi.
These three languages aren't spoken fluently in India today,
but Sanskrit is recognized as one of the official languages
of India. The modern Aryan languages are considered to have
evolved from Sanskrit. The evolvement of south Indian languages
isn't clear. Many believe that before the arrival of the Aryans,
Dravidian languages were spoken over all India. Some of the
tribes of north India speak (or spoke in the near past) in
dialects similar to Dravidian languages. Among the present
Dravidian languages of south India, Tamil language had exerted
its greatest influence on other Dravidian languages.
The Indian constitution recognizes, for now,
18 official Indian languages. But, almost each of these 18
languages, include different dialects or variations of that
language. Besides these 18 languages, there are other languages
which are recognized by the central government, but not as
official languages. There are other languages which aren't
recognized by the central government. Some of the present
India's states boundaries created were based on the boundaries
of the main Indian languages as recognized by the Indian constitution.
The process of creating Indian states began
after India's independence in 1947. During the British rule
of India, there were two types of British India states, princely
states and provinces. With India's independence, provinces
like Bombay and Bengal became Indian states and the small
princely states adjoining the big provinces were added to
the provinces. In some cases some small adjoining princely
states were joined together to make a new state like Rajasthan.
Big princely states like Hyderabad, Mysore and others were
also made states. But many local leaders demanded states for
their culture and identity. The main demand was to create
states based on language boundaries. This process of creating
states based on languages began in 1953 and even today there
are demands for new states for different language speakers.
States whose boundaries are based on languages
are Kerala for Malyalam speakers. Tamil Nadu for Tamil speakers.
Karnataka for Kanadda speakers. Andra Pradesh for Telugu speakers.
Maharashtra for Marathi speakers. Orissa for Oriya speakers.
West Bengal for Bengali speakers. Gujarat for Gujarati speakers.
Punjab for Punjabi speakers. Assam for Assami speakers. Some
of these states like Bengal and Orissa were provinces during
British rule. Though many states were created based on language
boundaries, there are other states which weren't created based
on language boundaries and there are many language speaker
who don't have their own state.
To name a few other languages spoken in India,
one can name Dogri, Ladacki and Kashmiri which are spoken
in different parts of Jammu and Kashmir state. In Sikkim,
different languages are spoken. The main language there is
Nepali. In Manipur the main language is Manipuri. In Madya
Pradesh, Uttar Pradesh, Rajasthan, Haryana, Himachal Pradesh
the main language is Hindi, which is also become the national
language of India. Some languages of India aren't specific
to a region of India, like Sindhi whose speakers came to India
from Sindh (in present day Pakistan), but are scattered all
over India. Urdu is spoken by many Muslims all over India.
The different tribes of India (some of them only a few hundreds)
also have their own languages.
As stated earlier most of the main Indian
languages have different dialects and variations, sometimes
very different from each other. Hindi has more than ten variations.
Hindi spoken in Rajasthan is different from Hindi spoken in
Bihar or Hindi of Himachal Pradesh. Sometimes the different
variations of a language are considered as separate language
with their own literature. One of Hindi dialects spoken in
East India is Maithali. Many Maithali speakers regard their
language as a different language from Hindi. Also Rajasthani
from Rajasthan is considered sometimes as a different language
and not as Hindi. But, actually Rajasthani also isn't one
language but different tribal languages spoken by the people
of Rajasthan and they all call their languages after the name
of their region.
Another language named after its region is
Konkani spoken in Goa and named as such because of the Konkan
coast. To the North of Goa in the Konkan coast of Maharashtra
there is another 'Konkani' language which is considered a
dialect derived from the Marathi language and is different
from Goa's Konkani language.
The Indian constitution uses the term 'mother
tongue' instead of language or dialect. Officially the central
government recognizes 18 languages, but each language includes
in it many mother tongues. The Indian census records over
200 different mother tongues.
Despite the different languages and dialects,
most of the official languages speakers have developed a standard
of speaking language which has become the accepted style of
speaking for that language. Sometimes, like in the case of
Hindi this language is completely different from some of its
dialects.
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Information on Languages of Bharat Heritage
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