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i am from madhya pradesh so i speak bundelkhandi which doesnt count ill say i am fluent in hindi and english i studied sanskrit and i am working in japan sooo yaaa japanese tooo but not fluently but it worked since i ateended language school i can understand punjabi and haryanvi more or less marathi
Ответитьmy native language is ho is this language relating to austro asiatic branch
ОтветитьI'm from Assam and my native language is Assamese, I can speak Assamese along with English and Hindi. I am currently learning Karbi, Sanskrit, Mandarin Chinese. I use English online, Hindi in school, Assamese at home and sometimes Karbi with my Karbi friends. I speak in Sanskrit with someone special.
ОтветитьTamil is too older than Sanskrit because there is no scientifical evidence and it seem same single word in Sanskrit then Tamil is the mother of other Dravidian languages in South Indian now archaeology’s found 4500years Industrial area in tamilnadu because Industry’s found are to create Knives and Iron materials so it must be too old language because it shows it is too civilized they rome gold coins it shows there is an business between them before 4000 years
ОтветитьI lived Karnataka for a year and acquired some proficiency in Kannada. I met my wife there. She Tamil, from Karnataka, who can read and write Tamil, Kannada and Malayalam. She had some proficiency in Telugu and English. Since we got married we speak mostly English and some Kannada. Of course our kids pretty much only speak English, here in America.
ОтветитьExcellent video. thanks for spreading the information that India is actually like Europe in diversity and size.
I am Tamil and know Tamil and English.
What the hell is 'Indo European'? We people are native to the indian subcontinent. We don't have any relation with Europeans. We have whole different culture, tradition, religion, langauges, food etc..
ОтветитьMan
That tamil pronounciation
Nan mambalam sappidugiren thats just funny
Anyways that actually means i am eating mango
I am Bengali and fluent in Hindi, English & Bengali (of course). I do understand but can't really speak Assamese, Odia, Nepali, Nagamese, a bit of Punjabi (exposure via media)
ОтветитьMy mother tongue is Konkani language ❤️..& Malayalam 🥰
ОтветитьIndia not have any national language
ОтветитьPolyglots assemble
ОтветитьMy Native Language is Sambalpuri(itvis the language of western part of Odisha) (It's a dialect of Odia,but got it's own script).
I can speak Sambalpuri,Odia,Hindi, English. I can understand Bengali, Gujarati, Nepali,Punjabi, Assamese (40%).
When I go outside, basically I communicate in Hindi and English.
മലയാളം❤❤❤
ОтветитьFluently and proudly speak Punjabi, Hindi, Urdu English and can understand bits and pieces of Gujarati as well as Marathi. Absolutely fabulous Bharat Mata khi Jai. JAI HIND❤️😍🙏👍🏾😇🇮🇳
ОтветитьMizo also
ОтветитьHi I am from India I am bangali my language Bengali 😊❤
ОтветитьMy native language is avadhi and i Speck. avadhi is more related to hindi. In my school Hindi and English is compulsory for every student. I speak Hindi, English, Urdu, avadhi , Bhojpuri and little bit haryanvi. But i can understand gujrati,Marathi, and Rajasthani .
ОтветитьI do empathize with people who are coming across this information for the first time, as it could be very overwhelming, but like I'd say mostly about 70% of all the people in india speak english, and hindi is widely spoken in most states as well, so like communication between various regions isn't as big of a issue as people think.
ОтветитьI can speak English Hindi punjabi Dogri and kashmiri. Total 5 languages
ОтветитьIn Manipur more than 10 languages have been spoke
ОтветитьThis is wrong though. Sangskrit means "formed", a language that was formed and used only for the upper class society in the ancient times. Prakrita is not branched from Sangskrit, it is the spoken form of language of the people of that time. You mean Vedik- the more ancient version of the language that would have the possibility of branching out. A lot of Sangskrit words got simply inserted due to It's practice by the literates back then. The Indo-aryan languages are not descendants of Sangskrit. It's better to say that Sangskrit and Prakrit existed side by side.
ОтветитьDo more india 🇮🇳 pls ❤
ОтветитьI can Speak English, Hindi and Our Native Language Malayalam and i can Understand Tamil also mostly i use Malayalam because use i live in kerala and im telling a fact that if u go outside ur native state u can learn all languages it's my opinion ☺️☺️
ОтветитьIndia means Unity and Diversity that's India is different from Rest Of The World Jai Hind🇮🇳🇮🇳🇮🇳
ОтветитьIndia is so fascinating. I think that if one really wants to become an expert on India, one literally needs to know more than a dozen languages at least semi-fluently: English, Hindi, Sanskrit, Pali, Bengali, Marathi, Tamil, Telugu, Kannada, Urdu, Malayalam, Gujarati, Odia and Punjabi. This is something totally incomparable to any other country in the world, as in most cases there are just one or two languages that dominate across the country.
ОтветитьMy mother tongue is Punjabi, although I don't live in the Punjab region or anywhere near, I speak Punjabi with my grandparents because they are the ones who migrated from Punjab. With my parents, on the other hand, I have a habit of Speaking Hindi because they made sure I spoke hindi to avoid the language barrier, I can understand and speak a little Bengali because I was born in West Bengal and lived in a neighbouring state which has a huge community speaking the Bihari dialect of hindi alongwith native speakers of Bengali. Having studied predominantly in English made me a fluent speaker of English. For my graduation I moved to another state "Maharashtra" where I was exposed to the marathi language for 3 years resulting in me completely understanding the language and also speaking a little. I have been learning German on Duolingo because personally it fascinated me the most as a foreign language and I can speak a bit of basic german now.
It has been said that India is a country where the taste changes every 5 kms, and the language changes every 50
India is amazing
ОтветитьI am from India🧡 🤍💚
My native language is Bengali.
I also can speak Hindi, panjabi, Gujarati, Oria, Asamise and English, 🧡🤍💚
Unity In Diversity is our culture.
I am from the U.S. but my mother was Bengali so I speak both American English and Bengali, but not Hindi. I can normally use English, though typically use Bengali with street vendors, taxis, etc in Kolkata and also in nearby states like Assam, Odiya and even eastern Bihar. My sister's husband and family are Gujarati, so I understand but don't speak other than greetings. I don't speak Hindi at all, but can function in markets because the numbers are the same.😄
ОтветитьStill better than any Western language
ОтветитьAs a indian, my nstive language is tamil but I can understand telugu and some Malayalam, I can understand hindi very well but not fluent at speaking hindi because I learned hindi through school and private tution but actually never had a friend who speaks hindi as his/her mother tongue.
ОтветитьWe are Indian but we dont leave language and culture, u r a human in the world but u r not living in India u dont know rights to speak about my language and calture, we are tamilian and cholan we had build navy force at first even ur language and other language doesn't have words "navy"..... U dont speak abt me.... I can speak about u r a seller of own mom
ОтветитьSanskrit mostly Tamil words
ОтветитьNo national language in india
ОтветитьIndia..languages.hindi
ОтветитьHi! This is my first video I your channel,my mothertongue is Bengali and I can speak hindi also but I am weak at it when told to write..and I mostly use hindi while traveling ..I am in an English medium school but me and my classmates barely use it we speak Bengali and I don't use English in any other occasion
ОтветитьCome to nagaland state,,you will find more than thousands language ..every tribe have differnt language..
ОтветитьHaryana a small state have its own 5 to 6 way of speaking haryanvi 🤣
ОтветитьI know marathi and it is the something like the mother language and Hindi it is the national language I am not sure😢😮
Ответитьi just want to clarify that there is no official language for India. hindi and english are most spoken languages. you should check our 10 rupee note, There you can see clearly printed , those are called as official languages.
So sad that you doesn't get a clarification about our languages. Sanskrit is mother of all languages cause you don't know how to read or understand the each language individually. There is a modernized and traditional side for each language in india, if you go deeper to traditional language then it will be on the same land with name sanskrit.
I speak Bengali 😊🇮🇳
Ответитьwell actually we learn many languages in north mostly all kinda can understand and talk hindi while rural might not know english and also few people in south know hindi.also people in south can kinda understand each other if the know tamil or telugu cause malayalam and kannada has rooted from these and in south people usually communicate with each other in english wile going really deeply rural i guess they still havent had the need to communicate with a person who speaks other languages because people only move to cities and subrural areas for occupational mobility
ОтветитьHindi is just an official Language not National Language .
ОтветитьMy mother-tongue is Marathi. I can speak Kannada, Hindi, English
ОтветитьThere are 22 official language of India
ОтветитьTamil has 247 letters but you only need to know 31 letters 12 ×18 =246 +1 ஃ the 12 vowels அ ஆ இ ஈ உ ஊ எ ஏ ஐ ஒ ஓ ஜ 18 contents க ங ச ஞ ட ண த ந ப ம ய ர ல வ ள combined
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