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Languages of India

Languages spoken in the Republic of India belong to several language families, the major ones being the Indo-Aryan languages spoken by 78.05% of Indians and the Dravidian languages spoken by 19.64% of Indians,[5][6] both families together are sometimes known as Indic languages.[7][8][9] Languages spoken by the remaining 2.31% of the population belong to the Austroasiatic, Sino–Tibetan, Tai–Kadai, and a few other minor language families and isolates.[10]: 283  As per the People's Linguistic Survey of India, India has the second highest number of languages (780), after Papua New Guinea (840).[11] Ethnologue lists a lower number of 456.[12]

Languages of India
Official
Semi-official

(total of official languages: 23, including 22 8th Schedule languages and additional official language, English)

Signed
Keyboard layout

Article 343 of the Constitution of India stated that the official language of the Union is Hindi in Devanagari script, with official use of English to continue for 15 years from 1947. Later, a constitutional amendment, The Official Languages Act, 1963, allowed for the continuation of English alongside Hindi in the Indian government indefinitely until legislation decides to change it.[3] The form of numerals to be used for the official purposes of the Union are "the international form of Indian numerals",[13][14] which are referred to as Arabic numerals in most English-speaking countries.[1] Despite the misconceptions, Hindi is not the national language of India; the Constitution of India does not give any language the status of national language.[15][16]

The Eighth Schedule of the Indian Constitution lists 22 languages,[17] which have been referred to as scheduled languages and given recognition, status and official encouragement. In addition, the Government of India has awarded the distinction of classical language to Kannada, Malayalam, Odia, Sanskrit, Tamil and Telugu. Classical language status is given to languages which have a rich heritage and independent nature.

According to the Census of India of 2001, India has 122 major languages and 1599 other languages. However, figures from other sources vary, primarily due to differences in definition of the terms "language" and "dialect". The 2001 Census recorded 30 languages which were spoken by more than a million native speakers and 122 which were spoken by more than 10,000 people.[18] Two contact languages have played an important role in the history of India: Persian[19] and English.[20] Persian was the court language during the Mughal period in India. It reigned as an administrative language for several centuries until the era of British colonisation.[21] English continues to be an important language in India. It is used in higher education and in some areas of the Indian government. Hindi, which has the largest number of first-language speakers in India today,[22] serves as the lingua franca across much of North and Central India. However, there have been concerns raised with Hindi being imposed in South India, most notably in the states of Tamil Nadu and Karnataka,[23][24] Maharashtra, West Bengal, Assam, Punjab and other non-Hindi regions have also started to voice concerns about Hindi.[25] Bengali is the second most spoken and understood language in the country with a significant amount of speakers in eastern and northeastern regions. Marathi is the third most spoken and understood language in the country with a significant amount of speakers in South-Western regions.[26]

History

The Southern Indian languages are from the Dravidian family. The Dravidian languages are indigenous to the Indian subcontinent.[27] Proto-Dravidian languages were spoken in India in the 4th millennium BCE and started disintegrating into various branches around 3rd millennium BCE.[28][page needed] The Dravidian languages are classified in four groups: North, Central (Kolami–Parji), South-Central (Telugu–Kui), and South Dravidian (Tamil-Kannada).[29][page needed]

The Northern Indian languages from the Indo-Aryan branch of the Indo-European family evolved from Old Indo-Aryan by way of the Middle Indo-Aryan Prakrit languages and Apabhraṃśa of the Middle Ages. The Indo-Aryan languages developed and emerged in three stages — Old Indo-Aryan (1500 BCE to 600 BCE), Middle Indo-Aryan stage (600 BCE and 1000 CE), and New Indo-Aryan (between 1000 CE and 1300 CE). The modern north Indian Indo-Aryan languages all evolved into distinct, recognisable languages in the New Indo-Aryan Age.[30]

In the Northeast India, among the Sino-Tibetan languages, Meitei language (officially known as Manipuri language) was the court language of the Manipur Kingdom (Meitei: Meeteileipak). It was honoured before and during the darbar sessions before Manipur was merged into the Dominion of the Indian Republic. Its history of existence spans from 1500 to 2000 years according to most eminent scholars including Padma Vibhushan awardee Suniti Kumar Chatterji.[31][32] Even according to the "Manipur State Constitution Act, 1947" of the once independent Manipur, Manipuri and English were made the court languages of the kingdom (before merging into Indian Republic).[33][34]

Persian, or Farsi, was brought into India by the Ghaznavids and other Turko-Afghan dynasties as the court language. Culturally Persianized, they, in combination with the later Mughal dynasty (of Turco-Mongol origin), influenced the art, history, and literature of the region for more than 500 years, resulting in the Persianisation of many Indian tongues, mainly lexically. In 1837, the British replaced Persian with English and Hindustani in Perso-Arabic script for administrative purposes and the Hindi movement of the 19th Century replaced Persianised vocabulary with Sanskrit derivations and replaced or supplemented the use of Perso-Arabic script for administrative purposes with Devanagari.[19][35]

Each of the northern Indian languages had different influences. For example, Hindustani was strongly influenced by Sanskrit, Arabic and Persian, leading to the emergence of Modern Standard Hindi and Modern Standard Urdu as registers of the Hindustani language. Bangla on the other hand has retained its Sanskritic roots while heavily expanding its vocabulary with words from Persian, English, French and other foreign languages.[36][37]

Inventories

The first official survey of language diversity in the Indian subcontinent was carried out by Sir George Abraham Grierson from 1898 to 1928. Titled the Linguistic Survey of India, it reported a total of 179 languages and 544 dialects.[38] However, the results were skewed due to ambiguities in distinguishing between "dialect" and "language",[38] use of untrained personnel and under-reporting of data from South India, as the former provinces of Burma and Madras, as well as the princely states of Cochin, Hyderabad, Mysore and Travancore were not included in the survey.[39]

Different sources give widely differing figures, primarily based on how the terms "language" and "dialect" are defined and grouped. Ethnologue, produced by the Christian evangelist organisation SIL International, lists 461 tongues for India (out of 6,912 worldwide), 447 of which are living, while 14 are extinct. The 447 living languages are further subclassified in Ethnologue as follows:[40][41]

  • Institutional – 63
  • Developing – 130
  • Vigorous – 187
  • In trouble – 54
  • Dying – 13

The People's Linguistic Survey of India, a privately owned research institution in India, has recorded over 66 different scripts and more than 780 languages in India during its nationwide survey, which the organisation claims to be the biggest linguistic survey in India.[42]

The People of India (POI) project of Anthropological Survey of India reported 325 languages which are used for in-group communication by 5,633 Indian communities.[43]

Census of India figures

The Census of India records and publishes data with respect to the number of speakers for languages and dialects, but uses its own unique terminology, distinguishing between language and mother tongue. The mother tongues are grouped within each language. Many of the mother tongues so defined could be considered a language rather than a dialect by linguistic standards. This is especially so for many mother tongues with tens of millions of speakers that are officially grouped under the language Hindi.

1951 Census

Separate figures for Hindi, Urdu, and Punjabi were not issued, due to the fact the returns were intentionally recorded incorrectly in states such as East Punjab, Himachal Pradesh, Delhi, PEPSU, and Bilaspur.[44]

1961 Census

The 1961 census recognised 1,652 mother tongues spoken by 438,936,918 people, counting all declarations made by any individual at the time when the census was conducted.[45] However, the declaring individuals often mixed names of languages with those of dialects, subdialects and dialect clusters or even castes, professions, religions, localities, regions, countries and nationalities.[45] The list therefore includes languages with barely a few individual speakers as well as 530 unclassified mother tongues and more than 100 idioms that are non-native to India, including linguistically unspecific demonyms such as "African", "Canadian" or "Belgian".[45]

1991 Census

The 1991 census recognises 1,576 classified mother tongues.[46] According to the 1991 census, 22 languages had more than a million native speakers, 50 had more than 100,000 and 114 had more than 10,000 native speakers. The remaining accounted for a total of 566,000 native speakers (out of a total of 838 million Indians in 1991).[46][47]

2001 Census

As per the census of 2001, there are 1635 rationalised mother tongues, 234 identifiable mother tongues and 22 major languages.[18] Of these, 29 languages have more than a million native speakers, 60 have more than 100,000 and 122 have more than 10,000 native speakers.[48] There are a few languages like Kodava that do not have a script but have a group of native speakers in Coorg (Kodagu).[49]

2011 Census

According to the most recent census of 2011, after thorough linguistic scrutiny, edit, and rationalization on 19,569 raw linguistic affiliations, the census recognizes 1369 rationalized mother tongues and 1474 names which were treated as ‘unclassified’ and relegated to ‘other’ mother tongue category.[50] Among, the 1369 rationalized mother tongues which are spoken by 10,000 or more speakers, are further grouped into appropriate set that resulted into total 121 languages. In these 121 languages, 22 are already part of the Eighth Schedule to the Constitution of India and the other 99 are termed as "Total of other languages" which is one short as of the other languages recognized in 2001 census.[51]

Multilingualism

 
Multilingualism is common in the international airports in India. A signboard in the Imphal International Airport is displayed in the Meitei (officially called Manipuri), Hindi and English languages.

2011 Census India

First, Second, and Third languages by number of speakers in India (2011 Census)
Language First language
speakers[52]
First language
speakers as a percentage
of total population
Second language
speakers (millions)
Third language
speakers (millions)
Total speakers (millions)[53] Total speakers as a
percentage of total
population[54]
Hindi 528,347,193 43.63 139 24 692 57.1
Bengali 97,237,669 8.30 9 1 107 8.9
Marathi 83,026,680 6.86 13 3 99 8.2
Telugu 81,127,740 6.70 12 1 95 7.8
Tamil 69,026,881 5.70 7 1 77 6.3
Gujarati 55,492,554 4.58 4 1 60 5.0
Urdu 50,772,631 4.19 11 1 63 5.2
Kannada 43,706,512 3.61 14 1 59 4.9
Odia 37,521,324 3.10 5 0.03 43 3.5
Malayalam 34,838,819 2.88 0.05 0.02 36 2.9
Punjabi 33,124,726 2.74 0.03 0.003 36 3.0
Assamese 15,311,351 1.26 7.48 0.74 24 2.0
Maithili 13,583,464 1.12 0.03 0.003 14 1.2
Meitei (Manipuri) 1,761,079 0.15 0.4 0.04 2.25 0.2
English 259,678 0.02 83 46 129 10.6
Sanskrit 24,821 0.00185 0.01 0.003 0.025 0.002

Ethnologue (2019, 22nd edition) worldwide

The following table is a list of languages from the Indian subcontinent by total number of speakers as it appears in the 2019 edition of Ethnologue, a language reference published by SIL International, which is based in the United States.[55]

Language Total speakers (millions)
Hindi 615
Bengali 265
Urdu 170
Punjabi 126
Marathi 95
Telugu 93
Tamil 81
Gujarati 61
Kannada 56
Odia 38
Malayalam 38
Assamese 15
Santali 7
Meitei (Manipuri) 1.7
Sanskrit 0.025

Language families

Ethnolinguistically, the languages of South Asia, echoing the complex history and geography of the region, form a complex patchwork of language families, language phyla and isolates.[10] Languages spoken in India belong to several language families, the major ones being the Indo-Aryan languages spoken by 78.05% of Indians and the Dravidian languages spoken by 19.64% of Indians. The languages of India belong to several language families, the most important of which are:[56][5][6][10][57]

Rank Language family Population (2018)
1 Indo-European language family 1,045,000,000 (78.05%)
2 Dravidian language family 265,000,000 (19.64%)
3 Austroasiatic language family Unknown
4 Sino-Tibetan language family Unknown
5 Tai–Kadai language family Unknown
6 Great Andamanese languages Unknown
Total Languages of India 1,340,000,000

Indo-Aryan language family

 
Indo-Aryan language subgroups (Urdu is included under Hindi)
  Pashai
  Khowar
  Shina
  Kohistani
  Kashmiri
  Panjabi
  Sindhi
  Rajasthani
  Gujarati
  Bhili
  Western Pahari
  Central Pahari
  Nepali
  Western Hindi
  Eastern Hindi
  Bihari
  Bengali-Assamese
  Oriya
  Halbi
  Marathi-Konkani
  Sinhala-Maldivian

The largest of the language families represented in India, in terms of speakers, is the Indo-Aryan language family, a branch of the Indo-Iranian family, itself the easternmost, extant subfamily of the Indo-European language family. This language family predominates, accounting for some 1035 million speakers, or over 76.5 of the population, as per a 2018 estimate. The most widely spoken languages of this group are Hindi,[n 1] Bengali, Bhojpuri, Marathi, Urdu, Gujarati, Punjabi, Kashmiri, Rajasthani, Sindhi, Assamese (Asamiya), Maithili and Odia.[58][59] Aside from the Indo-Aryan languages, other Indo-European languages are also spoken in India, the most prominent of which is English, as a lingua franca.

Dravidian language family

The second largest language family is the Dravidian language family, accounting for some 277 million speakers, or approximately 20.5% as per 2018 estimate. The Dravidian languages are spoken mainly in southern India and parts of eastern and central India as well as in parts of northeastern Sri Lanka, Pakistan, Nepal and Bangladesh. The Dravidian languages with the most speakers are Telugu, Tamil, Kannada and Malayalam.[6] Besides the mainstream population, Dravidian languages are also spoken by small scheduled tribe communities, such as the Oraon and Gond tribes.[60] Only two Dravidian languages are exclusively spoken outside India, Brahui in Balochistan, Pakistan and Dhangar, a dialect of Kurukh, in Nepal.[61]

Austroasiatic language family

Families with smaller numbers of speakers are Austroasiatic and numerous small Sino-Tibetan languages, with some 10 and 6 million speakers, respectively, together 3% of the population.[62]

The Austroasiatic language family (austro meaning South) is the autochthonous language in Southeast Asia, arrived by migration. Austroasiatic languages of mainland India are the Khasi and Munda languages, including Bhumij and Santali. The languages of the Nicobar islands also form part of this language family. With the exceptions of Khasi and Santali, all Austroasiatic languages on Indian territory are endangered.[10]: 456–457 

Tibeto-Burman language family

The Tibeto-Burman language family are well represented in India. However, their interrelationships are not discernible, and the family has been described as "a patch of leaves on the forest floor" rather than with the conventional metaphor of a "family tree".[10]: 283–5 

Padma Vibhushan awardee Indian Bengali scholar Suniti Kumar Chatterjee said, "Among the various Tibeto-Burman languages, the most important and in literature certainly of much greater importance than Newari, is the Meitei or Manipuri language".[63][64][65]

In India, Tibeto-Burman languages are spoken across the Himalayas in the regions of Arunachal Pradesh, Assam (hills and autonomous councils), Himachal Pradesh, Ladakh, Manipur, Meghalaya, Mizoram, Nagaland, Sikkim, Tripura and West Bengal.[66][67][68]

Sino-Tibetan languages spoken in India include two constitutionally recognised official languages, Meitei (officially known as Manipuri) and Bodo as well as the non-scheduled languages like Karbi, Lepcha, and many varieties of several related Tibetic, West Himalayish, Tani, Brahmaputran, Angami–Pochuri, Tangkhul, Zeme, Kukish sub linguistic branches, amongst many others.

Tai-Kadai language family

The Ahom language, a Southwestern Tai language, had been once the dominant language of the Ahom Kingdom in modern-day Assam, but was later replaced by the Assamese language (known as Kamrupi in ancient era which is the pre-form of the Kamrupi dialect of today). Nowadays, small Tai communities and their languages remain in Assam and Arunachal Pradesh together with Sino-Tibetans, e.g. Tai Phake, Tai Aiton and Tai Khamti, which are similar to the Shan language of Shan State, Myanmar; the Dai language of Yunnan, China; the Lao language of Laos; the Thai language of Thailand; and the Zhuang language in Guangxi, China.

Andamanese language families

The languages of the Andaman Islands form another group:[69]

In addition, Sentinelese is thought likely to be related to the above languages.[69]

Language isolates

The only language found in the Indian mainland that is considered a language isolate is Nihali.[10]: 337  The status of Nihali is ambiguous, having been considered as a distinct Austroasiatic language, as a dialect of Korku and also as being a "thieves' argot" rather than a legitimate language.[70][71]

The other language isolates found in the rest of South Asia include Burushaski, a language spoken in Gilgit–Baltistan (administered by Pakistan), Kusunda (in western Nepal), and Vedda (in Sri Lanka).[10]: 283  The validity of the Great Andamanese language group as a language family has been questioned and it has been considered a language isolate by some authorities.[10]: 283 [72][73]

In addition, a Bantu language, Sidi, was spoken until the mid-20th century in Gujarat by the Siddi.[10]: 528 

Official languages

 
States and union territories of India by the most commonly spoken (L1) first language.[74]
 
Official languages of India by state and union territory. Hindustani refers to both Hindi and Urdu in this map.

Federal level

Language proficiency in India (2001, 2011)[75][76]
Language Year percent
Hindi 2001
  
53.61% +3.50%
2011
  
57.11%
English 2001
  
12.19% -1.57%
2011
  
10.62%

Prior to Independence, in British India, English was the sole language used for administrative purposes as well as for higher education purposes.[77]

In 1946, the issue of national language was a bitterly contested subject in the proceedings of the Constituent Assembly of India, specifically what should be the language in which the Constitution of India is written and the language spoken during the proceedings of Parliament and thus deserving of the epithet "national". Members belonging to the northern parts of India insisted that the Constitution be drafted in Hindi with the unofficial translation in English. This was not agreed to by the drafting committee on the grounds that English was much better to craft the nuanced prose on constitutional subjects. The efforts to make Hindi the pre-eminent language were bitterly resisted by the members from those parts of India where Hindi was not spoken natively.

Eventually, a compromise was reached not to include any mention of a national language. Instead, Hindi in Devanagari script was declared to be the official language of the union, but for "fifteen years from the commencement of the Constitution, the English Language shall continue to be used for all the official purposes of the Union for which it was being used immediately before such commencement."[77]

Article 343 (1) of the Constitution of India states "The Official Language of the Union government shall be Hindi in Devanagari script."[78]: 212 [79] Unless Parliament decided otherwise, the use of English for official purposes was to cease 15 years after the constitution came into effect, i.e. on 26 January 1965.[78]: 212 [79]

As the date for changeover approached, however, there was much alarm in the non Hindi-speaking areas of India, especially in Kerala, Gujarat, Maharashtra, Tamil Nadu, Punjab, West Bengal, Karnataka, Puducherry and Andhra Pradesh. Accordingly, Jawaharlal Nehru ensured the enactment of the Official Languages Act, 1963,[80][81] which provided that English "may" still be used with Hindi for official purposes, even after 1965.[77] The wording of the text proved unfortunate in that while Nehru understood that "may" meant shall, politicians championing the cause of Hindi thought it implied exactly the opposite.[77]

In the event, as 1965 approached, India's new Prime Minister Lal Bahadur Shastri prepared to make Hindi paramount with effect from 26 January 1965. This led to widespread agitation, riots, self-immolations, and suicides in Tamil Nadu. The split of Congress politicians from the South from their party stance, the resignation of two Union ministers from the South, and the increasing threat to the country's unity forced Shastri to concede.[77][24]

As a result, the proposal was dropped,[82][83] and the Act itself was amended in 1967 to provide that the use of English would not be ended until a resolution to that effect was passed by the legislature of every state that had not adopted Hindi as its official language, and by each house of the Indian Parliament.[80]

The Constitution of India does not give any language the status of national language.[15][16]

Hindi

 
The Hindi-belt, including Hindi-related languages such as Rajasthani and Bhojpuri.

In the 2001 census, 422 million (422,048,642) people in India reported Hindi to be their native language.[84] This figure not only included Hindi speakers of Hindustani, but also people who identify as native speakers of related languages who consider their speech to be a dialect of Hindi, the Hindi belt. Hindi (or Hindustani) is the native language of most people living in Delhi, Western Uttar Pradesh, Uttarakhand, Chhattisgarh, Himachal Pradesh, Chandigarh, Bihar, Jharkhand, Madhya Pradesh, Haryana, and Rajasthan.[85]

"Modern Standard Hindi", a standardised language is one of the official languages of the Union of India. In addition, it is one of only two languages used for business in Parliament. However, the Rajya Sabha now allows all 22 official languages on the Eighth Schedule to be spoken.[86]

Hindustani, evolved from khari boli (खड़ी बोली), a prominent tongue of Mughal times, which itself evolved from Apabhraṃśa, an intermediary transition stage from Prakrit, from which the major North Indian Indo-Aryan languages have evolved.[citation needed]

Varieties of Hindi spoken in India include Rajasthani, Braj Bhasha, Haryanvi, Bundeli, Kannauji, Hindustani, Awadhi, Bagheli and Chhattisgarhi.[87][88] By virtue of its being a lingua franca, Hindi has also developed regional dialects such as Bambaiya Hindi in Mumbai. In addition, a trade language, Andaman Creole Hindi has also developed in the Andaman Islands.[89]

In addition, by use in popular culture such as songs and films, Hindi also serves as a lingua franca across both North and Central India.[citation needed]

Hindi is widely taught both as a primary language and language of instruction and as a second tongue in most states.

English

British colonialism in India resulted in English becoming a language for governance, business, and education. English, along with Hindi, is one of the two languages permitted in the Constitution of India for business in Parliament. Despite the fact that Hindi has official Government patronage and serves as a lingua franca over large parts of India, there was considerable opposition to the use of Hindi in the southern states of India, and English has emerged as a de facto lingua franca over much of India.[77][24] Journalist Manu Joseph, in a 2011 article in The New York Times, wrote that due to the prominence and usage of the language and the desire for English-language education, "English is the de facto national language of India. It is a bitter truth."[90] English language proficiency is highest among urban residents, wealthier Indians, Indians with higher levels of educational attainment, Christians, men and younger Indians.[91] In 2017, more than 58 percent of rural teens could read basic English, and 53 percent of fourteen year-olds & sixty percent of 18 year-olds could read English sentences.[92] Despite this, only a little over 10% of Indians can speak English fluently.[93]

Scheduled languages

 
Main languages of India and their relative size according to how many speakers each has.[94]

Until the Twenty-first Amendment of the Constitution of India in 1967, the country recognised 14 official regional languages. The Eighth Schedule and the Seventy-First Amendment provided for the inclusion of Sindhi, Konkani, Meitei and Nepali, thereby increasing the number of official regional languages of India to 18. The Eighth Schedule of the Constitution of India, as of 1 December 2007, lists 22 languages,[78]: 330  which are given in the table below together with the regions where they are used.[84]

The individual states, the borders of most of which are or were drawn on socio-linguistic lines, can legislate their own official languages, depending on their linguistic demographics. The official languages chosen reflect the predominant as well as politically significant languages spoken in that state. Certain states having a linguistically defined territory may have only the predominant language in that state as its official language, examples being Karnataka and Gujarat, which have Kannada and Gujarati as their sole official language respectively. Telangana, with a sizeable Urdu-speaking Muslim population, and Andhra Pradesh[95] has two languages, Telugu and Urdu, as its official languages.

Some states buck the trend by using minority languages as official languages. Jammu and Kashmir used to have Urdu, which is spoken by fewer than 1% of the population, as the sole official language until 2020. Meghalaya uses English spoken by 0.01% of the population. This phenomenon has turned majority languages into "minority languages" in a functional sense.[96]

Lists of Official Languages of States and Union Territories of India

In addition to states and union territories, India has autonomous administrative regions which may be permitted to select their own official language – a case in point being the Bodoland Territorial Council in Assam which has declared the Bodo language as official for the region, in addition to Assamese and English already in use.[97] and Bengali in the Barak Valley,[98] as its official languages.

Prominent languages of India

Hindi

 
At a tourist site in Bengaluru – Top to bottom, the languages are Hindi, Kannada, Tamil, Telugu, and Malayalam. English and many other European languages are also provided here.

In British India, English was the sole language used for administrative purposes as well as for higher education purposes. When India became independent in 1947, the Indian legislators had the challenge of choosing a language for official communication as well as for communication between different linguistic regions across India. The choices available were:

  • Making "Hindi", which a plurality of the people (41%)[84] identified as their native language, the official language.
  • Making English, as preferred by non-Hindi speakers, particularly Kannadigas and Tamils, and those from Mizoram and Nagaland, the official language. See also Anti-Hindi agitations.
  • Declare both Hindi and English as official languages and each state is given freedom to choose the official language of the state.

The Indian constitution, in 1950, declared Hindi in Devanagari script to be the official language of the union.[78] Unless Parliament decided otherwise, the use of English for official purposes was to cease 15 years after the constitution came into effect, i.e. on 26 January 1965.[78] The prospect of the changeover, however, led to much alarm in the non Hindi-speaking areas of India, especially in South India whose native tongues are not related to Hindi. As a result, Parliament enacted the Official Languages Act in 1963,[99][100][101][102][103][104] which provided for the continued use of English for official purposes along with Hindi, even after 1965.

Bengali

Native to the Bengal region, comprising the nation of Bangladesh and the states of West Bengal, Tripura and Barak Valley region[105][106] of Assam. Bengali (also spelt as Bangla: বাংলা) is the sixth most spoken language in the world.[105][106] After the partition of India (1947), refugees from East Pakistan were settled in Tripura, and Jharkhand and the union territory of Andaman and Nicobar Islands. There is also a large number of Bengali-speaking people in Maharashtra and Gujarat where they work as artisans in jewellery industries. Bengali developed from Abahatta, a derivative of Apabhramsha, itself derived from Magadhi Prakrit. The modern Bengali vocabulary contains the vocabulary base from Magadhi Prakrit and Pali, also borrowings from Sanskrit and other major borrowings from Persian, Arabic, Austroasiatic languages and other languages in contact with.

Like most Indian languages, Bengali has a number of dialects. It exhibits diglossia, with the literary and standard form differing greatly from the colloquial speech of the regions that identify with the language.[107] Bengali language has developed a rich cultural base spanning art, music, literature, and religion. Bengali has some of the oldest literature of all modern Indo-Aryan languages, dating from about 10th to 12th century ('Chargapada' Buddhist songs). There have been many movements in defence of this language and in 1999 UNESCO declared 21 Feb as the International Mother Language Day in commemoration of the Bengali Language Movement in 1952.[108]

Magahi

Magahi language also known as Magadhi is a language spoken in Bihar, Jharkhand and West Bengal states of eastern India, and in the Terai of Nepal. Magadhi Prakrit was the ancestor of Magahi, from which the latter's name derives.

Magahi derived from the ancient Magadhi Prakrit, which was created in the ancient kingdom of Magadha, the core of which was the area south of the Ganges and east of Son River.

Though the number of speakers in Magahi is about 12.6 million, it has not been constitutionally recognised in India.

Historically, Magahi had no famous written literature. There are many popular songs throughout the area in which the language is spoken, and strolling bards recite various long epic poems which are known more or less over the whole of Northern India. In Magahi speaking area, folk singers sing a good number of ballads.

Bhojpuri

Bhojpuri is an Indo-Aryan language native to the Bhojpur region of India and Nepal.[109] It is chiefly spoken in western Bihar, eastern Uttar Pradesh, western Jharkhand, northeastern Madhya Pradesh, northeastern Chhattisgarh and in the Terai region of Nepal.[110] The Bhojpuri variant of Kaithi is the indigenous script of Bhojpuri language.[111][112]

Bhojpuri is an Eastern Indo-Aryan language and a descandant of Magadhi Prakrit, a language spoken in eastern India over 2500 years ago.[113][114]

In India, Bhojpuri is included under Hindi in the census but it is an Indo-Aryan language of eastern zone.[115][116] Proponents demand for inclusion of Bhojpuri language in the eighth schedule of Indian constitution so it will be officially recognized as its own language and not a dialect of Hindi.[117][118][119]

It is recognized as a minority language in Fiji, Guyana, Mauritius, Suriname, Trinidad and Tobago and South Africa.[120][121]

Marathi

Marathi is an Indo-Aryan language. It is the official language and co-official language in Maharashtra and Goa states of Western India respectively, and is one of the official languages of India. There were 83 million speakers of the language in 2011.[122] Marathi has the third-largest number of native speakers in India and ranks 10th in the list of most spoken languages in the world. Marathi has some of the oldest literature of all modern Indo-Aryan languages; Oldest stone inscriptions from 8th century & literature dating from about 1100 AD (Mukundraj's Vivek Sindhu dates to the 12th century). The major dialects of Marathi are Standard Marathi and the Varhadi dialect. There are other related languages such as Khandeshi, Dangi, Vadvali, Samavedi. Malvani Konkani has been heavily influenced by Marathi varieties. Marathi is one of several languages that descend from Maharashtri Prakrit. The further change led to the Apabhraṃśa languages like Old Marathi.

Marathi Language Day (मराठी दिन/मराठी दिवस (transl. Marathi Dina/Marathi Diwasa) is celebrated on 27 February every year across the Indian states of Maharashtra and Goa. This day is regulated by the State Government. It is celebrated on the birthday of eminent Marathi Poet Vi. Va. Shirwadkar, popularly known as Kusumagraj.

Marathi is the official language of Maharashtra and co-official language in the union territories of Dadra and Nagar Haveli and Daman and Diu. In Goa, Konkani is the sole official language; however, Marathi may also be used for all official purposes.[123]

Over a period of many centuries the Marathi language and people came into contact with many other languages and dialects. The primary influence of Prakrit, Maharashtri, Apabhraṃśa and Sanskrit is understandable. Marathi has also been influenced by the Austroasiatic, Dravidian and foreign languages such as Persian and Arabic. Marathi contains loanwords from Persian, Arabic, English and a little from French and Portuguese.

Meitei

Meitei language (officially known as Manipuri language) is the most widely spoken Indian Sino-Tibetan language of Tibeto-Burman linguistic sub branch. It is the sole official language in Manipur and is one of the official languages of India. It is one of the two Sino-Tibetan languages with official status in India, beside Bodo. It has been recognized as one of the advanced modern languages of India by the National Sahitya Academy for its rich literature.[124] It uses both Meitei script as well as Bengali script for writing.[125][126]

Meitei language is currently proposed to be included in the elite category of "Classical Languages" of India.[127][128][129] Besides, it is also currently proposed to be an associate official language of Government of Assam. According to Leishemba Sanajaoba, the present titular king of Manipur and a Rajya Sabha member of Manipur state, by recognising Meitei as an associate official language of Assam, the identity, history, culture and tradition of Manipuris residing in Assam could be protected.[130][131][132]

Meitei Language Day (Manipuri Language Day) is celebrated on 20 August every year by the Manipuris across the Indian states of Manipur, Assam and Tripura. This day is regulated by the Government of Manipur. It is the commemoration of the day on which Meitei was included in the Eighth Schedule to the Constitution of India on the 20 August 1992.[133][134][135][136][137]

Telugu

Telugu is the most widely spoken Dravidian language in India and around the world. Telugu is an official language in Andhra Pradesh, Telangana and Yanam, making it one of the few languages (along with Hindi, Bengali, and Urdu) with official status in more than one state. It is also spoken by a significant number of people in the Andaman and Nicobar Islands, Chhattisgarh, Karnataka, Maharashtra, Odisha, Tamil Nadu, Gujarat, and by the Sri Lankan Gypsy people. It is one of six languages with classical status in India. Telugu ranks fourth by the number of native speakers in India (81 million in the 2011 Census),[122] fifteenth in the Ethnologue list of most-spoken languages worldwide and is the most widely spoken Dravidian language.

Tamil

15th-century anthology of Tamil religious poem dedicated to lord Ganesha

Tamil (also spelt as Thamizh: தமிழ்) is a Dravidian language predominantly spoken in Tamil Nadu, Puducherry and many parts of Sri Lanka. It is also spoken by large minorities in the Andaman and Nicobar Islands, Kerala, Karnataka, Andhra Pradesh, Malaysia, Singapore, Mauritius and throughout the world. Tamil ranks fifth by the number of native speakers in India (61 million in the 2001 Census)[138] and ranks 20th in the list of most spoken languages.[citation needed] It is one of the 22 scheduled languages of India and was the first Indian language to be declared a classical language by the Government of India in 2004. Tamil is one of the longest surviving classical languages in the world.[139][140] It has been described as "the only language of contemporary India which is recognisably continuous with a classical past".[141] The two earliest manuscripts from India,[142][143] acknowledged and registered by UNESCO Memory of the World register in 1997 and 2005, are in Tamil.[144] Tamil is an official language of Tamil Nadu, Puducherry, Andaman and Nicobar Islands, Sri Lanka and Singapore. It is also recognized as a minority language in Canada, Malaysia, Mauritius and South Africa.

Urdu

After independence, Modern Standard Urdu, the Persianised register of Hindustani became the national language of Pakistan. During British colonial times, knowledge of Hindustani or Urdu was a must for officials. Hindustani was made the second language of British Indian Empire after English and considered as the language of administration.[citation needed] The British introduced the use of Roman script for Hindustani as well as other languages. Urdu had 70 million speakers in India (as per the Census of 2001), and, along with Hindi, is one of the 22 officially recognised regional languages of India and also an official language in the Indian states of Andhra Pradesh[95], Jammu and Kashmir, Delhi, Uttar Pradesh, Bihar and Telangana that have significant Muslim populations.

Gujarati

Gujarati is an Indo-Aryan language. It is native to the west Indian region of Gujarat. Gujarati is part of the greater Indo-European language family. Gujarati is descended from Old Gujarati (c. 1100 – 1500 CE), the same source as that of Rajasthani. Gujarati is the chief and official language in the Indian state of Gujarat. It is also an official language in the union territories of Daman and Diu and Dadra and Nagar Haveli. According to the Central Intelligence Agency (CIA), 4.5% of population of India (1.21 billion according to 2011 census) speaks Gujarati. This amounts to 54.6 million speakers in India.[145]

Kannada

Kannada is a Dravidian language which branched off from Kannada-Tamil sub group around 500 B.C.E according to the Dravidian scholar Zvelebil.[146] It is the official language of Karnataka. According to the Dravidian scholars Steever and Krishnamurthy, the study of Kannada language is usually divided into three linguistic phases: Old (450–1200 CE), Middle (1200–1700 CE) and Modern (1700–present).[147][148] The earliest written records are from the 5th century,[149] and the earliest available literature in rich manuscript (Kavirajamarga) is from c. 850.[150][151] Kannada language has the second oldest written tradition of all languages of India.[152][153] Current estimates of the total number of epigraph present in Karnataka range from 25,000 by the scholar Sheldon Pollock to over 30,000 by the Sahitya Akademi,[154] making Karnataka state "one of the most densely inscribed pieces of real estate in the world".[155] According to Garg and Shipely, more than a thousand notable writers have contributed to the wealth of the language.[156][157]

Malayalam

Malayalam (/mæləˈjɑːləm/;[158] [ maləjaːɭəm]) has official language status in the state of Kerala and in the union territories of Lakshadweep and Puducherry. It belongs to the Dravidian family of languages and is spoken by some 38 million people. Malayalam is also spoken in the neighboring states of Tamil Nadu and Karnataka; with some speakers in the Nilgiris, Kanyakumari and Coimbatore districts of Tamil Nadu, and the Dakshina Kannada and the Kodagu district of Karnataka.[159][160][161] Malayalam originated from Middle Tamil (Sen-Tamil) in the 7th century.[162] As Malayalam began to freely borrow words as well as the rules of grammar from Sanskrit, the Grantha alphabet was adopted for writing and came to be known as Arya Eluttu.[163] This developed into the modern Malayalam script.[164]

Odia

Odia (formerly spelled Oriya)[165] is the only modern language officially recognized as a classical language from the Indo-Aryan group. Odia is primarily spoken and has official language status in the Indian state of Odisha and has over 40 million speakers. It was declared as a classical language of India in 2014. Native speakers comprise 91.85% of the population in Odisha.[166][167] Odia originated from Odra Prakrit which developed from Magadhi Prakrit, a language spoken in eastern India over 2,500 years ago. The history of Odia language can be divided to Old Odia (3rd century BC −1200 century AD),[168] Early Middle Odia (1200–1400), Middle Odia (1400–1700), Late Middle Odia (1700–1870) and Modern Odia (1870 until present day). The National Manuscripts Mission of India have found around 213,000 unearthed and preserved manuscripts written in Odia.[169]

Santali

Santali is a Munda languages, a branch of Austroasiatic languages spoken widely in Jharkhand and other states of eastern India by Santhal community of tribal and non tribal.[170] It is written in Ol Chiki script invented by Raghunath Murmu at the end of 19th century.[171] Santali is spoken by 0.67% of India's population.[172][173] About 7 million peoples speak this language.[174] It is also spoken in Bangladesh and Nepal.[175][176] The language is major tribal language of Jharkhand and thus Santhal community is demanding to make it as the official language of Jharkhand.[177]

Punjabi

Punjabi, written in the Gurmukhi script in India, is one of the prominent languages of India with about 32 million speakers. In Pakistan it is spoken by over 80 million people and is written in the Shahmukhi alphabet. It is mainly spoken in Punjab but also in neighboring areas. It is an official language of Delhi and Punjab.

Assamese

Asamiya or Assamese language is most popular in the state of Assam.[178] It's an Eastern Indo-Aryan language with more than 23 million total speakers including more than 15 million native speakers and more than 7 million L2 speakers as per 2011 Census of India.[179] Along with other Eastern Indo-Aryan languages, Assamese evolved at least before the 7th century CE[180] from the middle Indo-Aryan Magadhi Prakrit. Assamese is unusual among Eastern Indo-Aryan languages for the presence of the /x/ (which, phonetically, varies between velar ([x]) and a uvular ([χ]) pronunciations). The first characteristics of this language are seen in the Charyapadas composed in between the eighth and twelfth centuries. The first examples emerged in writings of court poets in the fourteenth century, the finest example of which is Madhav Kandali's Saptakanda Ramayana composed during 14th century CE.

Maithili

Maithili (/ˈmtɪli/;[181] Maithilī) is an Indo-Aryan language native to India and Nepal. In India, it is widely spoken in the Bihar and Jharkhand states.[182][183] Native speakers are also found in other states and union territories of India, most notably in Uttar Pradesh and the National Capital Territory of Delhi.[184] In the 2011 census of India, It was reported by 1,35,83,464 people as their mother tongue comprising about 1.12% of the total population of India.[185] In Nepal, it is spoken in the eastern Terai, and is the second most prevalent language of Nepal.[186] Tirhuta was formerly the primary script for written Maithili. Less commonly, it was also written in the local variant of Kaithi.[187] Today it is written in the Devanagari script.[188]

In 2003, Maithili was included in the Eighth Schedule of the Indian Constitution as a recognised regional language of India, which allows it to be used in education, government, and other official contexts.[189]

Classical languages of India

In 2004, the Government of India declared that languages that met certain requirements could be accorded the status of a "Classical Language" of India.[190]

Languages thus far declared to be Classical:

Over the next few years, several languages were granted the Classical status, and demands have been made for other languages, including Pali, Bengali,[197][198] Marathi[199] and Meitei (officially called Manipuri).[200][201][202]

Other local languages and dialects

The 2001 census identified the following native languages having more than one million speakers. Most of them are dialects/variants grouped under Hindi.[84]

Languages No. of native speakers[84]
Bhojpuri 33,099,497
Rajasthani 18,355,613
Magadhi/Magahi 13,978,565
Chhattisgarhi 13,260,186
Haryanvi 7,997,192
Marwari 7,936,183
Malvi 5,565,167
Mewari 5,091,697
Khorth/Khotta 4,725,927
Bundeli 3,072,147
Bagheli 2,865,011
Pahari 2,832,825
Laman/Lambadi 2,707,562
Awadhi 2,529,308
Harauti 2,462,867
Garhwali 2,267,314
Nimadi 2,148,146
Sadan/Sadri 2,044,776
Kumauni 2,003,783
Dhundhari 1,871,130
Tulu 1,722,768
Surgujia 1,458,533
Bagri Rajasthani 1,434,123
Banjari 1,259,821
Nagpuria 1,242,586
Surajpuri 1,217,019
Kangri 1,122,843

Practical problems

India has several languages in use; choosing any single language as an official language presents problems to all those whose "mother tongue" is different. However, all the boards of education across India recognise the need for training people to one common language.[203] There are complaints that in North India, non-Hindi speakers have language trouble. Similarly, there are complaints that North Indians have to undergo difficulties on account of language when travelling to South India. It is common to hear of incidents that result due to friction between those who strongly believe in the chosen official language, and those who follow the thought that the chosen language(s) do not take into account everyone's preferences.[204] Local official language commissions have been established and various steps are being taken in a direction to reduce tensions and friction.[citation needed]

Language policy

The Union Government of India formulated the Three language formula.

In the Prime Minister's Office

The official website of the Prime Minister's Office of India publishes its official information in 11 Indian official languages, namely Assamese, Bengali, Gujarati, Kannada, Malayalam, Meitei (Manipuri), Marathi, Odia, Punjabi, Tamil and Telugu, out of the 22 official languages of the Indian Republic, in addition to English and Hindi.[205]

In the Press Information Bureau

The Press Information Bureau (PIB) selects 14 Indian official languages, which are Dogri, Punjabi, Bengali, Oriya, Gujarati, Marathi, Meitei (Manipuri), Tamil, Kannada, Telugu, Malayalam, Konkani and Urdu, in addition to Hindi and English, out of the 22 official languages of the Indian Republic to render its information about all the Central Government press releases.[a][206][207]

In the Staff Selection Commission

The Staff Selection Commission (SSC) selected 13 Indian official languages, which are Urdu, Tamil, Malayalam, Telugu, Kannada, Assamese, Bengali, Gujarati, Konkani, Meitei (Manipuri), Marathi, Odia and Punjabi, in addition to Hindi and English, out of the 22 official languages of the Indian Republic, to conduct the Multi-Tasking (Non-Technical) Staff examination for the first time in its history.[208][209]

Language conflicts

There are conflicts over linguistic rights in India. The first major linguistic conflict, known as the Anti-Hindi agitations of Tamil Nadu, took place in Tamil Nadu against the implementation of Hindi as the official language of India. Political analysts consider this as a major factor in bringing DMK to power and leading to the ousting and nearly total elimination of the Congress party in Tamil Nadu.[210] Strong cultural pride based on language is also found in other Indian states such as Assam, Odisha, Karnataka, West Bengal, Punjab and Maharashtra. To express disapproval of the imposition of Hindi on its states' people as a result of the central government, the government of Maharashtra made the state language Marathi mandatory in educational institutions of CBSE and ICSE through Class/Grade 10.[211]

The Government of India attempts to assuage these conflicts with various campaigns, coordinated by the Central Institute of Indian Languages, Mysore, a branch of the Department of Higher Education, Language Bureau, and the Ministry of Human Resource Development.[clarification needed][citation needed]

Linguistic movements

In the history of India, various linguistic movements were and are undertaken by different literary, political and social associations as well as organisations, advocating for the changes and the developments of several languages, dialects and vernaculars in diverse critical, discriminative and unfavorable circumstances and situations.

Bengali

Meitei (Manipuri)

Rajasthani

Tamil

Developmental works

In the age of technological advancements, the Google Translate supports the following Indian languages: Bengali, Gujarati, Hindi, Kannada, Malayalam, Marathi, Meiteilon (Manipuri)[b] (in Meitei script[c]), Odia, Punjabi (in Gurmukhi script[d]), Sanskrit, Tamil, Telugu, Urdu.

Meitei (Manipuri)

On the 4 September 2013, the Directorate of Language Planning and Implementation was established for the development and the promotion of Meitei language (officially called Manipuri language) and the Meitei script (Manipuri script) in Manipur.

In September 2021, the Central Government of India released 18 crore (US$2.3 million) as the first instalment for the development and the promotion of the Meitei language (officially called Manipuri language) and the Meitei script (Manipuri script) in Manipur.[212][213][214]

Sanskrit

The Central Government of India allocated ₹643.84 crore in the last three years for the development and the promotion of Sanskrit, ₹231.15 crore in 2019–20, around ₹214.38 crore in 2018–19, and ₹198.31 crore in 2017–18.[215][216]

Tamil

The Central Government of India gave an allocation of Rs 10.59 crore in 2017–18, Rs 4.65 crore in 2018–19 and Rs 7.7 crore in 2019–20 to the "Central Institute of Classical Tamil" for the development and the promotion of Tamil language.[215][217]

Telugu and Kannada

The Central Government of India gave an allocation of Rs 1 crore in 2017–18, Rs 99 lakh in 2018–19 and Rs 1.07 crore in 2019–20, each for the development and the promotion of Telugu language and Kannada language.[215][217]

Writing systems

Most languages in India are written in scripts derived from Brahmi.[218] These include Devanagari, Tamil, Telugu, Kannada, Meitei Mayek, Odia, Eastern Nagari – Assamese/Bengali, Gurumukhi and other. Urdu is written in a script derived from Arabic. A few minor languages such as Santali use independent scripts (see Ol Chiki script).

Various Indian languages have their own scripts. Hindi, Marathi, Maithili[219] and Angika are languages written using the Devanagari script. Most major languages are written using a script specific to them, such as Assamese (Asamiya)[220][221] with Asamiya,[222] Bengali with Bengali, Punjabi with Gurmukhi, Meitei with Meitei Mayek, Odia with Odia script, Gujarati with Gujarati, etc. Urdu and Kashmiri, Saraiki and Sindhi are written in modified versions of the Perso-Arabic script. With this one exception, the scripts of Indian languages are native to India. Languages like Kodava that didn't have a script whereas Tulu which had a script adopted Kannada due to its readily available printing settings; these languages have taken up the scripts of the local official languages as their own and are written in the Kannada script.[223]

See also

Notes

  1. ^ The Meitei language (officially called Manipuri) versions of the press releases are presently available in Bengali script, but there is plan of changing the script into Meitei script (Manipuri script) in due course of time.
  2. ^ Google Translate mentions both "Meiteilon" as well as "Manipuri" (within the parentheses) at the same time for the Meitei language (officially known as Manipuri language).
  3. ^ Meitei language uses both Meitei script as well as Bengali script officially but Google Translate uses Meitei script only.
  4. ^ Punjabi language uses both Gurmukhi script as well as Shahmukhi script officially but Google Translate uses Gurmukhi script only.
  1. ^ Although linguistically Hindi and Urdu is a same language called Hindustani, the government classifies them as separate languages instead of different standard registers of same language.

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External links

  • Linguistic map of India with a detailed map of the Seven Sister States (India) at Muturzikin.com
  • Languages and Scripts of India
  • Diversity of Languages in India
  • A comprehensive federal government site that offers complete info on Indian Languages
  • Technology Development for Indian Languages, Government of India
  • Languages Spoken in Himachal Pradesh – Himachal Pariksha

languages, india, this, article, about, general, overview, indian, languages, historical, context, linguistic, history, india, confused, with, languages, indian, subcontinent, languages, spoken, republic, india, belong, several, language, families, major, ones. This article is about the general overview of Indian languages For historical context see Linguistic history of India Not to be confused with Languages of the Indian subcontinent Languages spoken in the Republic of India belong to several language families the major ones being the Indo Aryan languages spoken by 78 05 of Indians and the Dravidian languages spoken by 19 64 of Indians 5 6 both families together are sometimes known as Indic languages 7 8 9 Languages spoken by the remaining 2 31 of the population belong to the Austroasiatic Sino Tibetan Tai Kadai and a few other minor language families and isolates 10 283 As per the People s Linguistic Survey of India India has the second highest number of languages 780 after Papua New Guinea 840 11 Ethnologue lists a lower number of 456 12 Languages of IndiaLanguage families of the Indian subcontinent Nihali Kusunda and Thai languages are not shown OfficialHindi 1 2 English 1 3 4 Semi officialAssamese Bengali Bodo Dogri Gujarati Kannada Kashmiri Konkani Maithili Malayalam Marathi Meitei Nepali Odia Punjabi Sanskrit Santali Sindhi Tamil Telugu Urdu total of official languages 23 including 22 8th Schedule languages and additional official language English SignedIndo Pakistani Sign Language Alipur Sign Language Naga Sign Language extinct Keyboard layoutQWERTY and InScript keyboardArticle 343 of the Constitution of India stated that the official language of the Union is Hindi in Devanagari script with official use of English to continue for 15 years from 1947 Later a constitutional amendment The Official Languages Act 1963 allowed for the continuation of English alongside Hindi in the Indian government indefinitely until legislation decides to change it 3 The form of numerals to be used for the official purposes of the Union are the international form of Indian numerals 13 14 which are referred to as Arabic numerals in most English speaking countries 1 Despite the misconceptions Hindi is not the national language of India the Constitution of India does not give any language the status of national language 15 16 The Eighth Schedule of the Indian Constitution lists 22 languages 17 which have been referred to as scheduled languages and given recognition status and official encouragement In addition the Government of India has awarded the distinction of classical language to Kannada Malayalam Odia Sanskrit Tamil and Telugu Classical language status is given to languages which have a rich heritage and independent nature According to the Census of India of 2001 India has 122 major languages and 1599 other languages However figures from other sources vary primarily due to differences in definition of the terms language and dialect The 2001 Census recorded 30 languages which were spoken by more than a million native speakers and 122 which were spoken by more than 10 000 people 18 Two contact languages have played an important role in the history of India Persian 19 and English 20 Persian was the court language during the Mughal period in India It reigned as an administrative language for several centuries until the era of British colonisation 21 English continues to be an important language in India It is used in higher education and in some areas of the Indian government Hindi which has the largest number of first language speakers in India today 22 serves as the lingua franca across much of North and Central India However there have been concerns raised with Hindi being imposed in South India most notably in the states of Tamil Nadu and Karnataka 23 24 Maharashtra West Bengal Assam Punjab and other non Hindi regions have also started to voice concerns about Hindi 25 Bengali is the second most spoken and understood language in the country with a significant amount of speakers in eastern and northeastern regions Marathi is the third most spoken and understood language in the country with a significant amount of speakers in South Western regions 26 Contents 1 History 2 Inventories 2 1 Census of India figures 3 Multilingualism 3 1 2011 Census India 3 2 Ethnologue 2019 22nd edition worldwide 4 Language families 4 1 Indo Aryan language family 4 2 Dravidian language family 4 3 Austroasiatic language family 4 4 Tibeto Burman language family 4 5 Tai Kadai language family 4 6 Andamanese language families 4 7 Language isolates 5 Official languages 5 1 Federal level 5 1 1 Hindi 5 1 2 English 5 2 Scheduled languages 6 Prominent languages of India 6 1 Hindi 6 2 Bengali 6 3 Magahi 6 4 Bhojpuri 6 5 Marathi 6 6 Meitei 6 7 Telugu 6 8 Tamil 6 9 Urdu 6 10 Gujarati 6 11 Kannada 6 12 Malayalam 6 13 Odia 6 14 Santali 6 15 Punjabi 6 16 Assamese 6 17 Maithili 7 Classical languages of India 8 Other local languages and dialects 8 1 Practical problems 9 Language policy 9 1 In the Prime Minister s Office 9 2 In the Press Information Bureau 9 3 In the Staff Selection Commission 10 Language conflicts 11 Linguistic movements 11 1 Bengali 11 2 Meitei Manipuri 11 3 Rajasthani 11 4 Tamil 12 Developmental works 12 1 Meitei Manipuri 12 2 Sanskrit 12 3 Tamil 12 4 Telugu and Kannada 13 Writing systems 14 See also 15 Notes 16 References 17 External linksHistoryMain article Linguistic history of IndiaFurther information Persian language in the Indian subcontinent The Southern Indian languages are from the Dravidian family The Dravidian languages are indigenous to the Indian subcontinent 27 Proto Dravidian languages were spoken in India in the 4th millennium BCE and started disintegrating into various branches around 3rd millennium BCE 28 page needed The Dravidian languages are classified in four groups North Central Kolami Parji South Central Telugu Kui and South Dravidian Tamil Kannada 29 page needed The Northern Indian languages from the Indo Aryan branch of the Indo European family evolved from Old Indo Aryan by way of the Middle Indo Aryan Prakrit languages and Apabhraṃsa of the Middle Ages The Indo Aryan languages developed and emerged in three stages Old Indo Aryan 1500 BCE to 600 BCE Middle Indo Aryan stage 600 BCE and 1000 CE and New Indo Aryan between 1000 CE and 1300 CE The modern north Indian Indo Aryan languages all evolved into distinct recognisable languages in the New Indo Aryan Age 30 In the Northeast India among the Sino Tibetan languages Meitei language officially known as Manipuri language was the court language of the Manipur Kingdom Meitei Meeteileipak It was honoured before and during the darbar sessions before Manipur was merged into the Dominion of the Indian Republic Its history of existence spans from 1500 to 2000 years according to most eminent scholars including Padma Vibhushan awardee Suniti Kumar Chatterji 31 32 Even according to the Manipur State Constitution Act 1947 of the once independent Manipur Manipuri and English were made the court languages of the kingdom before merging into Indian Republic 33 34 Persian or Farsi was brought into India by the Ghaznavids and other Turko Afghan dynasties as the court language Culturally Persianized they in combination with the later Mughal dynasty of Turco Mongol origin influenced the art history and literature of the region for more than 500 years resulting in the Persianisation of many Indian tongues mainly lexically In 1837 the British replaced Persian with English and Hindustani in Perso Arabic script for administrative purposes and the Hindi movement of the 19th Century replaced Persianised vocabulary with Sanskrit derivations and replaced or supplemented the use of Perso Arabic script for administrative purposes with Devanagari 19 35 Each of the northern Indian languages had different influences For example Hindustani was strongly influenced by Sanskrit Arabic and Persian leading to the emergence of Modern Standard Hindi and Modern Standard Urdu as registers of the Hindustani language Bangla on the other hand has retained its Sanskritic roots while heavily expanding its vocabulary with words from Persian English French and other foreign languages 36 37 InventoriesMain article List of languages by number of native speakers in India The first official survey of language diversity in the Indian subcontinent was carried out by Sir George Abraham Grierson from 1898 to 1928 Titled the Linguistic Survey of India it reported a total of 179 languages and 544 dialects 38 However the results were skewed due to ambiguities in distinguishing between dialect and language 38 use of untrained personnel and under reporting of data from South India as the former provinces of Burma and Madras as well as the princely states of Cochin Hyderabad Mysore and Travancore were not included in the survey 39 Different sources give widely differing figures primarily based on how the terms language and dialect are defined and grouped Ethnologue produced by the Christian evangelist organisation SIL International lists 461 tongues for India out of 6 912 worldwide 447 of which are living while 14 are extinct The 447 living languages are further subclassified in Ethnologue as follows 40 41 Institutional 63 Developing 130 Vigorous 187 In trouble 54 Dying 13The People s Linguistic Survey of India a privately owned research institution in India has recorded over 66 different scripts and more than 780 languages in India during its nationwide survey which the organisation claims to be the biggest linguistic survey in India 42 The People of India POI project of Anthropological Survey of India reported 325 languages which are used for in group communication by 5 633 Indian communities 43 Census of India figures The Census of India records and publishes data with respect to the number of speakers for languages and dialects but uses its own unique terminology distinguishing between language and mother tongue The mother tongues are grouped within each language Many of the mother tongues so defined could be considered a language rather than a dialect by linguistic standards This is especially so for many mother tongues with tens of millions of speakers that are officially grouped under the language Hindi 1951 CensusSeparate figures for Hindi Urdu and Punjabi were not issued due to the fact the returns were intentionally recorded incorrectly in states such as East Punjab Himachal Pradesh Delhi PEPSU and Bilaspur 44 1961 CensusThe 1961 census recognised 1 652 mother tongues spoken by 438 936 918 people counting all declarations made by any individual at the time when the census was conducted 45 However the declaring individuals often mixed names of languages with those of dialects subdialects and dialect clusters or even castes professions religions localities regions countries and nationalities 45 The list therefore includes languages with barely a few individual speakers as well as 530 unclassified mother tongues and more than 100 idioms that are non native to India including linguistically unspecific demonyms such as African Canadian or Belgian 45 1991 CensusThe 1991 census recognises 1 576 classified mother tongues 46 According to the 1991 census 22 languages had more than a million native speakers 50 had more than 100 000 and 114 had more than 10 000 native speakers The remaining accounted for a total of 566 000 native speakers out of a total of 838 million Indians in 1991 46 47 2001 CensusAs per the census of 2001 there are 1635 rationalised mother tongues 234 identifiable mother tongues and 22 major languages 18 Of these 29 languages have more than a million native speakers 60 have more than 100 000 and 122 have more than 10 000 native speakers 48 There are a few languages like Kodava that do not have a script but have a group of native speakers in Coorg Kodagu 49 2011 CensusAccording to the most recent census of 2011 after thorough linguistic scrutiny edit and rationalization on 19 569 raw linguistic affiliations the census recognizes 1369 rationalized mother tongues and 1474 names which were treated as unclassified and relegated to other mother tongue category 50 Among the 1369 rationalized mother tongues which are spoken by 10 000 or more speakers are further grouped into appropriate set that resulted into total 121 languages In these 121 languages 22 are already part of the Eighth Schedule to the Constitution of India and the other 99 are termed as Total of other languages which is one short as of the other languages recognized in 2001 census 51 MultilingualismMain article Multilingualism in India Multilingualism is common in the international airports in India A signboard in the Imphal International Airport is displayed in the Meitei officially called Manipuri Hindi and English languages 2011 Census India First Second and Third languages by number of speakers in India 2011 Census Language First languagespeakers 52 First languagespeakers as a percentageof total population Second languagespeakers millions Third languagespeakers millions Total speakers millions 53 Total speakers as apercentage of totalpopulation 54 Hindi 528 347 193 43 63 139 24 692 57 1Bengali 97 237 669 8 30 9 1 107 8 9Marathi 83 026 680 6 86 13 3 99 8 2Telugu 81 127 740 6 70 12 1 95 7 8Tamil 69 026 881 5 70 7 1 77 6 3Gujarati 55 492 554 4 58 4 1 60 5 0Urdu 50 772 631 4 19 11 1 63 5 2Kannada 43 706 512 3 61 14 1 59 4 9Odia 37 521 324 3 10 5 0 03 43 3 5Malayalam 34 838 819 2 88 0 05 0 02 36 2 9Punjabi 33 124 726 2 74 0 03 0 003 36 3 0Assamese 15 311 351 1 26 7 48 0 74 24 2 0Maithili 13 583 464 1 12 0 03 0 003 14 1 2Meitei Manipuri 1 761 079 0 15 0 4 0 04 2 25 0 2English 259 678 0 02 83 46 129 10 6Sanskrit 24 821 0 00185 0 01 0 003 0 025 0 002Ethnologue 2019 22nd edition worldwide The following table is a list of languages from the Indian subcontinent by total number of speakers as it appears in the 2019 edition of Ethnologue a language reference published by SIL International which is based in the United States 55 Language Total speakers millions Hindi 615Bengali 265Urdu 170Punjabi 126Marathi 95Telugu 93Tamil 81Gujarati 61Kannada 56Odia 38Malayalam 38Assamese 15Santali 7Meitei Manipuri 1 7Sanskrit 0 025Language familiesEthnolinguistically the languages of South Asia echoing the complex history and geography of the region form a complex patchwork of language families language phyla and isolates 10 Languages spoken in India belong to several language families the major ones being the Indo Aryan languages spoken by 78 05 of Indians and the Dravidian languages spoken by 19 64 of Indians The languages of India belong to several language families the most important of which are 56 5 6 10 57 Rank Language family Population 2018 1 Indo European language family 1 045 000 000 78 05 2 Dravidian language family 265 000 000 19 64 3 Austroasiatic language family Unknown4 Sino Tibetan language family Unknown5 Tai Kadai language family Unknown6 Great Andamanese languages UnknownTotal Languages of India 1 340 000 000Indo Aryan language family Main article Indo Aryan languages Indo Aryan language subgroups Urdu is included under Hindi Pashai Khowar Shina Kohistani Kashmiri Panjabi Sindhi Rajasthani Gujarati Bhili Western Pahari Central Pahari Nepali Western Hindi Eastern Hindi Bihari Bengali Assamese Oriya Halbi Marathi Konkani Sinhala Maldivian The largest of the language families represented in India in terms of speakers is the Indo Aryan language family a branch of the Indo Iranian family itself the easternmost extant subfamily of the Indo European language family This language family predominates accounting for some 1035 million speakers or over 76 5 of the population as per a 2018 estimate The most widely spoken languages of this group are Hindi n 1 Bengali Bhojpuri Marathi Urdu Gujarati Punjabi Kashmiri Rajasthani Sindhi Assamese Asamiya Maithili and Odia 58 59 Aside from the Indo Aryan languages other Indo European languages are also spoken in India the most prominent of which is English as a lingua franca Dravidian language family Main article Dravidian languages The second largest language family is the Dravidian language family accounting for some 277 million speakers or approximately 20 5 as per 2018 estimate The Dravidian languages are spoken mainly in southern India and parts of eastern and central India as well as in parts of northeastern Sri Lanka Pakistan Nepal and Bangladesh The Dravidian languages with the most speakers are Telugu Tamil Kannada and Malayalam 6 Besides the mainstream population Dravidian languages are also spoken by small scheduled tribe communities such as the Oraon and Gond tribes 60 Only two Dravidian languages are exclusively spoken outside India Brahui in Balochistan Pakistan and Dhangar a dialect of Kurukh in Nepal 61 Austroasiatic language family Families with smaller numbers of speakers are Austroasiatic and numerous small Sino Tibetan languages with some 10 and 6 million speakers respectively together 3 of the population 62 The Austroasiatic language family austro meaning South is the autochthonous language in Southeast Asia arrived by migration Austroasiatic languages of mainland India are the Khasi and Munda languages including Bhumij and Santali The languages of the Nicobar islands also form part of this language family With the exceptions of Khasi and Santali all Austroasiatic languages on Indian territory are endangered 10 456 457 Tibeto Burman language family The Tibeto Burman language family are well represented in India However their interrelationships are not discernible and the family has been described as a patch of leaves on the forest floor rather than with the conventional metaphor of a family tree 10 283 5 Padma Vibhushan awardee Indian Bengali scholar Suniti Kumar Chatterjee said Among the various Tibeto Burman languages the most important and in literature certainly of much greater importance than Newari is the Meitei or Manipuri language 63 64 65 In India Tibeto Burman languages are spoken across the Himalayas in the regions of Arunachal Pradesh Assam hills and autonomous councils Himachal Pradesh Ladakh Manipur Meghalaya Mizoram Nagaland Sikkim Tripura and West Bengal 66 67 68 Sino Tibetan languages spoken in India include two constitutionally recognised official languages Meitei officially known as Manipuri and Bodo as well as the non scheduled languages like Karbi Lepcha and many varieties of several related Tibetic West Himalayish Tani Brahmaputran Angami Pochuri Tangkhul Zeme Kukish sub linguistic branches amongst many others Tai Kadai language family This section does not cite any sources Please help improve this section by adding citations to reliable sources Unsourced material may be challenged and removed August 2018 Learn how and when to remove this template message The Ahom language a Southwestern Tai language had been once the dominant language of the Ahom Kingdom in modern day Assam but was later replaced by the Assamese language known as Kamrupi in ancient era which is the pre form of the Kamrupi dialect of today Nowadays small Tai communities and their languages remain in Assam and Arunachal Pradesh together with Sino Tibetans e g Tai Phake Tai Aiton and Tai Khamti which are similar to the Shan language of Shan State Myanmar the Dai language of Yunnan China the Lao language of Laos the Thai language of Thailand and the Zhuang language in Guangxi China Andamanese language families The languages of the Andaman Islands form another group 69 the Great Andamanese languages comprising a number of extinct and one highly endangered language Aka Jeru the Ongan family of the southern Andaman Islands comprising two extant languages Onge and Jarawa and one extinct language Jangil In addition Sentinelese is thought likely to be related to the above languages 69 Language isolates The only language found in the Indian mainland that is considered a language isolate is Nihali 10 337 The status of Nihali is ambiguous having been considered as a distinct Austroasiatic language as a dialect of Korku and also as being a thieves argot rather than a legitimate language 70 71 The other language isolates found in the rest of South Asia include Burushaski a language spoken in Gilgit Baltistan administered by Pakistan Kusunda in western Nepal and Vedda in Sri Lanka 10 283 The validity of the Great Andamanese language group as a language family has been questioned and it has been considered a language isolate by some authorities 10 283 72 73 In addition a Bantu language Sidi was spoken until the mid 20th century in Gujarat by the Siddi 10 528 Official languagesMain article Languages with official status in India States and union territories of India by the most commonly spoken L1 first language 74 Official languages of India by state and union territory Hindustani refers to both Hindi and Urdu in this map Federal level Language proficiency in India 2001 2011 75 76 Language Year percentHindi 2001 53 61 3 50 2011 57 11 English 2001 12 19 1 57 2011 10 62 Prior to Independence in British India English was the sole language used for administrative purposes as well as for higher education purposes 77 In 1946 the issue of national language was a bitterly contested subject in the proceedings of the Constituent Assembly of India specifically what should be the language in which the Constitution of India is written and the language spoken during the proceedings of Parliament and thus deserving of the epithet national Members belonging to the northern parts of India insisted that the Constitution be drafted in Hindi with the unofficial translation in English This was not agreed to by the drafting committee on the grounds that English was much better to craft the nuanced prose on constitutional subjects The efforts to make Hindi the pre eminent language were bitterly resisted by the members from those parts of India where Hindi was not spoken natively Eventually a compromise was reached not to include any mention of a national language Instead Hindi in Devanagari script was declared to be the official language of the union but for fifteen years from the commencement of the Constitution the English Language shall continue to be used for all the official purposes of the Union for which it was being used immediately before such commencement 77 Article 343 1 of the Constitution of India states The Official Language of the Union government shall be Hindi in Devanagari script 78 212 79 Unless Parliament decided otherwise the use of English for official purposes was to cease 15 years after the constitution came into effect i e on 26 January 1965 78 212 79 Main article Hindi Main article Anti Hindi agitations of Tamil Nadu As the date for changeover approached however there was much alarm in the non Hindi speaking areas of India especially in Kerala Gujarat Maharashtra Tamil Nadu Punjab West Bengal Karnataka Puducherry and Andhra Pradesh Accordingly Jawaharlal Nehru ensured the enactment of the Official Languages Act 1963 80 81 which provided that English may still be used with Hindi for official purposes even after 1965 77 The wording of the text proved unfortunate in that while Nehru understood that may meant shall politicians championing the cause of Hindi thought it implied exactly the opposite 77 In the event as 1965 approached India s new Prime Minister Lal Bahadur Shastri prepared to make Hindi paramount with effect from 26 January 1965 This led to widespread agitation riots self immolations and suicides in Tamil Nadu The split of Congress politicians from the South from their party stance the resignation of two Union ministers from the South and the increasing threat to the country s unity forced Shastri to concede 77 24 As a result the proposal was dropped 82 83 and the Act itself was amended in 1967 to provide that the use of English would not be ended until a resolution to that effect was passed by the legislature of every state that had not adopted Hindi as its official language and by each house of the Indian Parliament 80 The Constitution of India does not give any language the status of national language 15 16 Hindi The Hindi belt including Hindi related languages such as Rajasthani and Bhojpuri In the 2001 census 422 million 422 048 642 people in India reported Hindi to be their native language 84 This figure not only included Hindi speakers of Hindustani but also people who identify as native speakers of related languages who consider their speech to be a dialect of Hindi the Hindi belt Hindi or Hindustani is the native language of most people living in Delhi Western Uttar Pradesh Uttarakhand Chhattisgarh Himachal Pradesh Chandigarh Bihar Jharkhand Madhya Pradesh Haryana and Rajasthan 85 Modern Standard Hindi a standardised language is one of the official languages of the Union of India In addition it is one of only two languages used for business in Parliament However the Rajya Sabha now allows all 22 official languages on the Eighth Schedule to be spoken 86 Hindustani evolved from khari boli खड ब ल a prominent tongue of Mughal times which itself evolved from Apabhraṃsa an intermediary transition stage from Prakrit from which the major North Indian Indo Aryan languages have evolved citation needed Varieties of Hindi spoken in India include Rajasthani Braj Bhasha Haryanvi Bundeli Kannauji Hindustani Awadhi Bagheli and Chhattisgarhi 87 88 By virtue of its being a lingua franca Hindi has also developed regional dialects such as Bambaiya Hindi in Mumbai In addition a trade language Andaman Creole Hindi has also developed in the Andaman Islands 89 In addition by use in popular culture such as songs and films Hindi also serves as a lingua franca across both North and Central India citation needed Hindi is widely taught both as a primary language and language of instruction and as a second tongue in most states English Main articles English language and Indian English British colonialism in India resulted in English becoming a language for governance business and education English along with Hindi is one of the two languages permitted in the Constitution of India for business in Parliament Despite the fact that Hindi has official Government patronage and serves as a lingua franca over large parts of India there was considerable opposition to the use of Hindi in the southern states of India and English has emerged as a de facto lingua franca over much of India 77 24 Journalist Manu Joseph in a 2011 article in The New York Times wrote that due to the prominence and usage of the language and the desire for English language education English is the de facto national language of India It is a bitter truth 90 English language proficiency is highest among urban residents wealthier Indians Indians with higher levels of educational attainment Christians men and younger Indians 91 In 2017 more than 58 percent of rural teens could read basic English and 53 percent of fourteen year olds amp sixty percent of 18 year olds could read English sentences 92 Despite this only a little over 10 of Indians can speak English fluently 93 Scheduled languages This section needs additional citations for verification Please help improve this article by adding citations to reliable sources Unsourced material may be challenged and removed November 2016 Learn how and when to remove this template message Main languages of India and their relative size according to how many speakers each has 94 Until the Twenty first Amendment of the Constitution of India in 1967 the country recognised 14 official regional languages The Eighth Schedule and the Seventy First Amendment provided for the inclusion of Sindhi Konkani Meitei and Nepali thereby increasing the number of official regional languages of India to 18 The Eighth Schedule of the Constitution of India as of 1 December 2007 lists 22 languages 78 330 which are given in the table below together with the regions where they are used 84 Language Family ISO 639 codeAssamese Indo Aryan asBengali Bangla Indo Aryan bnBodo Sino Tibetan brxDogri Indo Aryan doiGujarati Indo Aryan guHindi Indo Aryan hiKannada Dravidian knKashmiri Indo Aryan ksKonkani Indo Aryan gomMaithili Indo Aryan maiMalayalam Dravidian mlMeitei Manipuri Sino Tibetan mniMarathi Indo Aryan mrNepali Indo Aryan neOdia Indo Aryan orPunjabi Indo Aryan paSanskrit Indo Aryan saSantali Austroasiatic satSindhi Indo Aryan sdTamil Dravidian taTelugu Dravidian teUrdu Indo Aryan urThe individual states the borders of most of which are or were drawn on socio linguistic lines can legislate their own official languages depending on their linguistic demographics The official languages chosen reflect the predominant as well as politically significant languages spoken in that state Certain states having a linguistically defined territory may have only the predominant language in that state as its official language examples being Karnataka and Gujarat which have Kannada and Gujarati as their sole official language respectively Telangana with a sizeable Urdu speaking Muslim population and Andhra Pradesh 95 has two languages Telugu and Urdu as its official languages Some states buck the trend by using minority languages as official languages Jammu and Kashmir used to have Urdu which is spoken by fewer than 1 of the population as the sole official language until 2020 Meghalaya uses English spoken by 0 01 of the population This phenomenon has turned majority languages into minority languages in a functional sense 96 Lists of Official Languages of States and Union Territories of IndiaIn addition to states and union territories India has autonomous administrative regions which may be permitted to select their own official language a case in point being the Bodoland Territorial Council in Assam which has declared the Bodo language as official for the region in addition to Assamese and English already in use 97 and Bengali in the Barak Valley 98 as its official languages Prominent languages of IndiaHindi Main article Hindi At a tourist site in Bengaluru Top to bottom the languages are Hindi Kannada Tamil Telugu and Malayalam English and many other European languages are also provided here In British India English was the sole language used for administrative purposes as well as for higher education purposes When India became independent in 1947 the Indian legislators had the challenge of choosing a language for official communication as well as for communication between different linguistic regions across India The choices available were Making Hindi which a plurality of the people 41 84 identified as their native language the official language Making English as preferred by non Hindi speakers particularly Kannadigas and Tamils and those from Mizoram and Nagaland the official language See also Anti Hindi agitations Declare both Hindi and English as official languages and each state is given freedom to choose the official language of the state The Indian constitution in 1950 declared Hindi in Devanagari script to be the official language of the union 78 Unless Parliament decided otherwise the use of English for official purposes was to cease 15 years after the constitution came into effect i e on 26 January 1965 78 The prospect of the changeover however led to much alarm in the non Hindi speaking areas of India especially in South India whose native tongues are not related to Hindi As a result Parliament enacted the Official Languages Act in 1963 99 100 101 102 103 104 which provided for the continued use of English for official purposes along with Hindi even after 1965 Bengali Main article Bengali language Native to the Bengal region comprising the nation of Bangladesh and the states of West Bengal Tripura and Barak Valley region 105 106 of Assam Bengali also spelt as Bangla ব ল is the sixth most spoken language in the world 105 106 After the partition of India 1947 refugees from East Pakistan were settled in Tripura and Jharkhand and the union territory of Andaman and Nicobar Islands There is also a large number of Bengali speaking people in Maharashtra and Gujarat where they work as artisans in jewellery industries Bengali developed from Abahatta a derivative of Apabhramsha itself derived from Magadhi Prakrit The modern Bengali vocabulary contains the vocabulary base from Magadhi Prakrit and Pali also borrowings from Sanskrit and other major borrowings from Persian Arabic Austroasiatic languages and other languages in contact with Like most Indian languages Bengali has a number of dialects It exhibits diglossia with the literary and standard form differing greatly from the colloquial speech of the regions that identify with the language 107 Bengali language has developed a rich cultural base spanning art music literature and religion Bengali has some of the oldest literature of all modern Indo Aryan languages dating from about 10th to 12th century Chargapada Buddhist songs There have been many movements in defence of this language and in 1999 UNESCO declared 21 Feb as the International Mother Language Day in commemoration of the Bengali Language Movement in 1952 108 Magahi Magahi language also known as Magadhi is a language spoken in Bihar Jharkhand and West Bengal states of eastern India and in the Terai of Nepal Magadhi Prakrit was the ancestor of Magahi from which the latter s name derives Magahi derived from the ancient Magadhi Prakrit which was created in the ancient kingdom of Magadha the core of which was the area south of the Ganges and east of Son River Though the number of speakers in Magahi is about 12 6 million it has not been constitutionally recognised in India Historically Magahi had no famous written literature There are many popular songs throughout the area in which the language is spoken and strolling bards recite various long epic poems which are known more or less over the whole of Northern India In Magahi speaking area folk singers sing a good number of ballads Bhojpuri Bhojpuri is an Indo Aryan language native to the Bhojpur region of India and Nepal 109 It is chiefly spoken in western Bihar eastern Uttar Pradesh western Jharkhand northeastern Madhya Pradesh northeastern Chhattisgarh and in the Terai region of Nepal 110 The Bhojpuri variant of Kaithi is the indigenous script of Bhojpuri language 111 112 Bhojpuri is an Eastern Indo Aryan language and a descandant of Magadhi Prakrit a language spoken in eastern India over 2500 years ago 113 114 In India Bhojpuri is included under Hindi in the census but it is an Indo Aryan language of eastern zone 115 116 Proponents demand for inclusion of Bhojpuri language in the eighth schedule of Indian constitution so it will be officially recognized as its own language and not a dialect of Hindi 117 118 119 It is recognized as a minority language in Fiji Guyana Mauritius Suriname Trinidad and Tobago and South Africa 120 121 Marathi Main article Marathi language Marathi is an Indo Aryan language It is the official language and co official language in Maharashtra and Goa states of Western India respectively and is one of the official languages of India There were 83 million speakers of the language in 2011 122 Marathi has the third largest number of native speakers in India and ranks 10th in the list of most spoken languages in the world Marathi has some of the oldest literature of all modern Indo Aryan languages Oldest stone inscriptions from 8th century amp literature dating from about 1100 AD Mukundraj s Vivek Sindhu dates to the 12th century The major dialects of Marathi are Standard Marathi and the Varhadi dialect There are other related languages such as Khandeshi Dangi Vadvali Samavedi Malvani Konkani has been heavily influenced by Marathi varieties Marathi is one of several languages that descend from Maharashtri Prakrit The further change led to the Apabhraṃsa languages like Old Marathi Marathi Language Day मर ठ द न मर ठ द वस transl Marathi Dina Marathi Diwasa is celebrated on 27 February every year across the Indian states of Maharashtra and Goa This day is regulated by the State Government It is celebrated on the birthday of eminent Marathi Poet Vi Va Shirwadkar popularly known as Kusumagraj Marathi is the official language of Maharashtra and co official language in the union territories of Dadra and Nagar Haveli and Daman and Diu In Goa Konkani is the sole official language however Marathi may also be used for all official purposes 123 Over a period of many centuries the Marathi language and people came into contact with many other languages and dialects The primary influence of Prakrit Maharashtri Apabhraṃsa and Sanskrit is understandable Marathi has also been influenced by the Austroasiatic Dravidian and foreign languages such as Persian and Arabic Marathi contains loanwords from Persian Arabic English and a little from French and Portuguese Meitei Main article Meitei language Meitei language officially known as Manipuri language is the most widely spoken Indian Sino Tibetan language of Tibeto Burman linguistic sub branch It is the sole official language in Manipur and is one of the official languages of India It is one of the two Sino Tibetan languages with official status in India beside Bodo It has been recognized as one of the advanced modern languages of India by the National Sahitya Academy for its rich literature 124 It uses both Meitei script as well as Bengali script for writing 125 126 Meitei language is currently proposed to be included in the elite category of Classical Languages of India 127 128 129 Besides it is also currently proposed to be an associate official language of Government of Assam According to Leishemba Sanajaoba the present titular king of Manipur and a Rajya Sabha member of Manipur state by recognising Meitei as an associate official language of Assam the identity history culture and tradition of Manipuris residing in Assam could be protected 130 131 132 Meitei Language Day Manipuri Language Day is celebrated on 20 August every year by the Manipuris across the Indian states of Manipur Assam and Tripura This day is regulated by the Government of Manipur It is the commemoration of the day on which Meitei was included in the Eighth Schedule to the Constitution of India on the 20 August 1992 133 134 135 136 137 Telugu This section does not cite any sources Please help improve this section by adding citations to reliable sources Unsourced material may be challenged and removed October 2020 Learn how and when to remove this template message Main article Telugu language Telugu is the most widely spoken Dravidian language in India and around the world Telugu is an official language in Andhra Pradesh Telangana and Yanam making it one of the few languages along with Hindi Bengali and Urdu with official status in more than one state It is also spoken by a significant number of people in the Andaman and Nicobar Islands Chhattisgarh Karnataka Maharashtra Odisha Tamil Nadu Gujarat and by the Sri Lankan Gypsy people It is one of six languages with classical status in India Telugu ranks fourth by the number of native speakers in India 81 million in the 2011 Census 122 fifteenth in the Ethnologue list of most spoken languages worldwide and is the most widely spoken Dravidian language Tamil Main article Tamil language source source source 15th century anthology of Tamil religious poem dedicated to lord Ganesha Tamil also spelt as Thamizh தம ழ is a Dravidian language predominantly spoken in Tamil Nadu Puducherry and many parts of Sri Lanka It is also spoken by large minorities in the Andaman and Nicobar Islands Kerala Karnataka Andhra Pradesh Malaysia Singapore Mauritius and throughout the world Tamil ranks fifth by the number of native speakers in India 61 million in the 2001 Census 138 and ranks 20th in the list of most spoken languages citation needed It is one of the 22 scheduled languages of India and was the first Indian language to be declared a classical language by the Government of India in 2004 Tamil is one of the longest surviving classical languages in the world 139 140 It has been described as the only language of contemporary India which is recognisably continuous with a classical past 141 The two earliest manuscripts from India 142 143 acknowledged and registered by UNESCO Memory of the World register in 1997 and 2005 are in Tamil 144 Tamil is an official language of Tamil Nadu Puducherry Andaman and Nicobar Islands Sri Lanka and Singapore It is also recognized as a minority language in Canada Malaysia Mauritius and South Africa Urdu Main article Urdu After independence Modern Standard Urdu the Persianised register of Hindustani became the national language of Pakistan During British colonial times knowledge of Hindustani or Urdu was a must for officials Hindustani was made the second language of British Indian Empire after English and considered as the language of administration citation needed The British introduced the use of Roman script for Hindustani as well as other languages Urdu had 70 million speakers in India as per the Census of 2001 and along with Hindi is one of the 22 officially recognised regional languages of India and also an official language in the Indian states of Andhra Pradesh 95 Jammu and Kashmir Delhi Uttar Pradesh Bihar and Telangana that have significant Muslim populations Gujarati Main article Gujarati language Gujarati is an Indo Aryan language It is native to the west Indian region of Gujarat Gujarati is part of the greater Indo European language family Gujarati is descended from Old Gujarati c 1100 1500 CE the same source as that of Rajasthani Gujarati is the chief and official language in the Indian state of Gujarat It is also an official language in the union territories of Daman and Diu and Dadra and Nagar Haveli According to the Central Intelligence Agency CIA 4 5 of population of India 1 21 billion according to 2011 census speaks Gujarati This amounts to 54 6 million speakers in India 145 Kannada Main article Kannada Kannada is a Dravidian language which branched off from Kannada Tamil sub group around 500 B C E according to the Dravidian scholar Zvelebil 146 It is the official language of Karnataka According to the Dravidian scholars Steever and Krishnamurthy the study of Kannada language is usually divided into three linguistic phases Old 450 1200 CE Middle 1200 1700 CE and Modern 1700 present 147 148 The earliest written records are from the 5th century 149 and the earliest available literature in rich manuscript Kavirajamarga is from c 850 150 151 Kannada language has the second oldest written tradition of all languages of India 152 153 Current estimates of the total number of epigraph present in Karnataka range from 25 000 by the scholar Sheldon Pollock to over 30 000 by the Sahitya Akademi 154 making Karnataka state one of the most densely inscribed pieces of real estate in the world 155 According to Garg and Shipely more than a thousand notable writers have contributed to the wealth of the language 156 157 Malayalam Main article Malayalam Malayalam m ae l e ˈ j ɑː l e m 158 malejaːɭem has official language status in the state of Kerala and in the union territories of Lakshadweep and Puducherry It belongs to the Dravidian family of languages and is spoken by some 38 million people Malayalam is also spoken in the neighboring states of Tamil Nadu and Karnataka with some speakers in the Nilgiris Kanyakumari and Coimbatore districts of Tamil Nadu and the Dakshina Kannada and the Kodagu district of Karnataka 159 160 161 Malayalam originated from Middle Tamil Sen Tamil in the 7th century 162 As Malayalam began to freely borrow words as well as the rules of grammar from Sanskrit the Grantha alphabet was adopted for writing and came to be known as Arya Eluttu 163 This developed into the modern Malayalam script 164 Odia Main article Odia language Odia formerly spelled Oriya 165 is the only modern language officially recognized as a classical language from the Indo Aryan group Odia is primarily spoken and has official language status in the Indian state of Odisha and has over 40 million speakers It was declared as a classical language of India in 2014 Native speakers comprise 91 85 of the population in Odisha 166 167 Odia originated from Odra Prakrit which developed from Magadhi Prakrit a language spoken in eastern India over 2 500 years ago The history of Odia language can be divided to Old Odia 3rd century BC 1200 century AD 168 Early Middle Odia 1200 1400 Middle Odia 1400 1700 Late Middle Odia 1700 1870 and Modern Odia 1870 until present day The National Manuscripts Mission of India have found around 213 000 unearthed and preserved manuscripts written in Odia 169 Santali Main article Santali language Santali is a Munda languages a branch of Austroasiatic languages spoken widely in Jharkhand and other states of eastern India by Santhal community of tribal and non tribal 170 It is written in Ol Chiki script invented by Raghunath Murmu at the end of 19th century 171 Santali is spoken by 0 67 of India s population 172 173 About 7 million peoples speak this language 174 It is also spoken in Bangladesh and Nepal 175 176 The language is major tribal language of Jharkhand and thus Santhal community is demanding to make it as the official language of Jharkhand 177 Punjabi This section does not cite any sources Please help improve this section by adding citations to reliable sources Unsourced material may be challenged and removed October 2020 Learn how and when to remove this template message Main article Punjabi language Punjabi written in the Gurmukhi script in India is one of the prominent languages of India with about 32 million speakers In Pakistan it is spoken by over 80 million people and is written in the Shahmukhi alphabet It is mainly spoken in Punjab but also in neighboring areas It is an official language of Delhi and Punjab Assamese Main article Assamese language Asamiya or Assamese language is most popular in the state of Assam 178 It s an Eastern Indo Aryan language with more than 23 million total speakers including more than 15 million native speakers and more than 7 million L2 speakers as per 2011 Census of India 179 Along with other Eastern Indo Aryan languages Assamese evolved at least before the 7th century CE 180 from the middle Indo Aryan Magadhi Prakrit Assamese is unusual among Eastern Indo Aryan languages for the presence of the x which phonetically varies between velar x and a uvular x pronunciations The first characteristics of this language are seen in the Charyapadas composed in between the eighth and twelfth centuries The first examples emerged in writings of court poets in the fourteenth century the finest example of which is Madhav Kandali s Saptakanda Ramayana composed during 14th century CE Maithili Main article Maithili language Maithili ˈ m aɪ t ɪ l i 181 Maithili is an Indo Aryan language native to India and Nepal In India it is widely spoken in the Bihar and Jharkhand states 182 183 Native speakers are also found in other states and union territories of India most notably in Uttar Pradesh and the National Capital Territory of Delhi 184 In the 2011 census of India It was reported by 1 35 83 464 people as their mother tongue comprising about 1 12 of the total population of India 185 In Nepal it is spoken in the eastern Terai and is the second most prevalent language of Nepal 186 Tirhuta was formerly the primary script for written Maithili Less commonly it was also written in the local variant of Kaithi 187 Today it is written in the Devanagari script 188 In 2003 Maithili was included in the Eighth Schedule of the Indian Constitution as a recognised regional language of India which allows it to be used in education government and other official contexts 189 Classical languages of IndiaMain article Classical Languages of India Further information Meitei classical language movement In 2004 the Government of India declared that languages that met certain requirements could be accorded the status of a Classical Language of India 190 Languages thus far declared to be Classical Tamil in 2004 191 Sanskrit in 2005 192 Kannada in 2008 193 Telugu in 2008 193 Malayalam in 2013 194 Odia in 2014 195 196 Over the next few years several languages were granted the Classical status and demands have been made for other languages including Pali Bengali 197 198 Marathi 199 and Meitei officially called Manipuri 200 201 202 Other local languages and dialectsThe 2001 census identified the following native languages having more than one million speakers Most of them are dialects variants grouped under Hindi 84 Languages No of native speakers 84 Bhojpuri 33 099 497Rajasthani 18 355 613Magadhi Magahi 13 978 565Chhattisgarhi 13 260 186Haryanvi 7 997 192Marwari 7 936 183Malvi 5 565 167Mewari 5 091 697Khorth Khotta 4 725 927Bundeli 3 072 147Bagheli 2 865 011Pahari 2 832 825Laman Lambadi 2 707 562Awadhi 2 529 308Harauti 2 462 867Garhwali 2 267 314Nimadi 2 148 146Sadan Sadri 2 044 776Kumauni 2 003 783Dhundhari 1 871 130Tulu 1 722 768Surgujia 1 458 533Bagri Rajasthani 1 434 123Banjari 1 259 821Nagpuria 1 242 586Surajpuri 1 217 019Kangri 1 122 843Practical problems India has several languages in use choosing any single language as an official language presents problems to all those whose mother tongue is different However all the boards of education across India recognise the need for training people to one common language 203 There are complaints that in North India non Hindi speakers have language trouble Similarly there are complaints that North Indians have to undergo difficulties on account of language when travelling to South India It is common to hear of incidents that result due to friction between those who strongly believe in the chosen official language and those who follow the thought that the chosen language s do not take into account everyone s preferences 204 Local official language commissions have been established and various steps are being taken in a direction to reduce tensions and friction citation needed Language policyFurther information Three language formula and National Education Policy 2020 The Union Government of India formulated the Three language formula In the Prime Minister s Office See also Prime Minister s Office India and Prime Minister of India The official website of the Prime Minister s Office of India publishes its official information in 11 Indian official languages namely Assamese Bengali Gujarati Kannada Malayalam Meitei Manipuri Marathi Odia Punjabi Tamil and Telugu out of the 22 official languages of the Indian Republic in addition to English and Hindi 205 In the Press Information Bureau Main article Press Information Bureau The Press Information Bureau PIB selects 14 Indian official languages which are Dogri Punjabi Bengali Oriya Gujarati Marathi Meitei Manipuri Tamil Kannada Telugu Malayalam Konkani and Urdu in addition to Hindi and English out of the 22 official languages of the Indian Republic to render its information about all the Central Government press releases a 206 207 In the Staff Selection Commission Main article Staff Selection Commission The Staff Selection Commission SSC selected 13 Indian official languages which are Urdu Tamil Malayalam Telugu Kannada Assamese Bengali Gujarati Konkani Meitei Manipuri Marathi Odia and Punjabi in addition to Hindi and English out of the 22 official languages of the Indian Republic to conduct the Multi Tasking Non Technical Staff examination for the first time in its history 208 209 Language conflictsFurther information Anti Hindi agitations of Tamil Nadu Pure Tamil movement Meitei linguistic purism movement and Gokak agitation There are conflicts over linguistic rights in India The first major linguistic conflict known as the Anti Hindi agitations of Tamil Nadu took place in Tamil Nadu against the implementation of Hindi as the official language of India Political analysts consider this as a major factor in bringing DMK to power and leading to the ousting and nearly total elimination of the Congress party in Tamil Nadu 210 Strong cultural pride based on language is also found in other Indian states such as Assam Odisha Karnataka West Bengal Punjab and Maharashtra To express disapproval of the imposition of Hindi on its states people as a result of the central government the government of Maharashtra made the state language Marathi mandatory in educational institutions of CBSE and ICSE through Class Grade 10 211 The Government of India attempts to assuage these conflicts with various campaigns coordinated by the Central Institute of Indian Languages Mysore a branch of the Department of Higher Education Language Bureau and the Ministry of Human Resource Development clarification needed citation needed Linguistic movementsIn the history of India various linguistic movements were and are undertaken by different literary political and social associations as well as organisations advocating for the changes and the developments of several languages dialects and vernaculars in diverse critical discriminative and unfavorable circumstances and situations Bengali Further information Bengali language Bengali language movement in IndiaMeitei Manipuri Further information Meitei language Meitei language movements aka Manipuri language movements various linguistic movements for the cause of Meitei language officially called Manipuri language Meitei linguistic purism movement an ongoing linguistic movement aimed to attain linguistic purism in Meitei language Scheduled language movement a historical linguistic movement in Northeast India aimed at the recognition of Meitei language as one of the scheduled languages of Indian Republic Meitei classical language movement an ongoing linguistic movement in Northeast India aimed at the recognition of Meitei language as an officially recognized classical language Meitei associate official language movement a semi active linguistic movement in Northeast India aimed at the recognition of Meitei language as an associate official language of AssamRajasthani Further information Rajasthani language Rajasthani language movement a linguistic movement that has been campaigning for greater recognition for the Rajasthani language since 1947Tamil Further information Tamil language Tanittamil Iyakkam Pure Tamil Movement a linguistic purism movement for the Tamil language to ignore the loanwords borrowed from SanskritDevelopmental worksIn the age of technological advancements the Google Translate supports the following Indian languages Bengali Gujarati Hindi Kannada Malayalam Marathi Meiteilon Manipuri b in Meitei script c Odia Punjabi in Gurmukhi script d Sanskrit Tamil Telugu Urdu Meitei Manipuri Further information Meitei language Meitei script and Directorate of Language Planning and Implementation On the 4 September 2013 the Directorate of Language Planning and Implementation was established for the development and the promotion of Meitei language officially called Manipuri language and the Meitei script Manipuri script in Manipur In September 2021 the Central Government of India released 18 crore US 2 3 million as the first instalment for the development and the promotion of the Meitei language officially called Manipuri language and the Meitei script Manipuri script in Manipur 212 213 214 Sanskrit Further information Sanskrit The Central Government of India allocated 643 84 crore in the last three years for the development and the promotion of Sanskrit 231 15 crore in 2019 20 around 214 38 crore in 2018 19 and 198 31 crore in 2017 18 215 216 Tamil Further information Tamil language The Central Government of India gave an allocation of Rs 10 59 crore in 2017 18 Rs 4 65 crore in 2018 19 and Rs 7 7 crore in 2019 20 to the Central Institute of Classical Tamil for the development and the promotion of Tamil language 215 217 Telugu and Kannada Further information Telugu language and Kannada language The Central Government of India gave an allocation of Rs 1 crore in 2017 18 Rs 99 lakh in 2018 19 and Rs 1 07 crore in 2019 20 each for the development and the promotion of Telugu language and Kannada language 215 217 Writing systemsMain articles Official scripts of the Indian Republic Brahmic scripts and Nastaliq Part of a series on Officially used writing systems in IndiaCategoryIndic scriptsBengali Assamese script Devanagari script Gujarati script Gurmukhi script Kannada script Malayalam script Meitei script Odia script Tamil script Telugu scriptArabic derived scriptsPerso Arabic script Urdu scriptAlphabetical scriptsOl Chiki script Latin scriptRelatedOfficial scripts of the Indian Republic Writing systems of India Languages of India Asia portal India portal Language portal Writing portal The letters of the official scripts of the Indian Republic of the Indic Brahmic family used by the official languages of India top row Kannada Telugu Tamil Gujarati middle row Meitei Devanagari Eastern Nagari bottom row Odia Malayalam Gurmukhi Most languages in India are written in scripts derived from Brahmi 218 These include Devanagari Tamil Telugu Kannada Meitei Mayek Odia Eastern Nagari Assamese Bengali Gurumukhi and other Urdu is written in a script derived from Arabic A few minor languages such as Santali use independent scripts see Ol Chiki script Various Indian languages have their own scripts Hindi Marathi Maithili 219 and Angika are languages written using the Devanagari script Most major languages are written using a script specific to them such as Assamese Asamiya 220 221 with Asamiya 222 Bengali with Bengali Punjabi with Gurmukhi Meitei with Meitei Mayek Odia with Odia script Gujarati with Gujarati etc Urdu and Kashmiri Saraiki and Sindhi are written in modified versions of the Perso Arabic script With this one exception the scripts of Indian languages are native to India Languages like Kodava that didn t have a script whereas Tulu which had a script adopted Kannada due to its readily available printing settings these languages have taken up the scripts of the local official languages as their own and are written in the Kannada script 223 A Meitei language stone inscription in Meitei script about a royal decree of a Meitei king found in the sacred site of God Panam Ningthou in Andro Imphal East Manipur Development of Odia script Tamil Brahmi inscription in Jambaimalai Silver coin issued during the reign of Rudra Singha with Assamese inscriptions North Indian Brahmi found in Ashok pillar The Halmidi inscription the oldest known inscription in the Kannada script and language The inscription is dated to the 450 CE 500 CE period An early Telugu inscription found in the Krishna district of Andhra Pradesh See alsoList of endangered languages in India List of languages by number of native speakers in India National Translation Mission Romanization of Sindhi Indo Portuguese creoles Languages of China Languages of Pakistan Languages of Bangladesh Languages of Sri Lanka Languages of Maldives Languages of Nepal Languages of Bhutan Languages of Myanmar Languages of Malaysia Languages of Singapore Languages of Mauritius Languages of Reunion Languages of Fiji Languages of Guyana Languages of Trinidad and Tobago Tamil diaspora Telugu diaspora Caribbean Hindustani Fiji HindiNotes The Meitei language officially called Manipuri versions of the press releases are presently available in Bengali script but there is plan of changing the script into Meitei script Manipuri script in due course of time Google Translate mentions both Meiteilon as well as Manipuri within the parentheses at the same time for the Meitei language officially known as Manipuri language Meitei language uses both Meitei script as well as Bengali script officially but Google Translate uses Meitei script only Punjabi language uses both Gurmukhi script as well as Shahmukhi script officially but Google Translate uses Gurmukhi script only Although linguistically Hindi and Urdu is a same language called Hindustani the government classifies them as separate languages instead of different standard registers of same language References a b c Constitution of India 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