Hindi
Category:Indo-Aryan languages
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Hindi is a language spoken in most states in northern and central
India. It is an
Indo-European language, of the
Indo-Iranian subfamily. It evolved from the Middle Indo-Aryan
prakrit languages of the
middle ages, and indirectly, from
Sanskrit. Hindi derives a lot of its higher vocabulary from Sankrit. Due to
Muslim influence in Northern India, there are also a large number of
Persian,
Arabic and
Turkish loanwords.
Linguists think of Hindi and
Urdu as the same language, the difference being that Hindi is written in
Devanagari and draws vocabulary from
Sanskrit, while Urdu is written in
Arabic script and draws on Persian and
Arabic. The separation is largely a political one; before the
partition of India into India and
Pakistan, spoken Hindi and
Urdu were considered the same language,
Hindustani. Since partition, Standard Hindi has developed by replacing many words of Arabic and Persian origin with Sanskrit words. Hindi and Urdu presently have four standard literary forms: Standard Hindi, Urdu,
Dakkhini (Dakhini), and Rehkta. Dakhini is a dialect of Urdu from the
Deccan region of south-central India, chiefly from
Hyderabad, that uses fewer Persian or Arabic words. Rehkta is a form of Urdu used chiefly for poetry.
Hindi is the second most spoken language in the world, after
Chinese. About 500 million people speak Hindi, in India and abroad, and the total number of people who can understand the language may be 800 million. A 1997 survey found that 66% of all Indians can speak Hindi, and 77% of the Indians regard Hindi as "one language across the nation". More than 180 million people in India regard Hindi as their mother tongue. Another 300 million use it as second language. Outside of India, Hindi speakers are 100,000 in USA; 685,170 in Mauritius; 890,292 in South Africa; 232,760 in Yemen; 147,000 in Uganda; 5,000 in Singapore; 20,000 in New Zealand; 30,000 in Germany. Urdu, the official language of Pakistan, is spoken by about 41 million in Pakistan and other countries. Hindi became one of the official languages of India on
January 26,
1965 and it is a minority language in a number of countries, including
Fiji,
Mauritius,
Guyana,
Suriname,
Trinidad and Tobago, and
United Arab Emirates.
Hindi is generally classified in the
Central Zone of the
Indo-Aryan languages.
Khadiboli, the dialect spoken in Western
Uttar Pradesh, east of
Delhi is the basis for the language used by the government and taught in schools. Hindi is the predominant language in the states and territories of
Himachal Pradesh,
Delhi,
Haryana,
Chandigarh,
Uttar Pradesh,
Rajasthan,
Madhya Pradesh,
Bihar, as well as the cities of
Bombay and
Hyderabad. Is not easy to delimit the borders of the Hindi speaking region. A number of spoken languages are very closely related to Hindi, and may be considered dialects, including
Bambaiya Hindi, Bhaya,
Braj, Braj Bhasha,
Bundeli, Chamari, Ghera, Gowli,
Haryanvi,
Kanauji, and others. Some of the East-Central Zone languages, including Awadhi (Avadhi),
Bagheli,
Chhattisgarhi and Dhanwar, and
Rajasthani languages, including Marwari, are also widely considered to be dialects of Hindi. There has been considerable controversy on the status of
Punjabi and the
Bihari languages, including
Maithili,
Bhojpuri, and
Magadhi.
Hindi's popularity has been helped by
Bollywood, the Hindi film industry. These movies have an international appeal and now they have broken into the Western markets as well.
The beginnings of
Hindi literature go back to the Prakrits that are a part of the classical Sanskrit plays.
Tulasidas's Ramacharitamanas attained wide popularity. Modern masters include Sumitra Nandan Pant, Maithili Sharan Gupta,
Mahadevi Varma, Ajneya.
See also
External Links
- Hindi Wikipedia\n*Generator for Hindi typographical filler text\n*Hindi Language Resources: A comprehensive site built by Yashwant Malaiya.\n*Hindi documents and dictionary\n*International Institute of Information Technologies IIIT, online and downloadable dictionaries cross referenced in English for Hindi, Marathi, Punjabi, Bengali, Kannada, Telugu languages. Includes Classical Hindi Literature, writings of Meera, Suradas, Tulasidas, Premchand, Rahim et cetera.\n*Online Itrans to generate Hindi/Devanagari output.
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