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India is a land of a variety of
linguistic communities, each of
which share a common language
and culture. Though there could
be fifteen principal languages
there are hundreds of thousands
dialects that add to the
vividness of the country.
18 languages are officially
recognized in India of which
Sanskrit and Tamil share a long
history of more than 5,000 and
3,000 years respectively. The
population of people speaking
each language varies
drastically. For example Hindi
has 250 million speakers, while
Andamanese is spoken by
relatively fewer people.
Tribal or Aboriginal language
speaking population in India may
be more than some of the
European languages. For instance
Bhili and Santali both tribal
languages have more than 4
million speakers. The vividness
can be ascertained by the fact
that schools in India teach more
than 50 different languages;
there are Films in 15 languages,
Newspapers in 90 or more
languages and radio programmes
in 71 languages!
Indian languages come from four
distinct families, which are:
Indo-European, Dravidian,
Mon-Khmer, and Sino-Tibetan.
Majority of Indian population
uses Indo-European and Dravidian
languages. The language families
divide India geographically too.
Indo-European languages dominate
the northern and central India
while in south India; mainly
languages of Dravidian origin
are spoken. In eastern India
languages of Mon-Khmer group is
popular. Sino Tibetan languages
are spoken in the northern
Himalayas and close to Burmese
border. In terms of percentage,
75% of Indian population speaks
languages of Indo-European
family, 23% speak languages of
Dravidian origin and about 2% of
the population speaks Mon-Khmer
languages and Sino-Tibetan
languages.
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