Jump to content

Hindi

From Simple English Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Revision as of 13:16, 23 September 2024 by 172.105.253.236 (talk) (Fixed another massive error: Urdu is not part of Hindi its part of Hindustani which also includes Hindi)
(diff) ← Older revision | Latest revision (diff) | Newer revision → (diff)
Hindi
हिन्दी
The word "Hindi" in Devanagari script
Pronunciation[ˈɦɪn̪d̪iː]
Native to India
 Fiji
Significant communities in Nepal
Native speakers
L1: 345 million speakers of Hindi and various related languages who reported their language as 'Hindi' [1][2] (2011)
L2: 260 million (2020)[3][2]
Indo-European
Devanagari
Hindi Braille
Official status
Official language in
 India
 Fiji
Regulated byCentral Hindi Directorate (India)[5]
Language codes
ISO 639-1hi
ISO 639-2hin
ISO 639-3hin
hin-hin
Linguasphere59-AAF-qf
Part of a series on
Constitutionally recognised languages of India
Category
Scheduled Languages

A
Assamese
B
Bengali
Bodo
D
Dogri
G
Gujarati
H
Hindi
K
Kannada
Kashmiri
Konkani
M
Maithili
Malayalam
Marathi
Meitei (Manipuri)
N
Nepali
O
Odia (Oriya)
P
Punjabi
S
Sanskrit
Santali
Sindhi
T
Tamil
Telugu
U
Urdu

Related

Official languages of India
Languages with official status in India

Spoken Hindi
The man speaks Hindi in recorded in Taoquan City, Taiwan, China.

Hindi (हिन्दी), historically known as Hindavi (हिन्दवी) or Hindui (हिंदुई),[6] is an Indo-Aryan language. It is the biggest language in India and one of the official languages. Nearly half the people in India speak Hindi. The Devanāgarī script is used to write Hindi. Previously Hindi was known as Hindui.

Hindi is widely written, spoken and understood in North India and some other places in India. In 1997, a survey found that 45% of Indians can speak Hindi. It has taken words from the Dravidian languages of South India, as well as the Arabic, Persian, Chagatai, English and Portuguese languages.[source?]

Hindi and Urdu were considered the same language but have evolved into separate dialects. However, to this day, both languages are mutually intelligible, meaning their speakers can understand each other without knowing the other language. Urdu, however, is written in the completely different Arabic alphabet.

Hindi developed from Sanskrit, the ancient Indo-Aryan language of India. Hindi started to develop in the 7th century as "Apabhramsha" and became stable by the 10th century. Some famous Hindi poets are Tulsidas and Kabir.

Dialects of Hindi include: Moradabadi, Dehalvi, Hyderabadi, Sansi, Malyam, Malyani, Bambaiya, South Hindi, Dimasi, Arunachali, Port Blair, Deccani, Bihari, Lakhnavi, Larya, Ghera, Bhaya, and Kabuli Hindi.

Hindi is also spoken with regional accents like Haryanvi and Rajasthani. Bombay Hindi is spreading because Bollywood films use it.

Hindi Diwas is an annual celebration on 14th September. It commemorates the law of 1949 that made Hindi the legal language of the Republic.

References

[change | change source]
  1. "Scheduled Languages in descending order of speaker's strength - 2011" (PDF). Registrar General and Census Commissioner of India. 29 June 2018.
  2. 2.0 2.1 Hindi at Ethnologue.
  3. "BBC: A Guide to Urdu". Archived from the original on 2012-05-25. Retrieved 2013-03-08.
  4. Hindustani (2005). Keith Brown (ed.). Encyclopedia of Language and Linguistics (2nd ed.). Elsevier. ISBN 0-08-044299-4.
  5. Central Hindi Directorate regulates the use of Devanagari script and Hindi spelling in India. Source: Central Hindi Directorate: Introduction Archived 2010-04-15 at the Wayback Machine
  6. Dwyer, Rachel. "Hindi/Hindustani". Key Concepts in Modern Indian Studies, edited by Gita Dharampal-Frick, Monika Kirloskar-Steinbach and Jahnavi Phalkey, New York, USA: New York University Press, 2016, pp. 102-103. https://doi.org/10.18574/9781479826834-041