India has
18 officially spoken recognized languages.
However, English
continues to be an accepted means of communication.
Assamese
is the language of Assam and is spoken by nearly 60
percent of the State's population.
Bengali,
one of the leading Indo-Aryan languages, is the official
language of West Bengal. It too developed as a language
in the 13th Century and is now spoken by nearly 200
million people in West Bengal and in Bangladesh.
Gujarati
is the official language of the state of Gujarat and
is spoken by 70 percent of the State's population. Gujarat
started out as an independent language around AD 1200.
It is now one of the most developed languages in India.
Hindi is
numerically the biggest of the Indo-Aryan family and
is the official language of India. In six states and
union Territories, Hindi is the official language.
Kannada is
the state language of Karnataka and is spoken by 65
percent of the state's population. It belongs to the
Dravidian family, and dates back to the 9th Century
as an independent language.
Kashmiri
is a language of the Indo-Aryan group and is often mistaken
as the state language of Jammu and Kashmir. Urdu is
the state language of Jammu and Kashmir. Kashmiri speaking
population of the state comes to around 55% of the total
population. Kashmiri literature goes back to AD 1200.
Konkani,
the official language of Goa, is principally based on
classical Sanskrit and belongs to the southwestern branch
of Indo-Aryans. It is spoken by thousands of Konkanis
in Maharashtra, Karnataka and Kerala also.
Malayalam,
a branch of the Dravidian family is the official language
of the state of Kerala. Malayalam developed as an independent
language, by the 10th Century AD. It is the youngest
of all developed languages in the Dravidian family.
Marathi,
the Indic language, dates back to the 13th Century.
It is the official language of Maharashtra. Though Marathi
separated from the Indo-Aryan stock at a very early
date , it has today a fully developed literature of
the modern type.
Oriya, a
branch of the Indo-Aryan family, is the official language
of the State of Orissa, where the Oriya speaking population
comprises around 82% of the total population. Oriya
is found recorded as far back as the 10th Century. However,
its literary career began only in the 14th Century.
Punjabi belongs
to the Indo-Aryan family and is the official language
of the State of Punjab. Punjabi, though very ancient,
turned literary around the 15th Century. From the 19th
Century, Punjabi showed vigorous development in all
branches of literature. It is written in Gurmukhi script,
created by the Sikh Guru, Angad.
Sindhi is
spoken by a great number of people. It belongs to the
Indo-Aryan family and preserved some of the archaic
characteristics of the Indo-Aryan script.
Tamil is
the oldest of the Dravidian languages and is the State
language of Tamil Nadu. Tamil literature goes back to
Centuries before the Christian era. It represents certain
new literary types that are not in Sanskrit or other
Aryan languages. It spoken by more than 73 million people.
Telugu is
a Dravidian language spoken by the people of Andhra
Pradesh. It is numerically the biggest linguistic unit
in India. Telugu is found to be recorded in the 7th
Century AD. However, it is only in the 11th Century
that it broke out into a literary language.
Urdu is the
State language of Jammu and Kashmir and is spoken by
more than 28 million people In India. Urdu and Hindi
have proceeded from the same source i.e., Khariboli.
Urdu is written in the Persio-Arabic script and contains
many words from the Persian language.