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India
Travel Guide
Indian Languages
Officially, India has 22 national languages,
namely Assamese, Bengali, Bodo, Dogri, Gujarati, Hindi, Kannada,
Kashmiri, Konkani, Maithili, Malayalam, Manipuri, Marathi,
Nepali, Oriya, Punjabi, Sanskrit, Santhali, Sindhi, Tamil,
Telugu and Urdu. There are also other less prominent languages
like Tulu, Bhojpuri the main spoken language of some places.
Hindi, spoken by 30% of the population, is the primary tongue
of the people in Northern India. Many more people speak it
as a second language. If you can afford only one phrasebook,
pick up the Hindi one, as it will enable you to get by in
most of India. The exceptions are the extreme south - Tamil
Nadu and Kerala and the Northeast. In Tamil Nadu, it is inadvisable
to speak in Hindi, as there is a residual hostility to the
language dating back to the hamhanded policies of the 1960s.
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In any case, you are better off picking up as many words
of the local language of the place you are going to - people
are proud of their culture and language and will appreciate
it if an outsider makes an attempt to communicate in it.
English is widely spoken in major cities and around most
tourist places, and acts as the lingua franca among all educated
Indians. English has been spoken by Indians long enough that
it has begun evolving its own rhythm, vocabulary, and inflection,
much like French in Africa and Spanish in South America have
taken on glittering cultural lives of their own. Indeed, much
has recently been made of subcontinental writers such as Arundhati
Roy, Vikram Seth, and Salman Rushdie. The English you are
likely to hear in India will be heavily influenced by British
English, although spoken with the lilting stress and intonation
of the speaker's other native language. Indians can usually
tell regional English accents apart, similar to the South
American ability to tell Argentinians from Colombians.
One of the most delightful quirks of Indian English is the
language's adherence to Pre-1950s British English which to
speakers in North America and Britain will sound oddly formal.
Another source of fascination and intrigue for travelers is
the ubiquitous use of English for cute quips in random places.
One relatively common traffic sign reads, "Speed thrills,
but kills". On the back of trucks everywhere you'll find
"horn please ok" or "tata bye bye".
English speaking Indians may also seem commanding to a westerner.
You may hear "come here," "sit here,"
"drink this," "bring me that" which may
sound direct and demanding to the point of being rude to northern
Europeans and Americans, but is in no way meant to be impolite.
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