Join the FREE
Linguaholic
Newsletter

Subscribe for inspirational quotes, language tips & fascinating language trivia—straight to your inbox!

    We won't send you spam. Unsubscribe at any time.

    Join the FREE
    Linguaholic
    Newsletter

    Subscribe for inspirational quotes, language tips & fascinating language trivia—straight to your inbox!

      We won't send you spam. Unsubscribe at any time.

      Hindi: A soon to be forgotten language | Study Hindi Jump to content
      Linguaholic

      Hindi: A soon to be forgotten language


      pcgamer

      Recommended Posts

      It's one of the most under-appreciated language in my own country. We love to converse in English and boast that we know English. What's wrong with conversing in Hindi when it's your very own language? Dikkat kya hai bhai logon? Kya hum apni sanskri, sabhyata, ved-purano aur hamre rastriya bhasha ka apmaan nahi kar rahe?

      Link to comment
      Share on other sites

      Study With Us on Discord for FREE!

      That is so very true! Here in India, we have always felt English to be a superior language when compared to our local languages. This is a notion that we need to get out of people mind. Yes English is important but our native language is equally important too!

      Link to comment
      Share on other sites

      I do not think that Hindi will ever become extinct. What I think is that the language will becoming increasingly influenced by English and that while many common words will be retained, any technical or scientific word will automatically be loaned from English, as in "Ham apni naayi phone line ko kaise connect karte hain"?

      Link to comment
      Share on other sites

      I disagree compleatly, Hindi will not go away anytime soon. Actually I think it's growing, for example I know people from Nepal,Guyana, Afghanistan and Bangladesh who can communicate in basic Hindi from watching Hindi movies. Also I'm not sure about in India, but here in the United States I meet many Marathi's, Gujarati, and Punjabi's that can speak Hindi and use it to speak with other Indians. We are also forgetting that Hindi and Urdu spoken are mutually intelligible and Urdu is deffintly not going any time soon in Pakistan. Hindi and Urdu both has tons of media, has a lot of literature and has over 200 million speakers. I see Hindi getting more important instead of declining. Also both Hindi and Urdu are on the United States Critical languages list and is offered at a lot of big universties here, so I really don't think it will go extinct.

      Link to comment
      Share on other sites

        On 9/22/2013 at 4:08 PM, Meera said:

      I disagree compleatly, Hindi will not go away anytime soon. Actually I think it's growing, for example I know people from Nepal,Guyana, Afghanistan and Bangladesh who can communicate in basic Hindi from watching Hindi movies. Also I'm not sure about in India, but here in the United States I meet many Marathi's, Gujarati, and Punjabi's that can speak Hindi and use it to speak with other Indians. We are also forgetting that Hindi and Urdu spoken are mutually intelligible and Urdu is deffintly not going any time soon in Pakistan. Hindi and Urdu both has tons of media, has a lot of literature and has over 200 million speakers. I see Hindi getting more important instead of declining. Also both Hindi and Urdu are on the United States Critical languages list and is offered at a lot of big universties here, so I really don't think it will go extinct.

      It's a pity that our own Indian government is not supporting it.

      Link to comment
      Share on other sites

        On 9/25/2013 at 11:35 AM, wowtgp said:

      It's a pity that our own Indian government is not supporting it.

      Yeah I think so too :(Maybe they just don't want people in the south to get upset if they support Hindi?

      Link to comment
      Share on other sites

      Well there was an uproar in most of the non-hindi speaking states last time they tried (particularly in Tamilnadu), so there are not going to do it again. Moreover I don't even think it needs further help. Most government operations at state level are carried out in Hindi and it is still spoken by enough people. The so called 'English snobs' are a product of the systems in large cities. Most of India is not like that.

      Link to comment
      Share on other sites

        On 9/26/2013 at 5:44 AM, SpiralArchitect said:

      Well there was an uproar in most of the non-hindi speaking states last time they tried (particularly in Tamilnadu), so there are not going to do it again. Moreover I don't even think it needs further help. Most government operations at state level are carried out in Hindi and it is still spoken by enough people. The so called 'English snobs' are a product of the systems in large cities. Most of India is not like that.

      Yeah I'm glad the government doesn't force Hindi on the southern states like Tamil Nadu, I think it is awesome India has so many languages and encourages their regional languages. So many countries try to oppress their regional and minority languages.

      Link to comment
      Share on other sites

      Join the conversation

      You can post now and register later. If you have an account, sign in now to post with your account.
      Note: Your post will require moderator approval before it will be visible.

      Guest
      Reply to this topic...

      ×   Pasted as rich text.   Paste as plain text instead

        Only 75 emoji are allowed.

      ×   Your link has been automatically embedded.   Display as a link instead

      ×   Your previous content has been restored.   Clear editor

      ×   You cannot paste images directly. Upload or insert images from URL.

      ×
      ×
      • Create New...