Target Locked 2047, we will go back to our roots, The yin and yang of human civilization!!

I don't think there is any such language for us. Each state or region has their own language and culture, so it's almost impossible to identify what language everyone can accept.
That's true but considering most languages in India are derived from Sanskrit(except dravidian languages). I think it'll be the one that people might accept.
 
I want one language because then there'd be one less thing for us to fight about.
Exactly why Sanskrit should be taught everywhere.

That's true but considering most languages in India are derived from Sanskrit(except dravidian languages). I think it'll be the one that people might accept.
If we take the four main South Indian languages, linguists have opined that 65% of the Kannada words have their roots in Sanskrit. In Telugu and Malayalam languages it is around 70% to 75%. In Tamil, it is comparatively less with 15% to 20%.

Don't think some north Indian languages can claim this. lol.
 
Another way to advance people forward together then.

The price was too high for us. Entire bloodlines wiped out. Unchecked pilfering of our resources and treasures. Psychological conditioning that our darker skin makes us lesser humans.

They left us with an unending amount of red dirt and squiggly lines on a piece of paper that decided who our enemies were. And the English language.
 
That's true but considering most languages in India are derived from Sanskrit(except dravidian languages). I think it'll be the one that people might accept.
That "except" is an issue, apart from several other issues.
Sanskrit is already old and classical language. Due to the complexity, people, north or south, will find it too challenging to learn and lose interest. Meanwhile scholars would be still debating about versions of sanskrit, saying this is the right way or that is the correct way and they will take their time.

The best way to make people learn a language is, to identify the necessity. Why would anyone learn their mother tongue? Their parents teach it, they want to converse with their people etc. Why would anyone learn English? It's universal language that is everywhere and most important thing in the world.
Now why would anyone learn Sanskrit?

I think we better use resources to educate everyone and make life better in India, instead of trying to make people learn a different language for no reason.
 
The price was too high for us. Entire bloodlines wiped out.
That and the ensuing misery was not because of the language alone.
In that case languages of invaders from north-western borders should be considered the same. Rather, that linguistic collage is now the national language.
Because it was the hunt for resources from outsiders which caused this, not their language.
That way, south Indians who complains about getting less resources from center will say it's because of north Indian Hindi states, which is partially true too (not because of language though).
I think we better use resources to educate everyone and make life better in India, instead of trying to make people learn a different language for no reason.
Amount of monies spent to propagate Hindi is relevant here, don't think it produced any result in national integration, than not.
 
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I think we better use resources to educate everyone and make life better in India, instead of trying to make people learn a different language for no reason.
But it does have a reason. If we agreed on one native language then people would have one less thing to fight about.
 
I guess it's time to replace Java with Sanskrit
Naah Angrezi will do just fine ..
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We had to take Sanskrit because that was the only teacher our small school had. I forgot most of it in a couple of years. Modern Sanskrit taught in schools doesn't even enable you to read religious texts because the Sanskrit there is totally different, so I just don't see the point of it. I know in the west too some students can choose to learn Latin as a foreign language and some indeed do, but at least in their case it is a choice.

I think the most useful thing we could do for nation building is make North Indians learn a South Indian language and vice versa. At least it will have some utility in terms of cultural exchange and nation unity and temper regionalism.
 
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Naah Angrezi will do just fine ..
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NVIDIA is going to take things to next level NVIDIA Full-Stack Generative AI Software Ecosystem - but this is foreign conspiracy against India.

What why we even care, we will teach sankrti and excel in Ayurveda.
AI, science, research, logic, etc is not in our culture.
we want young generation to be like this https://www.hindustantimes.com/tren...viral-video-her-reaction-101730421162722.html
Modern Sanskrit taught in schools doesn't even enable you to read religious texts because the Sanskrit there is totally different

See language is a mode of communication , an utility to make one better on some or other way..... it was ignored for decades, allowed it to decay. Tamil is even older, but see it thrives even today.

when we took sanakrit in school the goal was never to "learn"it, rather to get easy marks compared to hindi, if i took hindi i probably have to devote 4x the time to score the same marks.
Plus Sanskrit was more like maths, had 100% guarantee of getting 20 marks in written and another assured 20 marks in unit test, that 40 already, just 5 marks below pass marks.

we could do for nation building is make North Indians learn a South Indian language and vice versa.
the goal is exact opposite, my friend. create the rift, divide and distract people... so that you dont ask where is teh tax money going, why we have fake medicine flooded in our market, where are basic facilities like drinking water, roads, and electricity.

if that is the objective our politicians have -- it would be possible only with methodical approach, and not some random group of unemployed buggers shows up in front of your car and threaten you and your family to speak <some language>
 
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But it does have a reason. If we agreed on one native language then people would have one less thing to fight about.
No offense but you sound very naive. People fight with their own siblings for property. To assume people won't fight just because they speak same language is dumb.

And people already fight with people who speak same language just because they belong to different communities.
 
And people already fight with people who speak same language just because they belong to different communities.
True.

asked GPT, and got this:

Here’s a list of the divides in present Indian society:​

1. Caste​

2. Religion​

3. Language​

4. Geography​

5. Economic class​

6. Education​

7. Gender​

8. Culture​

9. Politics​

10. Technology​

11. Social status​

12. Health​

13. Age​

14. Urban vs. Rural​

15. Ethnicity​

16. Profession​

17. Marital Status​

18. Disability status​

Let me know if you need anything else!​


This is good to keep people distracted for another 50yrs for sure :)
 
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See the scholarship amount to understand why they are smiling and thus predict the upcoming public interest.
Will actually prefer Sanskrit imposed all over India instead of Hindi, so that everyone equally suffers.;)
Even the printing of that cheque on that size sun board would cost anywhere around 150 rs to 200 rs.....simply wowww...that poor girl would have benefited instead...but this is how our gov works sadly....that is the reason always vote wisely for a wise candidate...who truly believes in the development and prosperity of the nation instead of his own...
 
Well, as much as one might want Sanskrit to be revived, languages evolve organically, and government can't do much about a dying language.
if we remember this - https://www.bbc.com/news/world-asia-india-30446917.
a village where sanskrit was the primary language. it seem to be falling as well.

The Challenges Faced To Preserve Sanskrit


Despite the villagers’ efforts, they faced several challenges keeping Sanskrit in their culture. Modern culture and the use of regional languages like Kannada or any other language like Hindi can make it hard for the younger generation to stay interested in Sanskrit. That is why the elders in the village work hard to teach and encourage the children to use the language regularly. They hope that future generations will continue to speak Sanskrit.
Source: https://www.mapsofindia.com/my-india/unique/mattur-the-last-surviving-sanskrit-speaking-village