Aces170 said:I dont understand how can a language be called crude, theoretically anything that is old and outdated is crude, so in that case Sanskrit is the crudest language of all... Not even spoken anymore.
All said and done, I think Mumbai may be the only city in India, where if you can survive even without knowing a single word of the local lang (marath)i, btw any official estimates as to the number of maharashtrians in mumbai, for all you know they might be a minority here
^ Sanskrit is there in every language. I learned tamil. I can read write and talk almost fluently cause I stayed there for many years. .even tamil contains sanskrit.but ,the thing is ,the amount of sanskritized words are very low. so ,it becomes tough for others..
praka123 said:well ..for that matter kannadigas -they are actually speaking any of these languages as it is their native - Tulu(south kanara) ,Konkani,Marathi ,Kodava and Malayalam(Byaari bhashe).
@Kumar : what I meant is ,even for a south guy apart from Tamil ,sanskrit surely helped in communicating other south indian languages. be it malyali talking kannada or telegu talking malyalam... while tamilians finds it tough to learn other languages due to this reason. go to bengalooru and check ...tamilians are still talking in tamil ... :|
praka123 said:yup.that too can be a reason.but as a friendly jesture ,I always talk in a language which the other person is comfortable with.but with language lovers ..we cant expect such things..I am shocked to see only "kannada" regn plate on buses in K'taka and Tamil in TN ! that sure is ridiculous ! :|
praka123 said:1. yes tamil and english exists. I esp meant with KSRTC(karnatak ) buses.
come here to Kochi(n) suburbs like muvattupuzha ,perumbavoor ,alwaye route -you can see buses plying with destination route written in English ,Malayalam,Hindi and Tamil .
that is called tolerance![]()
Arya said:Almost all states in north have different languages too. How many people know that? As one of my teacher(mind you she was M. Tech) said:
TechHead said:Does Bhojpuri count, chhore?
Arya said:Same goes for Telugu/Malyalam/Kannada being similar to Tamilfrom north perspective
Arya said:To add to what greenie said. Just because something didn't originate from sanskrit...or doesn't sound sweet, doesnt make it crude. Its about 2k years old.
I don't know what you quoted on previous page...but anyway what you assume doesn't apply to all Mallu's.
praka123 said:but with language lovers ..we cant expect such things..I am shocked to see only "kannada" regn plate on buses in K'taka and Tamil in TN ! that sure is ridiculous ! :|
I am not saying that people should be able to differentiate between different languages. I am just saying that people should be at least aware of the existence of these popular languages and where they are spoken regardless of whether they are North Indians or South Indians.
i disagree, i prefer tamil...even though im a mal.vij said:... although I think, the general consensus is that telugu is the sweetest of the south indian languages.
sTALKEr said:+1 to that
another mallu voting for tamil![]()
Grease Monk said:i disagree, i prefer tamil...even though im a mal.
vij said:I said I find the tamil language sweeter/refined(the sound of it) than other south indian languages.
Although generally I have seen that Bengali and "telugu" are touted to be the sweetest of languages...
Lord Nemesis said:Well, Bhojpuri is also touted as the sweetest of languages.![]()
Gulzar said:Woh Yaar Hai Jo Khusbhu Ki Tarah
Jiski Zubaan Urdu Ki Tarah