Hindi should be removed as a national language of India.

vijaykv18

New member
Hiiiiiiiiii
I think Hindi should be removed as a national language of India. India has many states and each state has got their won language then why Hindi is imposed on others. Because of Hindi other regional languages are suffering.
 
in india more than half of sate knowing hindi and there were 60% people who spoke hindi and known verry well and every country has his natinal language
i think u living in one particular sate thats why u think that if u travel than u get the great known hindi language and respect the every language
 
i think Dr. Ambedkar,Mahatma Gandhi etc are more tilented than what we r now.
they decided HINDI as a national lang. very carefully. So plz dont ask ques. on there ability.
see this is very wrong & baseless ques. according to me.
 
Re: Hindi should be removed as a national language of India.
Re: Hindi should be removed as a national language of India.
Re: Hindi should be removed as a national language of India.Re: Hindi should be removed as a national language of India.Re: Hindi should be removed as a national language of India.Re: Hindi should be removed as a national language of India.Re: Hindi should be removed as a national language of India.Re: Hindi should be removed as a national language of India.Re: Hindi should be removed as a national language of India.Re: Hindi should be removed as a national language of India.Re: Hindi should be removed as a national language of India.Re: Hindi should be removed as a national language of India.
 
removal of hindi will bring only more misery and fights to our nation , and we'll have more pakistan's coming out
 
Constitution is providing us to use our national language anytime, anywhere. But at the same time there is an absence of official resolution saying Hindi is our national language.
 
I think its better to keep hindi as national langauge.

but we have to give english as first language preference.

because india is a growing country n if still we struck wit old methods it may

cause badly.

:SugarwareZ-180:
 
:SugarwareZ-027:Hindi is not national language of India
I found many people in India think that hindi is our national language. even some school books also contain that hindi is our national language.
but it is not the truth.

The truth is that there is no national language of india.
hindi in devnagari script and english are official languages of india.
but, hindi is not our national language.

Neither the Constitution of India nor Indian law specifies a National language. Article 343 of the constitution specifies that the official language of the Union shall be Hindi in Devanagari script. Article 354 specifies that the legislature of a State may by law adopt any one or more of the languages in use in the State or Hindi as the Language or Languages to be used for all or any of the official purposes of that State.[3] Section 8 of The Official Languages Act of 1963 (as amended in 1967) empowers the Union Government to make rules regarding the languages which may be used for the official purposes of the Union, for transaction of business in Parliament, and for communication between the Union Government and the states.[4] Section 3 of G.S.R. 1053, titled "Rules, 1976 (As Amended, 1987)" specifies that communications from a Central (Union) Government office to a State or a Union Territory in shall, save in exceptional cases (Region "A") or shall ordinarily (Region "B"), be in Hindi, and if any communication is issued to any of them in English it shall be accompanied by a Hindi translation thereof.
:SugarwareZ-056::SugarwareZ-056::SugarwareZ-056::o:o:o


so dude nobody is imposing anything on u its ur perception btw hindi shud be promoted acc to me:SugarwareZ-093::SugarwareZ-093::SugarwareZ-093:
 
as hindi is widely speaking language across the country ,it should be maintained as a national level language
 
shrey420 has hit the nail on the head - Hindi is NOT our national language, in fact India doesn't have a national language. In any case, language cannot be 'imposed' and should not be.

As for the concern that people are losing touch with their own language, or that regional languages are suffering because of Hindi, I don't think that's true. The problem is really (and always has been) English. Parents speak to their children in English at home rather than their mother tongue,which leads the kids to grown up with a half-baked knowledge of their own language. To make matters worse, given the quality of english education in India, their english is not much better. So we are essentially breeding a generation of people who can't articulate themselves in ANY language. (Please don't interpret this as a tirade against the use of english, by the way - it happens to be my mother tongue and am glad I was taught both english and konkani as a kid)
 
Hiiiiiiiiii
I think Hindi should be removed as a national language of India. India has many states and each state has got their won language then why Hindi is imposed on others. Because of Hindi other regional languages are suffering.
accd to me....state languages must be banned...all of dem are INDIANS 1st...so try speaking hindi,....]
 
Well Hindi is the most common language of our country. Well if we remove use of hindi from India it will not unite India but it will rather divide India. i don't know why our generation is thinking regarding this. We are Indian first and if state languages will be given preference then the day is not far when states will be against each other and this will also pose threat to our country's unity and integrity. So i think use of hindi must keep on going as it was before there should me not changes or amendments in use of hindi.
 
Hindi is national language necause many people speak hindi.

then 70 of hindus are staying in this conuntry why hindu can't be national religion
 
Origin and Growth of Hindi Language India has an enormous diversity of languages and
dialects, yet only one is the official language
of India — Hindi. Today, Hindi boasts some 275 million speakers and ranks as one of the leading languages of the world. Knowledge of Hindi gives entry to one of the world’s great civilisations and to a culture in which tradition and modernity exist side by side. Hindi is a member of the Indo-Aryan language family; its ancestry goes back through Sanskrit to the Indo-European language, which is the basis of many of the world’s most important language families. Those students who feel that Hindi is too far removed from their European mind should take note: Hindi is a distant relative of English. Sanskrit (meaning refined or perfected) was brought to India from the north-east in approximately the 2nd millennium BC and eventually gave rise to the Prakrit (natural or common) languages. These in turn gave rise to the modern Indian languages such as Hindi, Bengali, Marathi, Gujarati, Nepali and Sinhalese. The word ‘Hindi’ is known from as early as the thirteenth century. The language developed out of the structure of the dialect called Khariboli, interspersed with the vocabulary of Persian and Arabic during the period of Mogul rule (15th-18th centuries AD). Khariboli developed two distinct literary styles written in two different scripts; Urdu in the Perso-Arabic script and Hindi in the Devanagari. In its basic conversational form, Hindi is virtually the same language as Urdu (today the national language of Pakistan). The two languages diverge mainly at the level of higher vocabulary and perhaps more importantly in their scripts. The similarity between the two languages at conversational level (sometimes called Hindustani) makes learning Hindi doubly rewarding as the student is effectively gaining access to two languages at the same time! The Language and the Script The title ‘Hindi’ (originally a Persian word meaning ‘Indian’) actually embraces a wide range of dialects, the geographical extremes of which may be so diverse as to be mutually unintelligible. However the modern standard form of Hindi (based on the speech of Delhi and Uttar Pradesh) is widely accepted. Amongst its interesting features is a three-tier level of honorifics, allowing great subtlety in adjusting the level of communication to suit ‘formal’, ‘familiar’ and ‘intimate’ conversational contexts. Thus, the polite communicating of gratitude etc. is an intrinsic part of the language itself and does not rely solely on separate words for ‘please’ and ‘thank you’. Hindi has inherited its writing system from Sanskrit. The Devanagari script is derived from the ancient Brahmi and is closely related to other Indian scripts such as Gujarati and Bengali. Devanagari is an extremely logical writing system, it has a phonetic basis so there are relatively few spelling problems. The general appearance of the Devanagari script is that of letters ‘hanging from a line’. This ‘line’, evident in many South Asian scripts, is actually a component part of most of the letters and is drawn as the writing proceeds. The script has no capital letters. Finally . . . English speakers rarely take time to ponder the origins of their familiar vocabulary. The results are often surprising: for example, did you know that juggernaut, dungarees and sherbet are all of Hindi origin????????????????????????????
SO HINDI IS MUCH WELL VERSED AND UPGRADED LANGUAGE THAN ANY LANGUAGE I DNT AGREE WITH CAT XAVI COMMENT THAT IT EVOLVES RECENTLY
 
Hindi hi hamari rashtriya bhasha honi chahiye. Kyonki Bharat me 70% log hindi bolte hain aur samajhte hai.
Hamare netaon ne bhi ise rashtriya bhasha ka darja diya tha.
 
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