Hindi

Hindi

Infobox Language
name=Hindi
nativename= _hi. हिन्दी, हिंदी
familycolor=Indo-European
caption=Hindia IPA-all|hɪnd̪iː
states=India, Nepal [http://www.cbs.gov.np/Nepal%20in%20figure/Nepal%20in%20Figures%202007_nep.pdf] Fiji (Fiji Hindi), Pakistan (Urdu), Mauritius (Hindi/Urdu), Nepal (Bhojpuri), Suriname (Bhojpuri), Trinidad and Tobago (Bhojpuri), Guyana
speakers=First language: ~ 500–680 million (2008) [258 million "non-Urdu Khariboli" and 400 million Hindi languages (including Urdu) per 2001 Indian census data, plus 11 million Urdu in 1993 Pakistan, adjusted to population growth till 2008]
Second language: 120–225 million (1999) [non-native speakers of Standard Hindi, and Standard Hindi plus Urdu, according to SIL Ethnologue.]
rank=2 [Native]
fam2=Indo-Iranian
fam3=Indo-Aryan
script=Devanagari, Urdu, Kaithi, Latin, andseveral regional scripts.
nation=IND|India (Standard Hindi, Urdu, Maithili)
FIJ|Fiji (Fiji Hindi)
agency=Central Hindi Directorate (in India), [Central Hindi Directorate regulates the use of Devanagari script and Hindi spelling in India. Source: [http://hindinideshalaya.nic.in/hindi/introduction.html Central Hindi Directorate: Introduction] ] National Language Authority (in Pakistan), National Council for Promotion of Urdu language
iso1=hi
iso2=hin
iso3=hin
notice=Indic

Hindi (Devanāgarī: _hi. or _hi. , IAST: "ISOtranslit|Hindī|hi", : audio-IPA|hi-Hindi.ogg| [hɪnd̪iː] ) is the name given to an Indo-Aryan language, or a dialect continuum of languages, spoken in northern and central India (the "Hindi belt"). [Shapiro (2003), [http://books.google.com/books?id=jPR2OlbTbdkC&pg=PA251&vq=%22not+insignificant+numbers+of+speakers%22&dq=hindi+uttar+pradesh&as_brr=3&sig=u5CAclp7Je0ntylfM04B2YgYboc p. 251] ]

Native speakers of Hindi dialects between them account for 41% of the Indian population (2001 Indian census). As defined in the Constitution, Hindi is one of the two official languages of communication (English, the other) for India's federal government and is one of the 22 scheduled languages specified in the Eighth Schedule to the Constitution. [Constitution of India, Part XVII, Article 343.] Official Hindi is often described as Modern Standard Hindi, which along with English, is used for administration of the central government. [ [http://india.gov.in/knowindia/official_language.php The Union: Official Languages] ] [ [http://india.gov.in/govt/documents/english/Art243-395_89-184pp_.pdf PDF from india.gov.in containing Articles 343 which states so] ] Standard Hindi is a sanskritised register derived from the "khari boli" dialect. Urdu is a different, persianised, register of the same dialect.

Terminology

Etymology

The word "hindī" is of pre-Islamic Persian origin. It literally means "Indian", comprising "hind" "India", and the adjectival suffix "-ī". The word was originally used by pre-Islamic Persian merchants and ambassadors in north India to refer to any Indian language. The eleventh-century writer Abū Rayhān al-Bīrūnī used it to refer to Sanskrit.citation
contribution=The Progress of Hindi, Part 1
first=Stuart
last=McGregor
page=912
url=http://books.google.com/books?id=xowUxYhv0QgC&pg=RA1-PA912&vq=%22the+progress+of+hindi%22&dq=0520228219&sig=cxoU04ikzkQAgcCaye1dMooeEns
in Pollock (2003)] By the 13th century, "Hindi", along with its variant forms "Hindavi" and "Hindui", had acquired a more specific meaning: the "linguistically mixed speech of Delhi, which came into wide use across north India and incorporated a component of Persian vocabulary". It was later used by members of the Mughal court to distinguish the local vernacular of the Delhi region where the court was located from Persian, which was the official language of the court. [cite book
first=Andrew
last=Dalby
title=Dictionary of Languages: The Definitive Reference to More Than 400 Languages
isbn=0231115695
page=p. 248
location=New York
publisher=Columbia University Press
year=2004
edition=Revised edition
]

Evidence from the 17th century indicates that the language then called "Hindi" existed in two differing styles: among Muslims it was liable to contain a larger component of Persian-derived words and would be written down in a script derived from Persian, while among Hindus it used a vocabulary more influenced by Sanskrit and was written in Devanagari script. These styles eventually developed into modern Urdu and modern Hindi respectively. However the word "Urdu" was not used until around 1780: before then the word "Hindi" could be used for both purposes.citation
contribution=A Long History of Urdu Literarature, Part 1
first=Shamsur Rahman
last=Faruqi
url=http://books.google.com/books?id=xowUxYhv0QgC&pg=PA806&vq=%22Urdu%22+as+a+name+for+the+language&dq=0520228219&sig=dCsukF44BlAtQomOWT3v3ZZRJpk
page=806
in Pollock (2003).] The use of "Hindi" to designate what would now be called "Urdu" continued as late as the early twentieth century. Although"Hindī" as taken to mean "Indian" is sometimes still used,cite web|url = http://www.dnaindia.com/report.asp?NewsID=1158597| title = Hindi-Chini bhai-bhai|publisher = Daily News & Analysis|accessdate = 2007-08-21] it has come to specifically refer to the language(s) bearing that name.

Definitions

"Hindi" as the term for a language is used in at least four different but overlapping senses: [King (1994), p. 195]

#defined regionally, Hindi languages, i.e. the dialects native to Northern India
#:in a narrower sense, the Central zone dialects, divided into Western Hindi and Eastern Hindi
#:in a wider sense, all languages native to north-central India, stretching from Rajasthani in the west and Pahari in the northwest to Bihari in the east.
#defined historically, the literary dialects of Hindi literature, that is, historical regional standards such as Braj Bhasha and Avadhi.
#defined as a single standard language, Modern Standard Hindi, or "High Hindi", that is, highly Sanskritized "Khari boli"
# defined politically, "Hindi" is any dialect of the region that is not Urdu. This usage originates in the Hindi-Urdu controversy in the 19th century, and is that adopted by the official Indian census (as of 1991), which includes as "Hindi" a wide variety of dialects of the Hindi belt (adding up to a fraction native speakers of 40% of the total population), but lists Urdu as a separate language (with 5.8% native speakers).

History

Like many other modern Indian languages, it is believed that Hindi had been evolved from Sanskrit, by way of the Middle Indo-Aryan Prakrit languages and Apabhramsha of the Middle Ages. Though there is no consensus for a specific time, Hindi originated as local dialects such as Braj, Awadhi and finally Khari Boli after the turn of tenth century. [Shapiro, M: "Hindi".] In the span of nearly a thousand years of Muslim influence, such as when Muslim rulers controlled much of northern India during the Delhi Sultanate and the Mughal Empire, many Persian and Arabic words were absorbed into khari boli and was called Urdu or Hindustani. Since almost all Arabic words came via Persian, they do not preserve the original phonology of Arabic.

Hindi is contrasted with Urdu in the way both are written, and the use of Sanskrit vocabulary in higher registers. Urdu is the official language of Pakistan and also an official language in some parts of India. The primary differences between the two are the way Standard Hindi is written in Devanagari and draws its "vocabulary" with words from (Indo-Aryan) Sanskrit, while Urdu is written in Urdu script, a variant of the (Semitic) Perso-Arabic script, and draws heavily on Persian and Arabic "vocabulary." Vocabulary is in quotes here since it is mostly the literary vocabulary that shows this visible distinction with the everyday vocabulary being essentially common between the two. To a common unbiased person, both Hindi and Urdu are same (Hindustani) though politics of religion and ethnicity portrays them as two separate languages since they are written in two entirely different scripts. (See Hindi-Urdu controversy.) Interestingly, if Urdu is written in Devanagari script, it will be assumed as Hindi and vice versa. The popular examples are Bollywood songs and ghazals. Hindi is spoken mainly in northern states of Delhi, Haryana, Uttarakhand, Uttar Pradesh, Madhya Pradesh, Chattisgarh, Himachal Pradesh, Jharkhand and Bihar, but is understood alongside regional languages like Punjabi or Telugu throughout India.

Varieties and registers

Hindi languages

The "Hindi languages" in the widest sense of all dialects native to the "Hindi belt" accounts for 486 million (including Maithili [12 M] and Urdu [51 M] ) native speakers (2001 Indian census), consisting of:
*Central zone
**Western Hindi (West Central zone)
***258 M: Khariboli
***52 M: Urdu (counted separately in the official census)
***8 M: Haryanvi
***6 M: Kanauji
**Eastern Hindi (East Central zone)
***20 M: Awadhi
*** 11 M: Chhattisgarhi
*18 M: Rajasthani (Western Zone)
*Bihari (Eastern zone)
**12 M: Maithili (since 2003 recognized as a separate scheduled language)
**33 M: Bhojpuri
**13 M: Magadhi
**2 M: Sadri
*7 M: Pahari (Northern zone) (excludes Dogri and Nepali)

Khari boli

"Khari boli" or "straight dialect" is the term for the Western Hindi dialect of the Delhi region, which since the later 17th century (Mughal period) has emerged as the prestige dialect. "Khari boli" includes several standardized registers, including:

*Urdu, historically the "language of the court", a Persianized register
*Rekhta, a heavily Persianized and Arabized register used in Urdu poetry
*Dakhni, the historical literary register of the Deccan region
*Standard Hindi, a heavily Sanskritzed register created in the 19th century (colonial period) as a counter-proposal contrasted to Urdu in the Hindi-Urdu controversy.

Modern Standard Hindi

After independence, the Government of India worked on standardizing Hindi, instituting the following changes:
*standardization of Hindi grammar: In 1954, the Government of India set up a committee to prepare a grammar of Hindi; The committee's report was released in 1958 as "A Basic Grammar of Modern Hindi"
*standardization of Hindi spelling
*standardization of the Devanagari script by the Central Hindi Directorate of the Ministry of Education and Culture to bring about uniformity in writing and to improve the shape of some Devanagari characters.
*scientific mode of transcribing the Devanagari alphabet
*incorporation of diacritics to express sounds from other languages.

Hindi and Urdu

The term Urdu arose in 1645. Until then, and even after 1645, the term Hindi or Hindawi was used in a general sense for the dialects of central and northern India.

There are two fundamental distinctions between standard Urdu and standard Hindi that lead to their being recognised as distinct languages:
*the source of borrowed vocabulary (Persian/Arabic for Urdu and Sanskrit for Hindi); and
*the script used to write them (for Urdu, an adaptation of the Perso-Arabic alphabet written in Nasta'liq style; for Hindi, an adaptation of the Devanagari script).

Colloquially and linguistically, the distinction between the Urdu and Hindi is insignificant. This is true for the northern half of the Indian subcontinent, wherever neither learned vocabulary nor writing is used.Outside the Delhi dialect area, the term "Hindi" is used in reference to the local dialect, which may be different from both Hindi and Urdu.

The word "Hindi" has many different uses; confusion of these is one of the primary causes of debate about the identity of Urdu. These uses include:
#standardised Hindi as taught in schools throughout India,
#formal or official Hindi advocated by Purushottam Das Tandon and as instituted by the post-independence Indian government, heavily influenced by Sanskrit,
#the vernacular nonstandard dialects of Hindustani/Hindi-Urdu as spoken throughout much of India and Pakistan, as discussed above,
#the neutralised form of the language used in popular television and films, or
#the more formal neutralized form of the language used in broadcast and print news reports.

The rubric "Hindi" is often used as a catch-all for those idioms in the North Indian dialect continuum that are not recognised as languages separate from the language of the Delhi region. Panjabi, Bihari, and Chhatisgarhi, while sometimes recognised as being distinct languages, are often considered dialects of Hindi. Many other local idioms, such as the Bhili languages, which do not have a distinct identity defined by an established literary tradition, are almost always considered dialects of Hindi. In other words, the boundaries of "Hindi" have little to do with mutual intelligibility, and instead depend on social perceptions of what constitutes a language.

The other use of the word "Hindi" is in reference to Standard Hindi, the "Khari boli" register of the Delhi dialect of Hindi (generally called Hindustani) with its direct loanwords from Sanskrit. Standard Urdu is also a standardized form of Hindustani. Such a state of affairs, with two standardized forms of what is essentially one language, is known as a diasystem.

Urdu was earlier called "Zabān-e-Urdū-e-Mu`allah" (زبانِ اردوِ معلہ, ज़बान-ए उर्दू-ए मुअल्लह), lit., the "Exalted Language of the Camp". Earlier, the terms "Hindi" and "Urdu" were used interchangeably even by Urdu poets like Mir and Mirza Ghalib of the early 19th century (more often, however, the terms Hindvi/Hindi were used). By 1850, Hindi and Urdu were no longer used for the same language. Other linguists such as [http://www.nagpuronline.com/people/language.html Sir G. A. Grierson] (1903) have also claimed that Urdu is simply a dialect or style of Western Hindi. Before the Partition of India, Delhi, Lucknow, Aligarh and Hyderabad used to be the four literary centers of Urdu — none of which lie in present Pakistan.

The colloquial language spoken by the people of Delhi is indistinguishable by ear, whether it is called Hindi or Urdu by its speakers. The only important distinction at this level is in the script: if written in the Perso-Arabic script, the language is generally considered to be Urdu, and if written in devanagari it is generally considered to be Hindi. However, since independence the formal registers used in education and the media have become increasingly divergent in their vocabulary. Where there is no colloquial word for a concept, Standard Urdu uses Perso-Arabic vocabulary, while Standard Hindi uses Sanskrit vocabulary. This results in the official languages being heavily Sanskritized or Persianized, and nearly unintelligible to speakers educated in the other standard (as far as the formal vocabulary is concerned).

These two standardised registers of Hindustani have become so entrenched as separate languages that many extreme-nationalists, both Hindu and Muslim, claim that Hindi and Urdu have always been separate languages. The tensions reached a peak in the Hindi-Urdu controversy in 1867 in the then United Provinces during the British Raj. However, there were and are unifying forces as well. For example, it is said that Indian Bollywood films are made in "Hindi", but the language used in most of them is the same as that of Urdu speakers in Pakistan.

Phonology

Writing system

Hindi is written in Devanagari script.

Grammar

Literature

Hindi films play an important role in popular culture. The dialogues and songs of Hindi films use "Khariboli" and Hindi-Urdu in general, but the intermittent use of various dialects such as Awadhi, Rajasthani, Bhojpuri, Punjabi and quite often Bambaiya Hindi, as also of many English words, is common.

"Alam Ara" (1931), which ushered in the era of "talkie" films in India, was a Hindustani film. This film had seven songs in it. Music soon became an integral part of Hindustani/ Hindi cinema. It is a very important part of popular culture and now comprises an entire "genre" of popular music. So popular is film music that songs filmed even 50-60 years ago are a staple of radio/TV and are generally very familiar to an Indian.

Hindi movies and songs are popular in many parts of India, such as Punjab, Gujarat and Maharashtra, that do not speak Hindi as a native language. Indeed, the Hindi film industry is largely based at Mumbai (Bombay), in the Marathi-speaking state of Maharashtra. Hindi films are also popular abroad, especially in Pakistan, Afghanistan, Nepal, Bangladesh, Thailand, Iran and the UK, and are receiving an emerging fanbase in the rest of Asia-Pacific. These days Hindi movies are released worldwide and have large audience in Americas, Europe and Middle Eastern countries too.

The role of radio and television in propagating Hindi beyond its native audience cannot be overstated. Television in India was controlled by the central government until the proliferation of satellite TV rendered regulation redundant. During the era of control, Hindi predominated on both radio and TV, enjoying more air-time than local languages. After the advent of satellite TV, several private channels emerged to compete with the government's official TV channel. Today, a large number of satellite channels provide viewers with much variety in entertainment. These include soap operas, detective serials, horror shows, dramas, cartoons, comedies, host shows for Hindi songs, Hindu mythology and documentaries.

Hindi books has also played a big role in making Hindi a popular spoken language world wide.

See also

* Hindi languages
* Hindi literature
* Hindi belt
* History of Hindi
* Anti-Hindi agitations
* Hindi Wikipedia
* Hinglish
* Languages of India and Official languages of India
* List of Indian languages by total speakers
* Complex Text Layout languages

References

Notes

Bibliography

*Bhatia, Tej K. "Colloquial Hindi: The Complete Course for Beginners". London, UK & New York, NY: Routledge, 1996. ISBN 0-415-11087-4 (Book), 0415110882 (Cassettes), 0415110890 (Book & Cassette Course)
*Harvard reference
last=Gordon
first=Raymond G., Jr. (ed.)
year=2005
chapter= [http://www.ethnologue.com/show_language.asp?code=hin Hindi]
title=Ethnologue: Languages of the World
place= Dallas
publisher=SIL International
edition= 15th
.
*Grierson, G. A. "Linguistic Survey of India" Vol I-XI, Calcutta, 1928, ISBN 81-85395-27-6
*Hock, Hans H. (1991), "Principles of Historical Linguistics", Walter de Gruyter, Berlin–New York, ISBN 3-11-012962-0
*Koul, Omkar N. (1994). "Hindi Phonetic Reader".Delhi: Indian Institute of Language Studies.
*Koul, Omkar N. (2008). "Modern Hindi Grammar". Springfield: Dunwoody Press.
*McGregor, R. S. (1977), "Outline of Hindi Grammar", 2nd Ed., Oxford University Press, Oxford-Delhi, ISBN 0-19-870008-3 (3rd ed.)
*Harvard reference
last=Masica
first=Colin
authorlink=Colin Masica
year=1991
title=The Indo-Aryan Languages
place= Cambridge
publisher=Cambridge University Press
isbn=9780521299442
url=http://books.google.com/books?id=J3RSHWePhXwC&printsec=frontcover&dq=indo-aryan+languages
.
*Harvard reference
first=Manjari
last=Ohala
chapter=Hindi
editor=International Phonetic Association
date=1999
title=Handbook of the International Phonetic Association: a Guide to the Use of the International Phonetic Alphabet
publisher=Cambridge University Press
url=http://books.google.com/books?id=33BSkFV_8PEC&pg=PA100&vq=%22manjari+ohala%22&dq=%22handbook+of+the+international+phonetic+association%22&sig=sDM59_awCtRXNVwRrx-0jcqollw
pages=100-103
isbn=9780521637510
.
*cite book
title=Literary Cultures in History: Reconstructions from South Asia
isbn=0520228219
first=Sheldon I (ed.)
last=Pollock
location=Berkeley, CA
publisher=University of California Press
year=2003

*Harvard reference
last=Shapiro
first=Michael C.
year=2001
chapter=Hindi
editor1-last= Garry
editor1-first= Jane
editor2-last= Rubino
editor2-first= Carl
title=An encyclopedia of the world's major languages, past and present
publisher=New England Publishing Associates
pages=305-309
.
*Harvard reference
last=Shapiro
first=Michael C.
year=2003
chapter=Hindi
url=http://books.google.com/books?id=jPR2OlbTbdkC&pg=PA250&dq=indo-aryan&sig=cUNurxJKkTLfKf8uiMd7pWX2RC0
editor1-last= Cardona
editor1-first= George
editor2-last= Jain
editor2-first= Dhanesh
title=The Indo-Aryan Languages
publisher=Routledge
isbn=9780415772945
pages=250-285
.
*Harvard reference
last1= Snell
first1= Rupert
last2= Weightman
first2= Simon
year=1989
title=Teach Yourself Hindi
publisher=McGraw-Hill
edition= 2003
isbn=9780071420129
.
*Taj, Afroz (2002) " [http://www.ncsu.edu/project/hindi_lessons/ A door into Hindi] ". Retrieved November 8, 2005.
*Tiwari, Bholanath ( [1966] 2004) "हिन्दी भाषा (Hindī Bhāshā)", Kitāb Mahal, Allahabad, ISBN 81-225-0017-X.

Dictionaries

*Harvard reference
last=McGregor
first=R.S.
year=1993
title=Oxford Hindi-English Dictionary
publisher=Oxford University Press, USA
edition= 2004
.

Further reading

*Bhatia, Tej K "A History of the Hindi Grammatical Tradition". Leiden, Netherlands & New York, NY : E.J. Brill, 1987. ISBN 90-04-07924-60

External links

*
* [http://india.gov.in/knowindia/official_language.php The Union: Official Language]
* [http://www.unicode.org/charts/PDF/U0900.pdf Official Unicode Chart for Devanagari (PDF)]
* [http://www.iit.edu/~laksvij/language/hindi.html Romanized to Unicode Hindi transliterator]
* [http://hi.wikipedia.org/wiki/Web_Hindi_Resources Web Hindi Resources]
* [http://wikitravel.org/en/Hindi_phrasebook Hindi Phrasebook] - ( Wikitravel )
* [http://www.shabdkosh.com English Hindi Dictionary]

* [http://www.hindinet.co.cc Hindi Internet]


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