Sanskrit
ancient Indo-Aryan language of South Asia From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Sanskrit is an ancient Indo-European language. Many languages in South Asia are derived from Sanskrit.[3] Today, only about 14,000 people use it as their daily language.[1]
Sanskrit | |
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संस्कृतम् saṃskṛtam | |
![]() The word Sanskrit (संस्कृतम्) written in Devanagari. | |
Region | South Asia |
Native speakers | 14,000[1] (2001) |
Indo-European
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No native script.[2] Today it is usually written in Devanagari, but it was also previously written in various Brāhmī-based scripts. | |
Official status | |
Official language in | One of the 22 scheduled languages of India. |
Language codes | |
ISO 639-1 | sa |
ISO 639-2 | san |
ISO 639-3 | san |
Part of a series on | |
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Constitutionally recognised languages of India | |
Category | |
Scheduled Languages | |
A
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Related | |
Official languages of India
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Sanskrit is a standardized dialect of Old Indo-Aryan and has a linguistic ancestry that can be traced back to Proto-Indo-European. The Indo-European Aryan migration theory proposes that the Indo-Europeans migrated from the Central Asian steppes into South Asia during the early 2nd millennium BC and brought the Indo-European language Sanskrit with them.[4] The main script used to write Sanskrit today is Devanāgarī. Historically, it was also written in the Kharoshti and Brahmic scripts.[5]
William Jones, working as a judge in India in the 18th century, studied Sanskrit and recognised its similarities to Latin, Greek and other European languages. That led to the Indo-European languages being recognised as a group of related languages stretching from Europe to India.
It is also one of the 22 officially recognised languages of India. [source?]
Literature
Sanskrit literature includes poetry and drama and has also scientific, technical, philosophical and religious texts.[6][7] Sanskrit continues to be widely used as a sacred language in Hindu religious rituals, and also some Buddhist and Jain practice in the form of hymns and chants.
Grammar
Sanskrit has a very complex grammar, with eight grammatical cases, three grammatical genders, and three grammatical numbers. Words are also described based on their qualities. Sanskrit is considered highly scientific, words in a sentence can describe the subject's number, gender and action.
References
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