Sprachkarte von Indien

Von LazerScorpion

20 Comments

  1. Ok-Appearance-1652 on

    Heard there’s a lot of Urdu speakers too
    Lower end of tens of millions

  2. ThermionicEmissions on

    > Kannada

    Apparently they have at least 53 words for “sorry”

  3. Bakwaas_Yapper2 on

    I’m sorry but this time the map doesn’t work AT ALL, especially if you are using a lower threshold of 1 million

    Punjabi-Dogri in all Himachal and areas like Kishtwar? local Languages like Kangri have 1 million+ speakers and more people speak Hindi than Punjabi there 
    https://en.m.wikipedia.org/wiki/Himachal_Pradesh

    For Rajasthani ,specifically Marwari is labelled in places like Malwa. Malvi and other dialects like Hadauti, all have 1 million plus speakers
    https://en.m.wikipedia.org/wiki/Rajasthani_languages

    For Hindi regions, specifically “Khariboli” is labelled. That dialect is spoken in a very localized area. Haryanvi, Bundeli etc all have 1 million plus speakers
    https://en.m.wikipedia.org/wiki/Central_Indo-Aryan_languages

    Nepali in Uttarakhand?? Why??? Garhwali, Kumaoni and Hindi all have way more speakers
    https://en.m.wikipedia.org/wiki/Uttarakhand

    For the “Bihari” belt , again with a threshold of 1 million speakers you have atleast 5-10 languages there not one
    https://en.m.wikipedia.org/wiki/Bihari_languages

  4. JohnnieTango on

    Is Bihari and Rajastani really separate from Hindustani? I have seen many maps indicating that altogether they are considered Hindi…

  5. Right-Shoulder-8235 on

    There are lots of native languages missed out in this map, which have more than 1 million speakers. Bihari is a group of languages, not a single one. Same with Rajasthani. And where are Bundeli, Bagheli, Chhattisgarhi etc which have more than 1 million speakers?

  6. In_Formaldehyde_ on

    In reality, almost everyone from Rajasthan to Bihar natively speaks Standard Hindi and idk wtf “Punjabi-Dogri” is considering Pahadi is a separate branch of languages.

  7. Substantial-Rock5069 on

    This really shows the language diversity of India in a simple way excluding the further regional dialects available.

    These people not only speak differently, have different accents when speaking English/ Hindi but also have different religious backgrounds, cultural holidays and can look very different from others.

    India, Pakistan and Afghanistan are all very diverse. More than people realise. It’s a lot more than several shades of brown.

  8. flying_samosa on

    Nice effort, but it could have been more accurate without grouping together different languages together due to mutual intelligibility. Although it is true, many of these mutually intelligible pairs are highly exaggerated in terms of their intelligibility. And even then, it is not a sure shot criteria for grouping them together. And many languages with 1 million+ speakers are left out.

  9. onlyneedthat on

    Today I learnt, Bihari is a language. I thought it was just a mindset.

  10. Old-Bread3637 on

    North East is surprising. Are there any other factors other than terrain for this please?

  11. Telugu is the only Indo European language in south India despite the Dravidian propaganda. Down votes are welcome

  12. God_Killer_01 on

    There’s no language called Bihari. The state Bihar itself has many languages and dialects. Bro just rolled dice and made the map.
    कोस कोस पर बदले पानी, चार कोस पर वाणी

  13. MasterFurious1 on

    The purple part that is Sindhi in Gujrat, should be Kutcchi. It’s more like a Dialect, of Gujrati as it doesn’t have a writing system.

  14. Himachali is not identical to punjabi. Himachal has more than 15 languages, each with their own dialects . Please stop taking drugs OP. 

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