12 Amazing Reasons to Learn the Hindi Language in India
Hindi language, a member of the Indo-Aryan family of languages in the Indo-Iranian branch. It is India’s preferred official language, though a lot of national businesses are also made in English and other Indian languages. Nearly 425M speakers talk Hindi, in India as a first language and about 120M speak it as their second language. In South Africa, Mauritius, Bangladesh, Yemen and Uganda, significant Indian speaking communities are also found.

Sanskrit has had a strong influence on literary Hindi, which is written in the same script the Sanskrit language is written in – The Devanagari script! Its standard shape rests on the North and East of Delhi, the Khari Boli dialect. A number of languages such as the Awadhi, Bagheli, Bhojpuri, Bundeli, Chhattisgarhi, Garhwali, Haryanawi, Kanauji, Kumayuni, Magahi and Marwari, are interchangeably considered as the Hindi dialects, and so is the Braj Bhasha that was a prominent literary medium language from the 15th-19th century. Nevertheless, these so-called Hindi dialects are more precisely described as terrain languages of the ‘Hindi region’ or ‘belt’, an area extending from the North of India, in the south to the state of Madhya Pradesh. Want to learn Hindi? Click here to know more.