Introduction:
In addition to English, Spanish, Chinese, and Arabic Hindi is one of the world’s Big Five languages. It is spoken by more than a half-billion people and about half of the native speakers, mostly in northern India.
Hindi was the most common Indian language by the expulsion of the British in 1947. English remained a national language, but after 15 years of independence, it had been anticipated to be dropped from the Constitution. Both of them are now one of India’s 23 official languages. That’s just the end of the iceberg. In this culturally diverse country, more than 1,600 languages are used.
Hindi comes from Sanskrit, a historical and cultural influence as an ancient language as Greek and Latin. Many of India’s modern languages are Sanskrit and are still used as one of India’s official languages. The Vedas, the ancient recognized literary books, and the nucleus are also known as Sanskrit.
The Latin alphabet is good for learners to write Hindi, but you should also spend time in the Devanagari script.
Apparently, learning Devanagari takes a lot of time. It is more complicated than the Latin alphabet, but it’s interesting specifically for that. This name is derived from “deva” or “deity,” “Nagari” or “city.” That implies that Devanagari is a script for “religious and urban or sophisticated” ideas. You can easily read Sanskrit and Hindi if you know Devanagari.
The Hindi language is phonetic. It looks like it’s printed and a major plus in every language learning. The disadvantage for learners is that sounds in Hindi are not recognized by English speakers comfortably. They are produced by adding an h to our recognized sounds. There is therefore a sound “da” and a “dha”, sound “ka” and a “Kha”, etc.