Sanskrit
Appearance
Sanskrit | ||||
---|---|---|---|---|
संस्कृतम्saṃskṛtam | ||||
Naam ke bole ke dhang | [sə̃skɹ̩t̪əm] | |||
Spoken in | India | |||
Total speakers | 14,135 native speakers in India (2001)[1] | |||
Language family | Indo-European
| |||
Writing system | No native script.[2] Written inDevanāgarī(de facto), variousBrāhmī–basedscripts, andLatin alphabet | |||
Official status | ||||
Official language in | ![]() one of the 22scheduled languages of India | |||
Regulated by | No official regulation | |||
Language codes | ||||
ISO 639-1 | sa
| |||
ISO 639-2 | san
| |||
ISO 639-3 | san
| |||
|
![](https://upload.wikimedia.org/wikipedia/commons/thumb/3/3f/Devimahatmya_Sanskrit_MS_Nepal_11c.jpg/220px-Devimahatmya_Sanskrit_MS_Nepal_11c.jpg)
Sanskritek purani bhasha hai, aurIndo-Europeanlanguage familyme ii sab se purana hae. ise sansar ki sabse purani bhasha bhi mana jata hae. Sanskrit ke jaada kar keDevanāgarīscript me likha jaae hae.
Abhi Sanskrit ke jaada kar ke dharam ke kaamme use karaa jaae hai lekinHindustaniaurHinduPakistanislogisme hajaaro saal pahile baat karat rahin.Hindudharam ke jaada book Sanskrit me lika hai, aurBuddhistdharam (Mahayanaschool) bhi.
Dui rakam ke Sanskrit hai: Vedic and Classical.
Vedic Sanskritsab se purana Sanskrit hia, aur iske Northern India, Pakistan, Kashmir, aur Afghanistan me 1500 BC me bola jawat rahaa.Vedasbhi sanscript me likha hae.
![](https://upload.wikimedia.org/wikipedia/commons/thumb/a/a9/Phrase_sanskrit.png/220px-Phrase_sanskrit.png)
Classical Sanskritnawaa hae aur dher book isme likha hae.
Hafta ke din[badlo|source ke badlo]
Fiji Hindi | Sanskrit |
---|---|
Sombaar | soma-vaasara |
Mangar | mangala-vaasara |
Budh | budha-vaasara |
Bif | guru-vaasara |
Suk | shukra-vaasara |
Sanichar | shani-vaasara |
Etwaar | ravi-vaasara |
References[badlo|source ke badlo]
- ↑"Comparative speaker's strength of scheduled languages − 1971, 1981, 1991 and 2001".Census of India, 2001.Office of the Registrar and Census Commissioner, India.Retrieved31 December2009.
- ↑Banerji, Suresh (1971).A companion to Sanskrit literature: spanning a period of over three thousand years, containing brief accounts of authors, works, characters, technical terms, geographical names, myths, legends, and twelve appendices.p. 672.ISBN9788120800632.http://books.google.com/books?id=JkOAEdIsdUs.Template:Fix/category[dead link]
- ↑"Days of the week in Sanskrit".Archived fromthe originalon 2010-09-01.Retrieved2011-10-29.