Linguistic Heritage of India and AsiaOmkar Nath Koul, L. Devaki Papers presented at the International Conference on the Linguistic Heritage of India and Asia at Mysore on March 6-10, 2000, organized by the institute in collaboration with Unesco. |
Common terms and phrases
accepted according become belonging bilingual census Central considered consonants context culture dialects distinction diversity dominant Dravidian English example fact factors give given grammar groups heritage Hindi Hindu identity important India Indian languages Indo-Aryan languages Indonesian influence Institute instruction knowledge Konkani learning linguistic literacy literature maintenance major Malayalam means medium Melayu mentioned minor languages mother tongue multilingual education namely nature nouns official patterns phonemes political population position Pradesh present preservation problems promotion question reference regard regional languages religion result Sanskrit scheduled schools script sentences shift Siksa Sindhi situation social society sounds South speakers speaking speech spoken standard status strategy structure Table Tamil Telugu tradition tribal languages tribes types University Urdu variety various vowels written