How Many Language's Can You Speak????

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Re: how many languages

what are 'kromo inggil', 'ngoko', 'kromo alus'. Is Betawi a Malay language too?
:sl:
kromo inggil is how we should talk toward the sultans or higher caste person in central java
kromo alus is how we should talk toward the elder in central java
and ngoko is how we should talk toward our peer in java
betawi is also derived from Malay and China (mostly for Jakartan only)
 
Re: how many languages

alahamdulilaah i speak two languages, English and Somali and a little bit of swahili and now am tring to learn arabic insha allah
 
Re: how many languages

:sl:
kromo inggil is how we should talk toward the sultans or higher caste person in central java
kromo alus is how we should talk toward the elder in central java
and ngoko is how we should talk toward our peer in java
betawi is also derived from Malay and China (mostly for Jakartan only)

My late grandmother, she's Orang Betawi. When she was a baby, her parents divorced and the father brought her to Penang. Then he married a Malay woman. My late grandmother was raised up as Penangite Malay. She doesn't speak Betawi at all. But she loves to cook dishes which have 'tempe'.
 
Re: how many languages

My late grandmother, she's Orang Betawi. When she was a baby, her parents divorced and the father brought her to Penang. Then he married a Malay woman. My late grandmother was raised up as Penangite Malay. She doesn't speak Betawi at all. But she loves to cook dishes which have 'tempe'.
:sl:
Subhanallah. Nice to hear that:)
I am trying to give u a bit sense of Betawi language. The words below has the same meaning.

Malay: Takpe
Indonesia: Tidak apa-apa
kromo inggil: mboten menopo
kromo alus: mboten ngopo-ngopo
ngoko: ora opo-opo
Betawi: kagak ngape-ngape
 
Re: how many languages

I can speak English, Tamil and a li'l hindi and can read arabic....


Here is something about my contry too


Major Indian Languages

Sir George Grierson's twelve-volume Linguistic Survey of India , published between 1903

and 1923, identified 179 languages and 544 dialects. The 1921 census listed 188 languages

and forty-nine dialects. The 1961 census listed 184 "mother tongues," including those with

fewer than 10,000 speakers. This census also gave a list of all the names of mother tongues

provided by the respondents themselves; the list totals 1,652 names. The 1981 census--the

last census to tabulate languages--reported 112 mother tongues with more than 10,000

speakers and almost 1 million people speaking other languages. The encyclopedic People of

India series, published by the government's Anthropological Survey of India in the 1980s

and early 1990s, identified seventy-five "major languages" within a total of 325 languages

used in Indian households. In the early 1990s, there were thirty-two languages with 1 million

or more speakers

Determining what should be called a language or a dialect is more a political than a linguistic

question. Sometimes the word language is applied to a standardized and prestigious form,

recognized as such over a large geographic area, whereas the word dialect is used for the

various forms of speech that lack prestige or that are restricted to certain regions or castes

but are still regarded as forms of the same language. Its found that there are over 1600

dialects in India.

Here is a list of those Indian languages spoken by more than a million people. English is

spoken as a second language by more than ten million Indians. The highlighted links lead to

documents on this server. These documents list resources available on the net on the

language. Some of these resources are common to all Indian languages; they are also listed

seperately.

ASSAMESE
14,604,000 in India (1994 IMA); a few in Bangladesh (1991 D. Barrett SB). Assam,

Meghalaya, Arunachal Pradesh. Also in Bhutan. State language of Assam. Bengali script.
AWADHI
20,000,000 in India (1951 census); 540,000 in Nepal (1993 Johnstone); 20,316,950 in all

countries. Bihar, Madhya Pradesh, Uttar Pradesh, Kanpur, Delhi. Awadhi is the standard

for literature. There is considerable epic literature. "Kosali" is a name used for the Eastern

Hindi group. Caribbean Hindi is related to Awadhi.
BAGRI
1,721,000 in India (1994 IMA); 200,000 in Pakistan (1993); 1,921,000 in all countries.

Punjab, Rajasthan, Haryana, Madhya Pradesh. Nomadic between Pakistan and India.
BENGALI
67,200,000 in India (1994 IMA); 100,000,000 in Bangladesh (1994 UBS); 70,000 in

United Arab Emirates (1986); 600 in Singapore; 189,000,000 in all countries (1995 WA).

West Bengal and neighboring states. State language of West Bengal. Bengali script.
BHILI
1,600,000 (1986 MARC); 5,624,000 including languages in the Bhil group (1994 IMA).

Kotvali 12,688 (1994 IMA). Andhra Pradesh, Madhya Pradesh, Bihar, Gujarat, Jammu,

Kashmir, Maharashtra, Karnataka, Punjab, Rajasthan, Tripura; mountainous areas.

Connecting link between Gujarati and Rajasthani. 'Bhil' is an ethnic designation.
BHOJPURI
23,375,000 in India (1994 IMA); 1,370,000 in Nepal (1993); 25,000,000 in all countries.

Bihar Purnea area, Assam, Delhi, Madhya Pradesh, Uttar Pradesh, West Bengal. The

cover term "Bihari" is used for Bhojpuri, Maithili, and Magahi. Kaithi script.
CHHATTISGARHI
10,985,000 including 10,910,000 Chattisgarhi (1994 IMA), 75,156 Laria (1994 IMA).

Madhya Pradesh, Bihar, Orissa, and possibly in Maharashtra, Uttar Pradesh, and Tripura.

Devanagari script. Used in newspapers, radio, TV. Speakers use Hindi or Oriya as second

languages.
DECCAN
10,709,800 (1990). Central Maharashtra, Deccan Plateau. Distinct from Deccan (Dakhini,

Mirgan) dialect of Urdu.
DOGRI-KANGRI
2,095,280, including 2,005,000 Dogri (1994 IMA), 90,279 Kangri (1994 IMA). The

home area is in the outer hills and strip of plain in Jammu and Kashmir between the Ravi and

Chenab Rivers. Central states from north to south; West Bengal, Chandigarh, Himachal

Pradesh (Kangra and Hamirpur districts). Urdu (middle aged and older), Hindi (school,

shops, cities), and Punjabi (shops) are spoken as additional languages for certain purposes.

Radio programs.
GARHWALI
2,081,756 (1994 IMA). Kashmir, Uttar Pradesh.
GUJARATI
43,312,000 in India (1994 IMA); 140,000 in United Kingdom (1979 Wagner and

Dayton); 6,203 in Fiji; 9,600 in Zimbabwe (1973); 12,000 in Zambia (1985); 147,000 in

Uganda (1986); 5,000 in Malawi (1993); 50,000 in Kenya (1995); 800 in Singapore

(1985); 44,000,000 in all countries. Gujarat, Maharashtra, Rajasthan, Karnataka, Madhya

Pradesh. Also in Bangladesh, South Africa, Pakistan, Reunion. State language of Gujarat.

Gujarati script.
HARYANVI
13,000,000 or 85% of Haryan population of 16,000,000 (1992 SIL), including 102,348

Haryanvi proper (1994 IMA); 154,340 Mewati (1994 IMA). Haryana, Punjab,

Karnataka, Delhi, Himachal Pradesh, Uttar Pradesh. "Bangru" now used for speakers in

Jind area. "Khadar" is used by speakers in Jind to refer to the speech of Rohtak and

Sonepat. "Bagdi" is the variety used around Fatehabad and Sirsa, and south of Bhiwani

(distinct from the Wagdi language in southern Rajasthan). Intelligibility among dialects is

good, but not intelligible with Hindi, the closest language. Speakers of all ages. Hindi is used

as second language; some bilingual ability in all social groups for education and contact with

non-Haryanvi speakers.
HINDI
180,000,000 in India (1991 UBS); 346,513,000 or nearly 50% including second language

users in India (1994 IMA); 346,000 in Bangladesh (1993); 26,253 in USA (1970 census);

685,170 in Mauritius; 890,292 in South Africa; 232,760 in Yemen; 147,000 in Uganda;

5,000 in Singapore; 2,900 in Nepal; 11,200 in New Zealand (1987); 24,500 in Germany

(1984 Time); 182,000,000 in all countries or more. 418,000,000 including second language

users (1995 WA). Throughout northern India. Also in Kenya, United Arab Emirates,

United Kingdom. Hindi, Hindustani, Urdu could be considered co-dialects, but have

important sociolinguistic differences. Hindi uses the Devanagari writing system, and formal

vocabulary is borrowed from Sanskrit, de-Persianized, de-Arabicized. Literary Hindi, or

Hindi-Urdu, has four varieties: Hindi (High Hindi, Nagari Hindi, Literary Hindi, Standard

Hindi); Urdu; Dakhini; Rekhta. State language of Delhi, Uttar Pradesh, Rajasthan, Punjab,

Madhya Pradesh, Bihar, Haryana, Himachal Pradesh. Languages and dialects in the

Western Hindi group are Hindustani, Bangaru, Braj Bhasha, Kanauji, Bundeli.
HO
1,026,000 in India (1994 IMA); 444,000 in Singhbhum, Devanagari script area; 203,000

in Orissa, Oriya script area (1990 UBS). Mainly in Singhbhum District of Bihar, and

Mayurbhanj and Koenjhar districts of Orissa. Also in West Bengal and Bangladesh.

Language use is vigorous in home and community in most areas. Oriya, Santali, and Hindi

are used in limited domains. Grammar, dictionary. "Kherwari" (Khanwar, Kharar, Kharoali,

Kharwari) is a group name for Ho, Mundari, and Santhali, which are closely related

languages, and some other smaller languages or dialects. Distinct from Ho (Hani) of

Myanmar, China, Vietnam, Laos.
KANAUJI
6,000,000 (1977 Voegelin and Voegelin). Uttar Pradesh.
KANNADA
33,663,000 (1994 IMA); 44,000,000 including second language users (1995 WA).

Karnataka, Andhra Pradesh, Tamil Nadu, Maharashtra. State language of Karnataka.

Kannada script; similar to Telugu script.
KASHMIRI
4,161,000 in India (1994 IMA); 105,000 in Pakistan (1993); 115,000 in United Kingdom

(1991); 4,381,000 in all countries. Jammu and Kashmir (52.29% of the population),

Punjab, Uttar Pradesh, Delhi, Kashmir Valley. Literature can be traced to the 1400's, and

poetry is important. Persian-based script. Not used in primary education. Urdu and English

are used as second languages.
KHANDESI
2,246,105 including 742,111 Ahirani (1994 IMA), 1,503,994 Khandesi (1994 IMA).

Maharashtra, Gujarat.
KONKANI
2,056,841 in all countries (1994 IMA). North and central coastal strip of Maharashtra,

Karnataka, Dadra and Nagar Haveli, Kerala.
KONKANI (GOANESE)
2,000,000 in all countries (1977 Voegelin and Voegelin); 3,900 in Kenya (1987). Southern

coastal strip of Maharashtra, primarily in the districts of Ratnagari and Goa; also Karnataka

and Kerala. Also in United Arab Emirates. Daldi and Chitapavani are transitional dialects

between Goanese and Standard Konkani.
KUMAONI
2,013,000 in India (1994 IMA). Assam, Bihar, Delhi, Madhya Pradesh, Uttar Pradesh,

Kumaon; Maharashtra, Nagaland. Also in Nepal.
KURUX
1,747,000 in India (1994 IMA); 2,000,000 in all countries (1995 WA). Bihar, Madhya

Pradesh, Assam, Tripura, West Bengal, Orissa. Also in Bangladesh. Related to Malto.

Distinct from Nepali Kurux.
LAMANI
1,961,000 (1994 IMA), plus 769,120 Banjari. Andhra Pradesh, Madhya Pradesh,

Himachal Pradesh, Gujarat, Tamil Nadu, Maharashtra, Karnataka, Orissa, West Bengal.

"Gormati" is self name. Each of the three dialects needs a different script: Maharashtra uses

Devanagari script, Karnatak uses Kannada script, Andhra Pradesh uses Telugu script.
MAGAHI
10,821,000 (1994 IMA). Southern districts of Bihar, eastern Patna district, northern

Chotanagpur district, and Malda district of West Bengal. Also used as a religious language.
MAITHILI
22,000,000 in India including Dahati (1981); 2,260,000 in Nepal (1993); 24,260,000 in all

countries. Bihar, Delhi, Orissa, Madhya Pradesh, Maharashtra, West Bengal. There is a

Maithili Academy. Dictionary.
MALAYALAM
33,667,000 in India (1994 IMA); 300,000 in United Arab Emirates (1986); 37,000 in

Malaysia; 10,000 in Singapore (1987); 313 in Fiji; 34,014,000 in all countries. Kerala,

Laccadive Islands, and neighboring states. Also in United Kingdom, Bahrain, Qatar. State

language of Kerala. Malayalam script.
MALVI
1,050,000 (1994 IMA). Northwest Madhya Pradesh, Maharashtra, Rajasthan, Gujarat.

Considered the standard dialect of south-eastern Rajasthani.
MARATHI
64,783,000 (1994 IMA). Maharashtra and adjacent states. The dialect situation throughout

the greater Marathi speaking area is complex. Dialects bordering other major language

areas share many features with those languages. See separate entries for dialects or closely

related languages: Konkani, Goanese, Deccan, Varhadi, Nagpuri, Ikrani, Gowlan. State

language of Maharashtra. Devanagari script.
MARWARI
12,104,000 Marwari, Rajasthani, and Mewari (1994 IMA). Gujarat, Rajasthan, Madhya

Pradesh, Punjab, Delhi, Haryana, Uttar Pradesh, throughout India. The standard form of

Rajasthani. 23 dialects. Different from Marwari of Pakistan, and from Mewati, dialect of

Haryanvi. Devanagari script.
MEITHEI
1,252,000, including 1,181,000 Meithei in India (1994 IMA), 71,414 Bishnupuriya (1994

IMA); 92,800 in Bangladesh; 6,000 in Myanmar (1931); 1,351,000 in all countries.

Assam, Manipur, Kankan; Nagaland, Tripura, Uttar Pradesh, West Bengal. 7 clans

(Ningthonia, Luwang, Angom, Moirang, Khabanaganba, Chonglei). They had an earlier

script called "Meithei Mayek".
MUNDARI
1,467,515 in India (1994 IMA), including 973,000 Mundari, 494,515 Munda; 5,700 in

Nepal (1993); 1,473,000 or more in all countries. Assam, mainly in southern and western

parts of Ranchi district in Bihar. Also in Himachal Pradesh, Madhya Pradesh, Orissa,

Tripura, West Bengal, Andaman and Nicobar Islands. Also in Bangladesh. Closely related

to Ho and Santali, but a separate language.
NEPALI
6,000,000 in India (1984 Far Eastern Economic Review); 300,000 in Bhutan (1973 Dorji);

9,900,800 in Nepal (1993); 16,200,000 in all countries. West Bengal, Darjeeling area,

Assam, Arunachal Pradesh, Bihar, Haryana, Himachal Pradesh, Uttar Pradesh.
NIMADI
1,295,000 (1994 IMA). Madhya Pradesh, Uttar Pradesh, Maharashtra.
ORIYA
30,158,000 in India (1994 IMA); 13,299 in Bangladesh (1961 census); 31,000,000 in all

countries. Orissa, Bihar, West Bengal, Assam, Andhra Pradesh. Some of the larger dialects

have many subdialects. State language of Orissa. Oriya script.
PUNJABI
25,690,000 in India (1994 IMA); 43,000 in Malaysia (1993); 10,000 in Kenya (1995);

9,677 in Bangladesh (1961 census); 1,167 in Fiji; 25,700,000 in all countries. Punjab,

Haryana, Delhi, Rajasthan, Jammu and Kashmir. Also in United Arab Emirates, Singapore,

United Kingdom. Gurmukhi script.
SADRI
1,861,965 including 1,315,710 Sadani (1994 IMA), 546,255 Nagpuria (1994 IMA);

200,000 in Bangladesh (1993); 2,062,000. Assam, Bihar, Madhya Pradesh, West Bengal,

Maharashtra, Orissa, Andaman Islands, Nagaland. Hindi, Oriya, and Bengali are used as

official languages. Dictionary. Language of wider communication among tribal groups.

Devanagari script.
SANTHALI
5,675,000 in India (1994 IMA); 100,000 in Bangladesh (1983 UBS); 40,000 in Nepal

(1985); 5,800,000 in all countries. Assam, Bihar, Orissa, Tripura, West Bengal. Also in

Bhutan. Closely related to Ho and Mundari, but a separate language.
SINDHI
2,678,000 in India (1986 MARC); 16,992,000 in Pakistan (1993); 5,000 in Singapore

(1993); 19,675,000 in all countries. Gujarat, Maharashtra, Rajasthan, Andhra Pradesh,

Bihar, Delhi, Madhya Pradesh, Orissa, Tamil Nadu, Uttar Pradesh. Also in Afghanistan.

Arabic and Gurumukhi scripts used.
TAMIL
58,597,000 in India (1994 IMA); 3,000,000 in Sri Lanka (1993); 250,000 in South

Africa; 274,218 in Malaysia (1970 census); 191,200 in Singapore (1980); 35,000 in

Germany; 7,000 in Netherlands; 22,000 in Mauritius (1993); 6,663 in Fiji; 62,000,000 or

more in all countries first language speakers; 69,000,000 including second language users

(1995 WA). Tamil Nadu and neighboring states. Also in Bahrain, Qatar, Reunion, Thailand,

United Arab Emirates, United Kingdom. State language of Tamil Nadu. Tamil script.
TELUGU
66,318,000 in India (1994 IMA); 30,000 in Malaysia (1993); 2,008 in Fiji; 300 in

Singapore (1970); 73,000,000 in all countries (1995 WA). Andhra Pradesh and

neighboring states. Also in Bahrain, United Arab Emirates. State language of Andhra

Pradesh. Telugu script.
TULU
1,856,000 (1994 IMA). Andhra Pradesh, Kerala, Tamil Nadu, Maharashtra, Karnataka,

Meghalaya.
URDU
45,773,000 in India (1994 IMA); 8,000,000 in Pakistan (1988); 3,562 in Fiji; 170,000 in

South Africa; 30,000 in Oman; 20,000 in Bahrain; 19,950 in Qatar; 16,800 in Germany;

54,000,000 or more in all countries. Jammu and Kashmir and by Muslims in many parts of

India. Also in Afghanistan, USA. "Dakhini" is freer of Persian and Arabic loans than Urdu.

Both are written in Arabic script. "Rekhta" is a form of Urdu used in poetry. State language

and medium of instruction in government schools in Jammu and Kashmir
 
asslam o alikum

i can speak urdu,punjabi,hindi,arabic,english and i can understand many other language
 

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