Difference between revisions of "Hindi"
From Conservapedia
Tolkiendil (Talk | contribs) (cat) |
DavidB4-bot (Talk | contribs) (→See also: clean up & uniformity) |
||
| (6 intermediate revisions by 5 users not shown) | |||
| Line 1: | Line 1: | ||
| − | '''Hindi''' is one official language of the union government of India. It is an [[Indo-European]] | + | '''Hindi''' is one official language of the union government of India. It is an [[Indo-European language]] that is spoken mainly in northern and central India. |
| − | Hindi syntax is distinctive because it relies on ''incorporation'', a process in which | + | Hindi [[Grammar#Syntax|syntax]] is distinctive because it relies on ''incorporation'', a process in which [[verb]]s and direct objects fuse into a single unit. This structure is common to almost all of the world's languages; however, it is very rare in the Indo-European family. Its presence in Hindi is probably due to the influence of neighboring Dravidian languages. |
| − | Hindi phonology is more typical for Indo-European languages. The most distinctive characteristics for English speakers are the presence of aspirated voiced stops (''bh'', ''dh'', ''gh'') and contrastive lexical tones. | + | Hindi [[phonology]] is more typical for Indo-European languages. The most distinctive characteristics for English speakers are the presence of aspirated voiced stops (''bh'', ''dh'', ''gh'') and contrastive lexical tones. |
| − | {{ | + | ==See also== |
| + | {{Indian philosophy topics}} | ||
| − | [[Category:Indo- | + | [[Category:Indo-Iranian languages]] |
[[Category:India]] | [[Category:India]] | ||
Latest revision as of 05:17, July 12, 2016
Hindi is one official language of the union government of India. It is an Indo-European language that is spoken mainly in northern and central India.
Hindi syntax is distinctive because it relies on incorporation, a process in which verbs and direct objects fuse into a single unit. This structure is common to almost all of the world's languages; however, it is very rare in the Indo-European family. Its presence in Hindi is probably due to the influence of neighboring Dravidian languages.
Hindi phonology is more typical for Indo-European languages. The most distinctive characteristics for English speakers are the presence of aspirated voiced stops (bh, dh, gh) and contrastive lexical tones.
See also
| ||||||||