The People of India project, a massive exercise carried out by the Anthropological Survey of India, has generated a wealth of information on the hundreds of communities, castes and tribes which exist in this country. The subjects covered include culture, society, location, language, script, biological variation, educational level, impact of development, food habits, rituals, and work practices.
For the present volume, project information was collected on the languages spoken and the scripts used within a kin group, at home and outside. Data was generated on community-specific languages (325), and on the scripts (25) in present use.
The authors show that Indian languages derive strongly from the ethnic community or the territory in which the language is used. They also show the distribution of different language families, and the larger spread of languages such as Hindi, Marwari, Urdu and Telugu. They suggest that in language-contact situations, the incidence of bilingualism and multilingualism is very high. For example, many tribals speak more than three or four languages; moreover, there is evidence of considerable linguistic heterogeneity even within communities.
All the States and Union Territories of India are multilingual, despite the dominance in each of speakers of the scheduled languages. The language situation is extremely dynamic, with new languages evolving to serve as the lingua franca in several areas.
The data set being presented in this volume has been described as the third major contribution to the survey of Indian languages, alongside G. A. Grierson's work for the Linguistic Survey of India and the body of information generated by the Census of India. The People of India project on languages also forms the first comprehensive and definitive database of the languages and scripts used by communities all over India.
"synopsis" may belong to another edition of this title.
The authors show that Indian languages derive strongly from the ethnic community or the territory in which the language is used. They also show the distribution of different language families, and the larger spread of languages such as Hindi, Marwari, Urdu and Telugu. They suggest that in language-contact situations, the incidence of bilingualism is very high. For example, many tribals speak more than three to four languages; moreover, there is evidence of considerable linguistic heterogeneity even within communities.
"About this title" may belong to another edition of this title.
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Condition: Fair. Volume 9. This is an ex-library book and may have the usual library/used-book markings inside.This book has hardback covers. Clean from markings. In fair condition, suitable as a study copy. Dust jacket in poor condition. Please note the Image in this listing is a stock photo and may not match the covers of the actual item,850grams, ISBN:0195633520. Seller Inventory # 9867836
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Hardcover met stofomslag. Condition: Good. Titel: People of India- Languages and Scripts. Jaar van uitgave: 1993. Taal: Engels. Boek zeer goed. Stofomslag strak met sporen randen. Enkele gebruik-/opslagsporen. Seller Inventory # 169770
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