Bharati: One Script to Write All Indian Languages

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  • Опубликовано: 24 сен 2022
  • Unlike natural languages like French, Hindi, and German - Artificial Languages are created by one person or a group of people - this can be either for entertainment, educational or artistic reasons. In this video we deep dive into some artificial languages of the world such as Esperanto, Toki Pona, Bharati and get to know more about them.
    Facebook: indiainpixels
    Twitter: / indiainpixels
    Instagram: / india.in.pixels
    Duolingo link to learn Esperanto: www.duolingo.com/course/eo/en...
    Learn Toki Pona: • 12 Days of sona pi tok...
    Learn Bharati: bharatiscript.com/
    Learn Kiliki: kiliki.in/
    Stay tuned for the Part 2 video!
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Комментарии • 759

  • @jugalkishorekalita9611
    @jugalkishorekalita9611 Год назад +555

    " Brajavali " ( Brôzawôli ) ( ব্ৰজাৱলী) was an ancient artificial language created for the normal public who can't understand sanskrit language in Assam. It is mainly consist of Axomia and Maitheli language. Used as chief language for literature during Neo Vaishnavism movement in Assam during 15th century .

    • @sampuspitakumarajiva8930
      @sampuspitakumarajiva8930 Год назад +33

      It’s ব্রজবুলী , not ব্রজাৱলি

    • @miramitra2737
      @miramitra2737 Год назад +23

      Joi aai axom. Jai hind.

    • @i.amnasim
      @i.amnasim Год назад +28

      @@sampuspitakumarajiva8930 for Assamese perspectives he's correct
      You're not wrong either I has four names all are same

    • @zank4471
      @zank4471 Год назад +18

      It's Brajavali, not Brajabali. And it's consisted of Assamese and Maithili vocabulary, not Bangla.

    • @jugalkishorekalita9611
      @jugalkishorekalita9611 Год назад +10

      @@zank4471 Actually in proper word it will be " Brajawali" ( Brôzawôli ) . Only Srimanta Sankardev not created this language , actually all the poet and intellectual used this language that's why we can't give sole credit to Sankardev ( since you have mentioned in one of your comment) . And you are right it's not include bangla, I'll remove it.

  • @sassy_llama5909
    @sassy_llama5909 Год назад +267

    I am so proud of this channel!
    I remember commenting months ago about how much i love languages and a fellow viewer here recommended studying conlanging to me. I went into an internet rabbit hole of researching on things and learned of all the things mentioned in this video ( though I realised artificial languages did not spark the same joy that natural languages and their history do in me😅).
    I am so grateful we are born in the internet gen and can meet so many people sharing similar interests.
    Thanks IIP for bringing content that you love!! Hope to see you grow even more ☺

    • @rjo6026
      @rjo6026 Год назад +3

      That's so true. We are grateful indeed. One year ago I knew only my native lang, Hindi and English. But then I found some videos on Internet about Polyglots and instantly I got interested in learning new languages as well as cultures of different people around the world. I hope I can travel around the world later to find more about these.

    • @gjsanu
      @gjsanu Год назад

      @@rjo6026 Sanskrit Rocks

    • @rjo6026
      @rjo6026 Год назад

      @@gjsanu absolutely.... an amazing language..... And has few similarities with the European languages as well

  • @FarhanSheikh-qs2zs
    @FarhanSheikh-qs2zs 5 месяцев назад +20

    आज से पांच साल पहले जब मैं 13 साल का था तब ही मेने अपनी खुद की लिपि (स्क्रिप्ट) बना ली थी😊
    एक ही नही कई सारी लिपिया मेरे पास अभी भी है🎉🎉🎉🎉

  • @aniketsrivastava2385
    @aniketsrivastava2385 Год назад +161

    Dude it's 8 hours now, the video which deserves to be millions of views, having thousands of views?
    Seriously? Soo much research he have done! Your efforts is really really thankless, you deserve a lot

    • @iip
      @iip  Год назад +50

      Do tell me because I genuinely am excited about these topics 😅 Do you feel the videos are too long or is the pacing too slow? I also think because I don't post very frequently, the algorithm gods don't favor me too well.

    • @thatswhatshesaid7935
      @thatswhatshesaid7935 Год назад +13

      Only Intelligent people are allowed to watch this gem

    • @ringo567
      @ringo567 Год назад +10

      I don't think majority of people will be interested in these topics. They'd rather watch mindless reels on Instagram. 😒

    • @aniketsrivastava2385
      @aniketsrivastava2385 Год назад +11

      @@iip see, am not a youtuber but yes, the thumbnail/poster of video is not that much appealing( i may be wrong here) but once the viewer, watch the whole video, he will surely understand that this video, is very unique.
      All i wanna say, you should try to make a thumbnail which is more clickbait type or more appealing( I don't know why, i feel soo small while suggesting u this)

    • @AshishSharma-zp9nw
      @AshishSharma-zp9nw Год назад +4

      @@iip your videos are never too long ashris. In fact, I feel, no matter how long they are... They always end abruptly... I wanna keep watching hahah

  • @bitupanborah8497
    @bitupanborah8497 Год назад +71

    The way you pronounced "Axomiya" was perfect bro👌🏼

  • @rajvansh2003
    @rajvansh2003 Год назад +187

    If I would make a language it will be combination of Sanskrit and Tamil as these the two oldest languages of India and that's why many many languages have originated from them. Also, it could help to bridge the gap of a unifying language in India which will have a blend of both, the northern part and the southern part.
    The language could be named -
    TAMSKRIT
    Yet to decide the script.

    • @TamalPal
      @TamalPal Год назад +2

      I dont think u saw the last part of the video before writing this

    • @rajvansh2003
      @rajvansh2003 Год назад +15

      @@TamalPal I saw that but Esperanto was about neighboring countries and countries have different governments to make laws and ban a language. But in India, this shouldn't be a problem because the two regions in which the two languages(Sanskrit and Tamil) are most popular, lie in the same country. Yes, of course, no one knows what will happen in future.

    • @AkshayShukla.
      @AkshayShukla. Год назад +24

      Kadwa sach:-
      Aaj ki unifying language English ho sakti hai, mai aisa bilkul nahi chahta ki apni bhasha chhod ki sirf English hi bolo, aisa karna bahut bura hoga, lekin just to make communication easier: english already max logon ke kafi kareeb hai.

    • @titfortatt-regionalist
      @titfortatt-regionalist Год назад +6

      Nah, it's good to have 3 languages learned in school. Tamil itself is heavily modified to make it different from Sanskrit (it was done knowingly). And if you don't want to learn Hindi, you can learn Urdu which is second official language of Telangana. If not that, then Sanskrit, the most algorithmically accurate language

    • @saaar_mk
      @saaar_mk Год назад +8

      Oh god. Not this "tamil, the oldest language" lament again. 🤣🤣

  • @Namse21
    @Namse21 Год назад +78

    Where is my Soan Papdi I guessed Esperanto... conlanger here
    Edit: Adding to the video... the features/goals of a conlang change with its function- for example a universal conlang will need to be easy to speak by multiple people so it should have common sounds (phonemes) and grammar... but for a fictional conlang can have as many bizarre features as needed but it still should remain relatively naturalistic. Also, conscripting is also called neography and it has a subreddit too :D

    • @shreyasiraha1235
      @shreyasiraha1235 Год назад +2

      I kinda guessed Esperanto but wasn't sure.

    • @yashchaudhari3113
      @yashchaudhari3113 Год назад +1

      Even I'm a conlanger lessgoo

    • @nikhil518
      @nikhil518 Год назад +2

      Fellow conlangers, assemble! For we have nothing to lose but our soan papdi

  • @zenith8972
    @zenith8972 Год назад +25

    Recently I watched a CNA insider Documentation on " Penarakan Indian " Language (a mixture of Malay, Mandarin and Tamil ) which was wisely used by Tamil merchants and their families during pre - independence Singapore.

  • @friendlyvimana
    @friendlyvimana Год назад +40

    Recently (like a month ago) I was doing some video searches about *SANSKRIT* , and stumbled across a channel which has long stopped, and had some videos about *Sanskrit* , so in one of the most amazing videos i found on that channel the speaker who was speaking about Sanskrit said that this was an *Artificial language* which is different from a language we use in normal conversation, i was soooo much intrigued when i heard that because i had always thought that no way Sanskrit with all it's complexities from grammar to it's pronunciation could've been the langua franca of any village let alone a whole Kingdom, then how and in what capacity would have this language existed in historic times in India?!!! The term 'artificial language' gave me the best lead to the probable answer, i certainly don't have the answer yet, but it is certainly verry amazing that now i have a whole video on this topic just days after i stumbled across this word.
    I wrote all of this before i saw the video, i will write abt the video after i see it.
    Edit: Aftee watching the video,
    15:32 I'm sort of going mad right now, you pulled out the *exact* video i was talking about, like man woah ,seriously?!! That was amazing.
    Here's what i ,as a random viewer want to say,
    • this was a an interesting video, the idea of having the capability to actually have a language for all of india boggles my mind, it would be amazing what are the possibilities in it, what are it's pros and cons?! It would be amazing.
    •story of Esperanto is interesting to know
    • your way of presentation (both speaking and editing) keeps me into the video, even in topics I'm bot particularly interested in, like Esperanto 😅
    • this one is my favourite point, I would wait eagerly for the next video, it's like getting a movie made, tailored according to your own personal demands, i couldn't have asked for it, but somehow you chose this topic.
    Take your time on the next one but make it with as many data points as you can, in the end, just thanks 👍 for all the time you spent reading this.
    And Thanks 🙏 for all the effort and love you have put into this video.
    *Personal message:* Almost all the RUclips channels from India , presently, can be classified into categories, everyone is doing something someone else is already doing, I'm not against it, but there's a mass shortage of quality content, if someone made a video of let's say 'doing something on omegle', next week there would 10 more channels doing something on...
    Similarly for many more 'stuff', but it seems like a gust of cool breeze to see your channel, i just want good quality stuff made in hinglish/hindi heck even Indian Accented english would do.

    • @Anjali_Chowdhury
      @Anjali_Chowdhury Год назад +5

      This is called dil kholke commenting on something

    • @friendlyvimana
      @friendlyvimana Год назад +5

      To watch the whole video on Sanskrit
      Title - *"Thinking Allowed - Sanskrit Tradition (Full)*
      This is actually a snippet from th main channel- Thinking Allowed.

    • @xbhigyxn
      @xbhigyxn Год назад +2

      ive seen or probably read somewhere (which i don't actually remember) that Sanskrit was actually constructed and reconstructed many times by the rishis/gurus for it to be a perfect language and because of that it was really hard to pronounce and people from upper(literate) classes used it mostly while speaking while lower(illiterate) class people took it as a base for the language and created many branches from it, like hindi, bengali, punjabi, nepali, bihari, etc. that's why vedic period books were written in Sanskrit.

    • @titfortatt-regionalist
      @titfortatt-regionalist Год назад +1

      @@xbhigyxn many words in Sanskrit actually matches with Mittani Kingdom's Hurrian, which was 3500 yrs ago, which means there can be some proven truth to aftermath of Mahabharata, that many clans separated and went their own way. Good prove is Lithuanian language, which is hugely similar to Sanskrit, and out of nowhere too😂

    • @gluttonousmanu2725
      @gluttonousmanu2725 Год назад

      @@friendlyvimana thnx bro

  • @roshnichauhan9859
    @roshnichauhan9859 Год назад +15

    I love how this channel has such a lot of content to give with respect to Indian languages. Eagerly waiting for more videos on language and linguistics :D

  • @pinkcrab
    @pinkcrab Год назад +28

    As usual IIP comes with a banger and I learn about something new. 👍🏽

  • @AgentSlogger
    @AgentSlogger Год назад +9

    Yep, even I learned Bharti in 15 minutes…It was so easy. Thank you so much for promoting this script. According to me the idea behind this is we think in our own language but we all can read and write in Bharti

  • @SOHAMRUNWAL
    @SOHAMRUNWAL Год назад +5

    THANK YOU FOR TEACHING SOMETHING NEW . LOVE YOUR CONTENT. SPECIALLY LOVED THE INTRO PART OF THIS VIDEO .

  • @kappaprimus
    @kappaprimus Год назад +2

    Loved the video! I was going to write critically about you calling it artificial, especially considering how they are now integrated in society and hence have a culture, regardless of when they were synthesised. But when you also reasoned it out, and moved towards calling it conlang, I could only respect the amount of research you've done for the vid
    Also (literature student here) have been working on my own language for years now, have made a vocab of 500+ words, a lot of stories (primarily mythological in nature), philosophy etc for it, simply as a creative art experiment, so this video was very educating. I also have a conscript for it, and I'm trying to consciously bring out ideologies through both script and the links between words, grammar, sentence patterns etc.
    It's really refreshing to think in an entirely new language, especially one that you're developing yourself, it provokes you to think in different perspectives and conceptualise in ways you never would, especially if you're monolingual.

  • @shamukapattnaik694
    @shamukapattnaik694 Год назад +8

    As a literature student it is very interesting to know about Conlangs. Thank you IIP for bringing such videos. It must take a lot of hard work and research.

  • @chaitanyarajdixit
    @chaitanyarajdixit Год назад +34

    I've visited the conlang subreddit, read all I could find about sanskrit and many other languages and started learning Esperanto on Duolingo about a week ago. Totally love your content, it's the perfect launching pad for curious people to learn new things about the world.
    p.s. I swear you go down the exact same rabbit holes as me lol

    • @DeepjyotiSanskrit
      @DeepjyotiSanskrit Год назад

      Please share the links of them so that I can also read. Thank You.

  • @oldsongs2414
    @oldsongs2414 Год назад +3

    संचारक के माध्यम से इतना ज़्यादा ज्ञान फैलाना जबरदस्त है!!

  • @kevinmathew7613
    @kevinmathew7613 Год назад

    This channel is epic. Love all your videos. Keep up the good work.

  • @pranesh-sekar
    @pranesh-sekar Год назад

    Wow! I absolutely love this channel. Your knowledge on languages is so great.

  • @akshara487
    @akshara487 Год назад +1

    I love your videos, great presentation. this was very informative. looking forward to the next one!

  • @Pradeepch21
    @Pradeepch21 Год назад +3

    I was not aware that something like this exist in real world. Thanks for a very informative video. Your style of explaining is so easy to understand. My 9 year old daughter watched this along and was able to follow it all 👍

  • @jraj9696
    @jraj9696 Год назад +8

    Matter of fact I am working on building a language, but it's specific to the story I am working on. So glad you made this. BTW.... throughout the video I was waiting for you to mention Sanskrit as an artificial language. Even better that you have a whole video dedicated to it✌️✌️✌️

  • @ipikluninja91
    @ipikluninja91 Год назад +2

    Your videos are always a treat to watch!! A lot to learn about different cultures. I actually liked the concept of the Bharathi conscript (will try to learn, I love learning new languages) as it can help the North-South divide (though I feel like many youngsters nowadays do not have the north south hatred like the older generations may have had). It still helps each to understand the other and develop a sense of unity without compromising another person or community's culture. I hope to see more interesting videos from you!!!

  • @akashmihir84
    @akashmihir84 Год назад

    Wow. So many things I didn't knew even though I am a language nerd. So satisfying that so good India centric content is coming up. Really appreciate your efforts.

  • @muo1kor
    @muo1kor Год назад +29

    You should include "Manipravālam"/"मणिप्रवाळं" (ruby-coral) in your second video.It is an artificial language made by mixing Sanskirt and Tamil/Old Malayalam. It is the language used in most classical arts of Kerala like the Kathakali. It even has grammar books written (līlātilakam) which specifies the correct way to mix the birth languages. Manipravālam actually means ruby-coral, as in both languages mixed indistinguishably. Modern Malayalam is actually a toned down version of Manipravālam.

    • @LoveYourself-ve2jf
      @LoveYourself-ve2jf Год назад +1

      Thank u for info. 🇮🇳

    • @spiritofecstasy1517
      @spiritofecstasy1517 Год назад +3

      Manipravalam is basically the mixture of Centamizh and Sanskrit, spoken mainly in the Western Tamizhakam region around 9th to 11th centuries and Malayalam is it's successor language. Am I right?

    • @aswalchitra
      @aswalchitra Год назад +1

      This is mentioned class 7 ncert book history too

    • @ilovemusicbyabheekjha4988
      @ilovemusicbyabheekjha4988 5 месяцев назад

      where?
      @@aswalchitra

  • @subhashanvs3229
    @subhashanvs3229 Год назад +28

    Hey, why can't we revive brahmi script. Like every Indian script evolved from brahmi. I'm sure people would really love Brahmi.
    And the ka in bharati could be telugu క or malayalam ഗ.
    And please complete the next video. I can't wait for it. Your content is like heaven for the people who love lingustics.

    • @mdahsenmirza2536
      @mdahsenmirza2536 Год назад +1

      No one is stopping you, learn it and use it, make a community, community becomes a society and lo and behold, you've revived brahmic, as for me, I just don't care, every language is made up by humans thus it doesn't matter, languages come and go, again it doesn't matter. People can associate various sentimental values and fight for language supremacy but at the end of the day, everything is temporary..

    • @subhashanvs3229
      @subhashanvs3229 Год назад +1

      @@mdahsenmirza2536 I actually know brahmi. And there are people who know and propagate brahmi. I just gave my opinion on brahmi and bharati scripts.
      Maybe for you these things doesn't matter but for me and some other people this matters. A language and script is man made but it carries their culture, history and environment. It tells the saga of the people who used it. egyptian hieroglyphs , Sumerian till this day tell their stories even after 5000 years. If we didn't pay attention to these scripts we would have known nothing about Egyptians. Linguists are working hard to decode IVC script. Everything man made is not temporary. For that matter nothing is permanent.

    • @handle0007
      @handle0007 Год назад +1

      I thought the same and ik Brahmi Script

    • @arjavgarg5801
      @arjavgarg5801 5 месяцев назад

      Devanagari is most versatile

    • @subhashanvs3229
      @subhashanvs3229 5 месяцев назад

      @@arjavgarg5801 so is any other Indian script.

  • @_piyush_gupta_
    @_piyush_gupta_ Год назад +1

    Excited for your new video.

  • @isuofficial9240
    @isuofficial9240 Год назад +4

    wow! a new video from iip!

  • @Think_Vibes
    @Think_Vibes Год назад +2

    Bhai....Yaar Ekdam Tagda Content ♥️
    1st Comment 👍👍

  • @motiyar4484
    @motiyar4484 Год назад

    Eagerly awaiting for the next video 🤯

  • @jansanpi7369
    @jansanpi7369 Год назад +3

    toki! mi jan pi toki pona! sina pona tan ni: toki pona li lon pona sitelen tawa sina. toki pona li suli mute tawa mi, ni la jan li pana e sona lili pi toki pona la mi pilin pona.
    Hello! I am a toki pona speaker! Thank you for the good representation of toki pona in your video. Toki pona is very important to me, so when people share knowledge of it, it makes me happy.

  • @sg4829
    @sg4829 Год назад

    Great work!!! It's really amazing to see that you have done a lot reasearch for this and made such a awsm video on this topic. This seems like boring and uninterested untill actually start watching and knowing the depth of it. Please keep going I wish lakhs subscriber for you.

  • @satveer4084
    @satveer4084 Год назад +1

    He also changes thumnail to check if CTR increase per impression or not! Nice stragety coz it's humanely impossible to figure out what would work handy with RUclips algorithm kudos to you my guy
    Insanely talented , informative and well documented videos.
    He had changed 3 already on same day of upload

  • @iizznoob4
    @iizznoob4 Год назад

    I was about to ask about the kaliki conlang in the comments and then you talked about it. You are simply great bro

  • @user-yl4km9wn1v
    @user-yl4km9wn1v Год назад +55

    I actually thought about the idea of building a new language to replace english in India and to unite all Indians (who have different linguistic backgrounds) under a common language. That would prevent any single Indian language gaining supremacy over others. Never knew it was actually a concept. Thank you for creating this video.

    • @titfortatt-regionalist
      @titfortatt-regionalist Год назад +10

      Actually Hindi is just for that. States like MP, UP, Rajasthan could never have any native language as official, because of their own native language tussles. So all of them chose Hindi as state language. Really glad I chose it against Urdu in my school days in Assam.

    • @simonelifestyle1409
      @simonelifestyle1409 Год назад

      Very nice thought bro

    • @user-yl4km9wn1v
      @user-yl4km9wn1v Год назад +9

      @@titfortatt-regionalist No, we already have lots of Hindiwalas who act like they own the country.

    • @titfortatt-regionalist
      @titfortatt-regionalist Год назад +3

      @@herazion in which delusion are you living kid? "Basically killed language of Bihar" 😂😂
      Says a person who wasn't even born there.
      Go get some education kid, Bihar's languages are very much intact, people are speaking Bhojpuri in MP and here you're speculating mindlessly.
      Bhojpuri songs are ruling India

    • @titfortatt-regionalist
      @titfortatt-regionalist Год назад

      @@user-yl4km9wn1v nah still better than Madrasi-chhaps who are killing their own local language while vouching for state language, but speaking English instead. Tamil/Telugu aren't the only language spoken in their respective states

  • @SwapnaRoyGhosh
    @SwapnaRoyGhosh Год назад +2

    Wow🤩 this video was so insane...
    Btw pls make a video on the most efficient way to learn a language....🙏🙏
    Love and support form West Bengal...
    🧡💟💚

  • @saranshkaushik8259
    @saranshkaushik8259 Год назад +1

    This channel is insanely soothing somehow

  • @gaurangdeodhar1720
    @gaurangdeodhar1720 Год назад +63

    I loved your video 🤩
    Me and my brother have created a conlang inspired from Marathi konkani and Spanish.
    We use is as a code language for fun. I was inspired by a Portuguese Marathi Creole (korlai, Raigad Maharashtra) .
    I'm giving some sentences here.
    Bon Dis (good day)
    M ek lang cretlo. (I have created a language.)
    Actyat m an mi bro lang cretlon. (Actually I and my brother created a language.)
    E lang će idea korlai Portuguese Creoleun Avele. (The inspiration for the language comes from korlai Portuguese Creole.)
    M e lang simpal astaće problo. (I tried to keep the language simple.)
    Pon familla gomnar no es. (But something that family won't understand.)
    Even generations of parents also had a different conlang originated from Marathi itself... You can search for it as च ची भाषा or रफ ची भाषा...

    • @finger3215
      @finger3215 Год назад +2

      Nice effort man!

    • @ashieshsharmah1326
      @ashieshsharmah1326 Год назад

      Good chumtiya western logo ki chatna na bhoolna . Aur haan sirf Spanish hi kyun bki Europeans language v dal dete . Arabic bhi dalna tha .Aur haan engliss toh dalna bhoolna hi maat unofficial baap Hain tumhara Woh . Uske baad ache se flex mariyo.

    • @simonelifestyle1409
      @simonelifestyle1409 Год назад +1

      Omg 😍😍😍😍❤️❤️❤️❤️ just wow. Brilliant..

    • @gaurangdeodhar1720
      @gaurangdeodhar1720 Год назад +1

      @@simonelifestyle1409 If you want to join us and add your inputs and vocabulary to this language...
      You can connect me through email. We could combine our efforts to make a global gen-z language.

    • @samyuktashivshankar6928
      @samyuktashivshankar6928 Год назад

      This is beautiful! Also it is amazing that I could somewhat understand it because I know marathi. So it can help with other languages too.

  • @Cash_2854
    @Cash_2854 Год назад

    OMG i was just thinking about when you are gonna upload a new video!!!

  • @anuragvats3740
    @anuragvats3740 Год назад +10

    We have made a coded language as kids. Actually i can't take credit for it as it was passed on by our grandmother. It is simple to learn and just uses a lighter encryption to whichever language you speak to make it difficult for people to understand but easy for people who know the cypher to decipher. We cousins used to use it to talk privately even when we used to be around parents and other people.

    • @poonamansari2702
      @poonamansari2702 5 месяцев назад

      Humne bhi banai thi bachpan mein ese ek language par zyada din chal nahi pai😅

  • @supasapien
    @supasapien Год назад +1

    Bhai I'm somebody who invest so much of my time in these weird quirky things. I love languages and obsessed by the oration skills. So, I really appreciate this video.
    Kahan se lata hain ye mysterious information? Till now only you and @TheActionLab have made me flummoxed by these fascinating and relatively simple information.

  • @phs125
    @phs125 Год назад +27

    Now I'm having an urge to install Duolingo again...

    • @iip
      @iip  Год назад +18

      I have loved Duolingo ever since they introduced the Stories feature! It is so fun with the characters - they've all got very unique personalities

    • @satyasankalpapanigrahi9416
      @satyasankalpapanigrahi9416 4 месяца назад

      ​@@iipDoes duolingo have india's regional languages to learn as per indian constitution - 22 official languages of India

    • @aditisk99
      @aditisk99 3 месяца назад

      ​​@satyasankalpapanigrahi9416 Duolingo is shite. You would only learn some random ass sentences. The only good thing about it is it's marketing.

    • @SunnySJamil
      @SunnySJamil Месяц назад

      Duolingo is terrible to learn how to read a foreign script.

    • @aditisk99
      @aditisk99 Месяц назад

      @SunnySJamil The only good thing about is it's marketing.

  • @SANKALPASARKAR
    @SANKALPASARKAR Год назад

    Lovely... I learned so much buddy. Awesome

  • @lakshyasingh1527
    @lakshyasingh1527 Год назад +2

    I read a lot of fantasy novels and most of the authors make many conlangs for different races or maybe some ancient language of that fantasy world. And this is one of my favorite aspect of fantasy.
    Glad you made this video.😄😄😄

  • @jagannathdas5491
    @jagannathdas5491 Год назад

    You seem to be a language lover(linguafile !? Maybe). Nice work. It takes so much effort for each of your content video and I thank you so much for going that path to give us viewers the little joy.
    चरैवेति

  • @Qwerkywoop
    @Qwerkywoop Год назад

    Amazing video bro. Learned many new things

  • @rkv08
    @rkv08 Год назад +7

    For your next idea about Sanskrit,
    Don't forget about about Vedic Sanskrit, which is a purely natural language,
    Classical Sanskrit is modified and simplified version of Vedic Sanskrit, which was done by Maharshi Panini

  • @Rupsa292
    @Rupsa292 Год назад

    Finally wait is over....Shubho mahalaya!

  • @vysakhak191
    @vysakhak191 Год назад

    Bro I started learning Esperanto two weeks back! and now I got this video in suggestion!

  • @triptee2411
    @triptee2411 Год назад

    Amazing video....Such an unique topic😀

  • @immature_guys
    @immature_guys Год назад +1

    Now I believe I am ready to learn new language. Thanks for the aspiration.

  • @nikhil_kohli
    @nikhil_kohli Год назад

    Definitely gonna learn one of these. Thanks

  • @16nikhilyadav76
    @16nikhilyadav76 Год назад

    Your voice your content everything is unique bro . This is one of the best RUclips channel .Lots of love bhaiya ❣️❣️

  • @yellotello9656
    @yellotello9656 Год назад

    Can't wait for the next video

  • @azraelwai
    @azraelwai Год назад

    Contents of this channel is very unique.

  • @mcflyyyyyy
    @mcflyyyyyy Год назад

    Love your narration. You pronounced oxomiya so nicely

  • @kanikanaithani
    @kanikanaithani Год назад +10

    Finally you posted!!!!!😭😭

    • @iip
      @iip  Год назад +7

      Yeah remembered the password 🥲

    • @kanikanaithani
      @kanikanaithani Год назад +1

      @@iip thank God!! Start posting regularly now🫂

    • @muo1kor
      @muo1kor Год назад

      @@iip by all the Gods in heaven, your videos are like the first rain after a hot summer. Please include "Manipravālam" in your next video. I'm not sure if a macaronic language is the same as a conlang, but since it's not a language of local parlance and just intended for literature, I think it meets the criteria.

    • @subhampathak08
      @subhampathak08 3 месяца назад

      ​@@iip😂😂

  • @Snehajyoti_Karan
    @Snehajyoti_Karan Год назад +4

    Also Ol Chikki( script for Santali) is a con-script. It was developed by Pandit Raghunath Murmu.
    The video is great and eagerly waiting for second part.

  • @liveanimelfy1516
    @liveanimelfy1516 Год назад

    Very informative video. Waiting for the next video as it will be on Sanskrit language.

  • @vivekraghuram2459
    @vivekraghuram2459 5 месяцев назад

    I have been thinking on this topic on and off for some years now. Very nice video. I've had the privilege of attending lectures by Prof. Chakravarthy and knew about his project a few years ago. Glad to see that it is getting widespread recognition here. Given the current trend of globalization, and the predominance of English, sooner or later, the English we speak is going to be inundated with words from the languages of various countries. The trouble with the English language currently is that we basically need to know how to pronounce every word, despite how it is written. My guess is that in the future, people will start adopting a language that is read just like it is written, and can easily incorporate words from different countries and cultures. As a starting point, the International Phonetic Alphabet might be useful.

  • @joshuad007
    @joshuad007 Год назад

    I've made almost 4 con-scripts my now(now I generally use the newer one) without even realizing there's a big whole community for it. Maybe I'll try sharing them soon.
    Now my newest one is focusing on creating letters with respect to the entire current IPA table. Thanks for giving me such good information.

  • @shivatej47
    @shivatej47 Год назад +15

    I think the oldest conscript could be the 'GRANTHA SCRIPT' which was designed to represent Sanskrit sounds into Tamil. It majorly resembles Tamil script and a stranger may think both are same.

    • @studyhard-tl4bx
      @studyhard-tl4bx 5 месяцев назад

      Grantha would be ideal. It can be used to write both South, East and North Indian languages

    • @shivatej47
      @shivatej47 5 месяцев назад

      @@studyhard-tl4bx well it's not ideal. Coz we have telugu script with more proximity towards samskrutham script/devanagari

    • @studyhard-tl4bx
      @studyhard-tl4bx 5 месяцев назад

      @@shivatej47 No. Telugu Script lacks dravidian sounds. Its script is more like Marathi, Gujarati, Hindi script. It lacks sounds like zha, nja, rra, lla, which are present in Tamil, Malayalam and Kannada languages but is missing in Telugu. However, Grantha Script has both the Sanskritic sounds as well as the Dravidian ones. Sadly, this script is nowhere used.

    • @shivatej47
      @shivatej47 5 месяцев назад

      @@studyhard-tl4bx Every other sound is present in telugu except zha. Telugu has ల(la) and ళ(lla) and are also used frequently.

  • @coalcat3317
    @coalcat3317 Год назад +1

    An absolutely remarkable video to watch. I love the meticulous research put into the making of this video as well as the astute analysis you make. Great job as always!

  • @rishtopia
    @rishtopia 3 месяца назад +1

    I am currently making a language called Mohona, which is an abugida with the basic gramatic structure of Bangla and the phonetics of Urdu and a syntax of its own. I am so grateful that you made a video on conlangs, conlanging is amazing!!

  • @rohitb4548
    @rohitb4548 Год назад +7

    Bahubali also had a new language for kalakeya remember it was pretty good 😊

  • @mstrmndindia
    @mstrmndindia Год назад

    Outstanding ! I just want to add one more artificial language here - heptapod language used by aliens in the movie arrival - the movie opened me to this idea called Sapir Whorf hypothesis , which says that our thinking is influenced by our native language .. even though it’s not related to the discussion here , there is a short conversation in movie where main character asks about how a particular Sanskrit word is interpreted

  • @anik1612
    @anik1612 Год назад +2

    Love and respects from Bangladesh dadabhai🙏💖. Keep it up, we want more videos like this interesting fact. Om Shanti🛕

  • @itstimetoread3717
    @itstimetoread3717 Год назад

    Excellent content!!👌

  • @introvert2023
    @introvert2023 Год назад +1

    i knew that bahubali's kalkeya reference will be there in the video and i guessed it right.i love to watch your videos they are gems of knowledge .after this video i am going to learn bharathi script and eagerly waiting for your next video about sanskrit an artificial language.

  • @highgaming8237
    @highgaming8237 5 месяцев назад +1

    Hey, this video is on my watch list for a very long time and saw it today. I was surprised that Bahubali movie's that scene uses a language of their own. I knew about Conlangs and always has an interest in those type of things but not about the Bahubali. And the one thing I want you to correct is that you said टोकी instead of तोकी as the sounds of that language is closer to Romansh languages and not English. You asked a question if one wants to make a conlang or not. Well, i tried a few in past few months and I can relate to the creator of Toki Pona. I was too suffering from mental illness. The best part is that I have made a language with Indian scripts. From OL CHIKI SCRIPT to LATIN ALPHABET as english is a part of Indian language, even though it is a bit tougher than Bharati script, it connects the whole Indian languages, not just by script but also by words the different people use. It is in progress now and I've not more than 20 to 25 words in that language, I'm gonna finish it now.

  • @adisura9904
    @adisura9904 Год назад

    This man gives us such quality content

  • @SouravBanik90
    @SouravBanik90 Год назад

    Love this! I would love to learn Esperanto and Bharati!

  • @gregnisbet
    @gregnisbet Год назад +10

    The Bharati script is interesting. The way it groups related consonants together (like k, g, kh, gh) and derives them from the unvoiced, non-aspirated sound reminds me a little bit of Hangeul (the Korean script). How does it handle conjunct consonants?

    • @muo1kor
      @muo1kor Год назад +2

      Exactly my thoughts. It definitely went the Hangul way using similar signs for similar sounding phonemes.

    • @RSivaSanjayChannel
      @RSivaSanjayChannel Год назад +4

      Yeah , Hangul is an Inspiration for the Stacked arrangement of the Bharati letters ( Vowel marks on top , body in center , and the aspiration/voicing in the bottom)
      and regarding the conjunct consonants, its the main feature in all indic alphabets which complicates the letter 😅, this thing is eliminated in bharati . U just add an Halant to the 1st letter (the mark to mute the inherent vowel sound in a letter) , and write the other letter next to it . (may be we can attribute this idea to Tamil, coz as I observed only Tamil follows this approach , and also Malayalam with some exceptions here and there )

  • @minicineastemovies
    @minicineastemovies 4 месяца назад +1

    I am active in the conlang space. In fact, the illustration of emojis you used from toki pona was made by me. I have also worked on Naveen Sanskrit, a constructed language project that is meant to be a simple language for all of India, meant to be some day written in the brahmi script. It is a project in a hibernating stage, would love to get more people into it

  • @heptagrammar21
    @heptagrammar21 Год назад +1

    Although I know English but what I am going to say I don't think I can explain it in English properly so I will be using my mother tongue Bengali . প্রথমেই বলি , যে তুমি বললে , হয় এলোন মাস্ক আমাদেরকে মঙ্গলে নিয়ে যাবে , অথবা ইসরো , এই কথাটা শুনে আমার অত্যন্ত ভালো লাগলো। দ্বিতীয়তঃ , আমার যতদূর মনে হয় সংস্কৃত তৈরি করা একটি ভাষা , আমরা ছেলেবেলায় পড়েছি যে পানিনীর অষ্টাধ্যায়ীতে প্রথম সংস্কৃতের কথা উল্লেখ করা হয়। তো স্বভাবতই আমার মনে হয় যে সংস্কৃত ভাষাকে পানিনি কোন একটি প্রাচীন ভাষা থেকে নতুন রূপ দিয়ে তৈরি করেছিলেন । 🙏🙏

  • @sudipt0ghosh
    @sudipt0ghosh Год назад

    Awesome ye 💝

  • @theMangoGal
    @theMangoGal Год назад +2

    Proud of your স pronounciation and অসমীয়া।👏👏👏

  • @notesmaker204
    @notesmaker204 Год назад +8

    Braille and sign lang are also constructed languages

    • @ronaldonmg
      @ronaldonmg 9 месяцев назад +1

      No. Braille is not a language.
      There are hundreds of separate sign languages, and almost all of them were NOT created deliberately by one person or some small committee. What they have in common with Esperanto is that in some places they were banned, out of a (very misplaced) fear that using it would stop people from learning "real" languages.

  • @sushobhanroy2396
    @sushobhanroy2396 Год назад

    Ashris, your way of speaking is so charming and pleasing. I always wanted to say this.❤ And you know your passion for linguistics is actually infectious to us! A true Sigma Male you are indeed.😄Thanks for another fascinating video.

  • @16nikhilyadav76
    @16nikhilyadav76 Год назад

    Waiting for ur video bro✨

  • @sohamtalwalkar501
    @sohamtalwalkar501 Год назад +2

    I really liked this concept of con-lang.
    I think just like what our Indian languages does, we can take vocabulary from languages like Sanskrit, Tamil, English or Austro-Asiatic languages, as languages like Sanskrit are themselves the library of words.
    To create ours, we must first consider the grammatical aspects like topic-markers, helping verbs and rules regarding transformation of nouns to verbs.
    I think this pattern is uniformly followed in main language families of the world.

  • @fanaticofmetal
    @fanaticofmetal Год назад +3

    Esperanto does have a Past Tense and it's made by adding -is to the root
    Manĝi - To eat
    Mi manĝas - I eat
    Mi manĝis - I ate
    Mi manĝos - I'll eat
    Mi manĝus - I'd eat
    Ni manĝu - (We) Let's eat!

  • @ChanyeolsHaneul
    @ChanyeolsHaneul Год назад +3

    I am inventing my own conlang. It has already over 2 thousand words. I been working on it for over 10 years. Maybe one day I will show it to the world.

  • @MynameisS_A
    @MynameisS_A Год назад

    The legend is back with another video.

  • @atelics
    @atelics Год назад +1

    I love your content

  • @mechanzie
    @mechanzie 4 месяца назад

    great idea for video, thanks

  • @rajvansh2003
    @rajvansh2003 Год назад +2

    This video feels like bringing our childhood imagination to reality.

  • @rajdeepbasu8412
    @rajdeepbasu8412 Год назад +1

    Again an excellent video. Thank you so much for such great work.
    But one small thing I want to say is that I think Esperanto language has past tense. For e.g., if we have to say in present tense 'I do' , then it will be 'mi faras' and in past tense it will be 'mi faris' meaning 'I did'. In other words, as far as I know, in Esperanto, '-as' joins as suffix with the root verb in present tense whereas '-is' joins as suffix with the root verb in past tense. Please correct me if I am wrong. Thanks once again for such great videos.

    • @seanoriain8294
      @seanoriain8294 Год назад

      You are correct. Esperanto does have a past tense, formed by adding -is to any verb. Esperanto has six participles, where English and French only have two each.

  • @dibyajyotiparida3646
    @dibyajyotiparida3646 Год назад

    Nice informative video bro👍

  • @varsharajauria5187
    @varsharajauria5187 Год назад

    ❤️you are doing great 👍

  • @SaiCharithSharma0609
    @SaiCharithSharma0609 3 месяца назад +1

    14:13 I knew it! I knew that my favourite Samskrta was a conlang! From what I know, Samskrta is a conlang created for the use of the elite or was a language used for formal occasions and Prakrta was the one used for day-to-day communication... Ashris, please make a video on whether Samskrta is a conlang...

  • @simonelifestyle1409
    @simonelifestyle1409 Год назад +2

    Caption dekhke dil khush ho gaya. Valar murghulis is the near to my heart and the character based on this is my al time fav character.i desire to be like her

  • @nishadshahasane5048
    @nishadshahasane5048 Год назад

    Hi! Great video yet again! But you forgot one language... The one which minions say. Banana😍😍😍 It too is designed thoughtfully and they say in a way which is very lucid & sound similar and seems like the maker has done lot of homework before making it.

  • @debangansamanta
    @debangansamanta Год назад +1

    Tbh I got to know about Esperanto few years back and was fascinated about how good it was actually even tho it was completely new

    • @fanaticofmetal
      @fanaticofmetal Год назад +1

      Completely new? Esperanto is one of the oldest conlangs being 100+ years old

  • @happy00035
    @happy00035 Год назад

    That actually blows my mind dude

  • @TheAmanBharti
    @TheAmanBharti Год назад

    Everytime new information ℹ️☺️

  • @agamonipathakodtcl2066
    @agamonipathakodtcl2066 Год назад

    An one another 😊 great research article

  • @Dhruba99
    @Dhruba99 Год назад

    wowh!
    BTW I heard that Facebook in an internal experiment found AI's having a conversation in some unknown language. By your Thumbnail I thought it would be around this. 😅

  • @giantjupiter
    @giantjupiter Год назад +1

    toki, mi jan suli Jupiter😁
    (Hello, I'm GiantJupiter)
    I've learnt a bit of Toki Pona. I can speak some simple sentences and most of the sentences. I've also transliterated some works into Bharati.
    Your video's lit as always

  • @nanditamukherjee344
    @nanditamukherjee344 4 месяца назад +1

    As a person who learned and can somewhat fluently speak Toki Pona you are completely correct, it is really hard... Also one of my friends actually did create con-langs, 3 infact