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Is Marathi an easy language to learn?
Marathi is one of the easiest Indian languages to learn as is written exactly the way it is spoken. You will also pick up Hindi and Sanskrit along with it. Learn the Devanagari script and you know the language much more than you think.
Which language is easy Hindi or Marathi?
If you belong to maharashtra, marathi may be more easy compared to hindi. But person who belongs to another state of India such as orissa, telangana, kerala, karnataka, tamilnadu, punjab will get hindi most easy than marathi.
Is Telugu one of the hardest language?
This language belongs to the central group of the 21 Dravidian languages. Some say, Telugu is the toughest language in the world to learn, be it its script or grammar or its pronunciation, but it’s easiest to those who have learnt it and it enables one to pronounce any other language in the world.
What is the difference between the Tamil and Telegu languages?
Hindi, Marathi, Bengali belongs to Indo-aryan languages subgroup of Indo-European language family. Tamil and Telegu belongs to different groups of Dravidian language family. But since Telegu is highly influenced by Sanskrit accounting Sanskrit originated words 70-75\% of its vocabulary make Telegu more difficult for Tamils.
Why do Marathi and Bengali speakers understand Hindi?
Marathi uses the same script as Hindi, Bangla uses a different script. Most Marathi and Bengali speakers can understand and speak Hindi because they are exposed to it while growing up through TV, movies etc. Also, Hindi is the second language of communication in large cities of states where Marathi and Bengali is spoken.
What is the official language of Marathi in India?
Marathi language. Marathi ( English: /məˈrɑːti/; मराठी Marāṭhī; Marathi: [məˈɾaʈʰi] ( listen)) is an Indo-Aryan language spoken predominantly by around 83 million Marathi people of Maharashtra, India. It is the official language and co-official language in the Maharashtra and Goa states of Western India, respectively,…
Why did Marathi become the dominant language of epigraphy in India?
Marathi became the dominant language of epigraphy during the last half century of the dynasty’s rule (14th century), and may have been a result of the Yadava attempts to connect with their Marathi-speaking subjects and to distinguish themselves from the Kannada-speaking Hoysalas.