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Indians beat English at their language

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The Serpent The Eagle The Lion & The Disk - Brannon Parker - Google Books

Son are you testing me? you know I am a Dr but okay as you will


List of English Words derived from Sanskrit via Latin Greek Persian | HitXP by Gurudev

If you still do not believe me, do contact Oxford University who have a excellent Sanskrit department and they can enlighten you.

Both Sanskrit and English share a common ancestor in Proto-Indo-European. A lot of words in English are not borrowed from Sanskrit - but both diverged from a single source and borrowed heavily from it. Sanskrit is NOT the mother language of English but more of a cousin.
 
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Both Sanskrit and English share a common ancestor in Proto-Indo-European. A lot of words in English are not borrowed from Sanskrit - but both diverged from a single source and borrowed heavily from it. Sanskrit is NOT the mother language of English but more of a cousin.


That's what I said, I said related not Mother.

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You may want to order this from Amazon :-)

A Sanskrit-English Dictionary: Sir M. Monier-Williams: 9788189211004: Amazon.com: Books

White man is the God of Hindus

or tera Bhagawan kon ke? Kala from Nigeria :woot:
 
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Tuns out British were second wave of Aryans indeed who tried to civilize South Asians.
 
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What I most like in Germans is love for their language and father land.
ahhh I wish at least Pakistan could come out of British colonial Raj now.

Yes, the world's largest exporter and one of the most tecnically advanced didn't need English.

Germany: Language of education German, official language German.

Pakistan: Language of education English, official language English.

'English is the language of progress'.
 
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"An English-speaking Indian has native-like intuition in English, unlike a Chinese for whom English is assembled by a more academic thought process. For an Indian, English is more like an adjunct native language. We do some of our thinking in our Indian language and other things in English — that is, we have a native competence that spans two or more languages. No wonder we do so well in Toefl."
Most probably these students may have been instructed in English since childhood. No wonder! They can use English far better in an academic and professional setting than perhaps their own mother-tongue. Try this :

"A line which meets a circle at only one point is called a tangent." Try to imagine writing this sentence in your own native language purely. I bet a Chinese or Japanese student can do it. Most of English-medium educated students will have problem in finding words for terms like tangent or intercept or secant in their own language. They never learnt to use their mother tongue in an academic or technical setting.
 
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The topic title as written by an indian member (banned at the moment) shows the level of inferiority indians have.
 
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Wish come true...Now you are Britisher then the British! Good lad.
 
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