abjktu
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He is a Marathi..Why are you calling him??@Sahasranama Your help is needed here to decipher this guy's malayalam and the sanskrit root words in there.
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He is a Marathi..Why are you calling him??@Sahasranama Your help is needed here to decipher this guy's malayalam and the sanskrit root words in there.
What are you complaining about? There are people in India who are called Chinese when they visit north India. You guys are having it too easy.
And I have heard a lot about Kerala and know the difference between Kerala, Karnataka, Tamil Nadu, Andhra Pradesh etc.
''Venda chechi venda..oru Kannadathikku ithrayum thalakhanam paadullathalla..Malayalikalodu kalichaal checheeda thalamanda vetti eduthu thottadutha aattill ozhukum..veruthe ennodu kalikaan varalle..Neeyokke ethra thulli chaadiyaalum Malayalaikalodoppam ethaan nooru kadalukal neendhi kadakanam..njaan Malayalathill ezhuthiyathu chechikku thirinjo??..Appo njaan vidavaangatte..Nanni..''''.........................
Idaralli nodi.Vondu Sanskrit pada kooda sikkala nimagu..
He is a Marathi..Why are you calling him??
There is something called Vedic Sanskrit as well. Languages in India are influenced by each other over the centuries. It is practically impossible to find a "pure" language. Paani is not an Indian word but today people across India say paani for water.
It could be possible that there are still some "pure languages" which are not influenced by Sanskrit.
He is a Marathi..Why are you calling him??
Your mother tongue??
Paani has Sanskrit origin there are words like Paanik or paaniya in Sanskrit for drinking.
Sorry..You mean Indian culture=Sanskrit??..
I am proud of my culture..Is it a problem for you??..Some people gives more prominence to other cultures and languages than their mother tongue..You want me to follow your very footsteps??..I don't hate other languages.I could speak 5 Indian languages including my mother tongue..Most probably,I could understand way more Sanskrit than you ...
I am genuinely not sure about that. The word I have heard in "pure" Hindi is Jal.
My dear even if South Indian language are Dravidian family but you still can't ignore the role of Sanskrit in shaping the culture and lingua of South India. It was only after the Europeans discovered South Indian languages don't belong to Same family of Northern languages, people started trying to detach Sanskrit from South Indian culture.
Mene terpe garv hai tauYou my friend is the first person in India who genuinely believes that I can speak Haryanvi and Punjabi. LOL!!
Dekh Liya Jaat Rock. I am finally able to speak Haryanvi. Bhai humse ho payo