Thursday, October 8, 2009

Telugu is an Indo-Aryan group Language

I believe Telugu should be classified as Indo-Aryan language. Telugu has more sanskrit words than dravidian and that is undeniable. I am presenting few facts here .

The word Telugu, some claim has originated either from the word talaing - few people who conquered Andhra region, or from tenunga - referring to white or fair-skinned people. However, Andhra is the old Aryan name for Telugu country.

In page 14 of the book- A History of Telugu Literature By Chenchiah, Bhujanga, he states -"
Telugus (may) have been in the remote past a Dravidian people possessing a non-Aryan culture, but they seem to have lost their Dravidian identity very early in their history. In historical times they were so completely Aryanised in religion, language and literature, that for all purposes they may be treated as Aryans.

In page 16- Telugu is Vikriti , that is a language formed my modification of sanskrit and prakrit. It would appear that Andhras adopted a form of Prakrit which, in course of development, became the immediate ancestor of Telugu.


Cholas are "aryans" not from dravida family. Even pallavas also aryans. They bring brahmins to south India. Ofcourse all kings are "Aryans" They speak Prakruth which is unrefined Samskrit. There is no king in India who is from Dravida family. Some kings were speaking telugu in prakruth way. which common people cannot understand. Prathistanapura(maharasthra)Pallavas, Cholas, K'Raya, nayakars Telugu is not same telugu which common people speaks. Telugu scipt Developed from brahmi script. So telugu which kings were speaking is written in brahmi script. Aryans language in dravida script is Telugu which was spoken by Kings. So Telugu sounds southern language when spoken in south, Sounds nothern when spoken in North. The language which bridges between south India and north India. Hence Telugu is best language in INDIA.



Now there are more sanskri words in telugu than Dravidian.

Sanskrit is the oldest next comes Telugu. The logical proof is.. The linguistic prakriya (Game) of Sanskrit Avadhana is existing only Telugu. From this the immediate next language of Sanskrit is Telugu. In other languages Avadhana disappeared. Obviusly son possesses more features of father than grand son , because son is more immediate.

I wish to see more telugu people here than Tamils(No Offense).


(1) B.C. 200 -- A.D. 500 : During the first phase, we only come across names of places and personal names of Telugu in Prakrit and Sanskrit inscriptions found in the Telugu country. Telugu was exposed to the influence of Prakrit as early as the 3rd century B.C.' From this we know that the language of the people was Telugu, although the language of the rulers was different. The first complete Telugu inscription belongs to the Renati Cholas, found in Erragudipadu, Kamalapuram taluk of Cuddapah district and assigned to about A.D. 575. Source: Revenue Department (Gazetteers)


As Velcheru Narayana Rao states in page 3 of his book Classical Telugu Poetry: "every Sanskrit word is potentially a Telugu word as well, and literary texts in Telugu may be lexically Sanskrit or Sanskritized to an enormous extent, perhaps sixty percent or more." As C.P Brown states in page 266 of his book A Grammar of the Telugu language: "Every Telugu rule is laboriously deduced from a Sanskrit canon". As David Shulman states in page 3 of his book Classical Telugu Poetry: "The enlivening presence of Sanskrit is everywhere evident in Andhra civilization, as it is in the Telugu language". Based on all these facts Telugu should be classified into Indo-Aryan group.


Nannaya Bhattarakudu’s Andhra Mahabharatamu produced around the 11th century is commonly referred to as the first Telugu literary composition (Aadi kaavyam). Although there is evidence of Telugu literature before Nannaya, he is still referred to as Aadi Kavi (the first poet) because he was the first poet to establish a formal grammar for written Telugu. 'Nannaya meticulously laid down the ground rules and semantics of writing in Telugu by borrowing from Sanskrit grammar and inventing original rules'. Telugu literature until then was Prakrit based and devoid of a grammar.


Inscriptions containing Telugu words dated back to 400 BC were discovered in Bhattiprolu in Guntur district. English translation of one inscription reads: “Gift of the slab by venerable Midikilayakha.

Primary sources are Prakrit/Sanskrit inscriptions found in the region, in which Telugu places and personal names are found. From this we know that the language of the people was Telugu, while the rulers, who were of the Satavahana dynasty, spoke Prakrit


Some other scholars associate Telugu as originating from a frequently used Sanskrit word Kalinga or Kling, which in Puranas and Ashok's inscriptionsdepicted people of Continental India as it is even today in the Malay language.

Onamaalu, or the Telugu alphabet consist of 60 symbols - 16 vowels, 3 vowel modifiers, and 41 consonants have almost 1-to-1 correspondence with Sanskrit alphabets, yet another proof of its influence on its evolution.

Though no inscriptions in Telugu language (as it is written/ spoken today) have been found prior to the period 200 BC 500 AD, inferences to the existence of Telugu during that time can be made from the frequent use of words of that period found in the Telegu region found on Parakrit (Sanskrit)inscriptions and also in anthology of poems in Parakrit language, collected by the Satavahna dynasty King all point to existence of Telugu and Telugupeople in that period between the Krishna and Godavri rivers basin. Thus, we can safely presume Telugu to have originated earlier than 200 BC. (Source:Ostom Ray - Telugu The Language, People And The Land Through Ages)



“The country will not survive if the language and culture are not protected. Sanskrit, which is mother of Indian languages, Telugu and other languages are unique in the world in the sense that they are inter-twined with life. Whatever said in the literature like Satakams written in the olden ages determines our life. The Indian literature helps in personality development and determines the life”
Among the Indian languages, Telugu was the only language having closest relationship with Sanskrit and this was the reason for it continuing to be strong even now - Vedula Subrahmanya Sastry(Telugu and Sanskrit scholar)



Most of Andhras follow the Aryan Vaishnavite religion ( cf. the Tirupati temple ), in contrast to the Dravidians, who are Shaivite.

Andhra and Aandhra are ancient names used in Sanskrit literature to denote Telugu tribe/race/nationality/caste/people (hereinafter Nationality or Nationalities). According to Aitareya Brahmana composed in 600 BC, sage Viswamitra, a Kshatriya-an Aryan warrior tribal, adopted Brahmin Sunasyepa. However, fifty of Viswamitra's sons objected and didn't accept Sunasyepa as their brother. Enraged Viswamitra exiled those sons from Aryavarta (land of Aryans - probably North-Western part of the Indian Continent) and cursed them to mix with Dasya Nationalities such as Aandhra, Pundra, Sabara, Mootiba and Pulinda. This is the first ever description of non-Aryan (Mleccha) Aandhra Nationality in Sanskrit literature. These five Mleccha nationalities are considered to be the Dasya Nationalities living in the borders of Aryavarta. Andhra Nationality was a great Nationality respected and known to Europeans. Greek Ambassador Megasthanese visited Chandragupta Mourya's empire in 400 BC and wrote that the Andhras were a powerful Nationality and possessed several villages and thirty towns defended by walls and towers that supplied its king with an army of 100,000 infantry, 2000 cavalry and 1000 elephants. Aandhra Nationality was described in Mahabharat also. Andhras were fudators of Dharmaraja and in Kurukshetra war they fought against Dharmaraja. According to Manusmriti, Andhras were Nishadas and were born to a Karavara tribal woman(From a Nishada springs (by a woman of the Vaideha caste) a Karavara, who works in leather; and from a Vaidehaka (by women of the Karavara and Nishada castes), an Andhra and a Meda, who dwell outside the village) and Vaideha. In the beginning of Christian era, Bharata in Natyasastra prohibited the use of non-Aryan languages (non-Indo-European languages) like Aandhra, Kirata, Berber, Dramila etc. In Bhagavata, sage Suka, in his praise for lord Vishnu, describes how "bad people" (paapulu) like Kirata, Huna, Andhra, Pulinda etc. were rescued by the Supreme God when they converted to Vaishnavism and prayed to lord Vishnu[4].

In addition, various Andhra kings considered themselves related to Aryans and invited Brahmins from various parts of the Indian Continent to immigrate to the land of Andhra by providing incentives such as donation of villages and lands. Thus, the Andhra Nationality became a genetically hybrid Nationality when Sanskrit speaking Aryans mixed with them. And hence the non-Aryan (non- Indo-European) languages of these people also became hybridized. Also, Sanskrit influenced Telugu language tremendously because of the immense and rich literary contribution of Sanskrit speaking Brahmins, leading to the belief that Sanskrit was the mother of all languages.



People of Andhra Pradesh

Telugu / Andhra / Kalinga are all terms which refer to the native inhabitants of Andhra Pradesh.

Sanskrit writings from the 7th century BC describe the Andhra people as Aryans from the north who migrated south of the Vindhya Range and mixed with non-Aryans.[5][6]

Anthropological surveys indicate that the Telugu are preponderantly mulatto ( Aryan and Dravidian Mix ). It thus would be natural to consider Andhri to be a creole which was gradually Sanskritized.[7].

The ethnic composition of the people of Andhra Pradesh can be geographically categorised into 3 main regions: North-west, North-east and Southern. Racially, the early people of the Deccan Plateau (north-west Andhra Pradesh) were a hybrid race - a mixture of Dravidians, Scythians (Sakas), Parthians (Pahlavas), and Greeks (Yavanas)[8]. The people of North-east Andhra Pradesh, are predominantly a mixture of Aryans and Dravidians. The term Kalinga (India), has been historically relevant to this region, incorporating north-east Andhra Pradesh and modern day Orissa. People from the Kalinga region were responsible for colonizing Sri Lanka, spreading Buddhism and are ancestors to a large portion of the Sinhalese population. The inhabitants of Southern Andhra Pradesh are predominantly descendants of the Dravidian people, with mild admixture from the Aryan race.

Sanskrit writings from the 7th century BC describe the Andhra people as Aryans from the North who migrated South of the Vindhya Range and mixed with non-Aryans. They are mentioned again at the time of the death of the great Mauryan King Ashoka in 232 BC. This date has been considered to be the beginning of the Andhra historical record. Various dynasties have ruled the area, including the Andhra (or Satavahana), Shakas, Ikshvakus, Eastern Chalukyas, the Vijayanagar Kingdom, the Qutb Shahis of Golconda, and the Nizams (princes) of Hyderābād.[9]

The people of Andhra Pradesh were also called Andhri.[10] In certain times they ruled over the kingdoms of Magadha, Anga, Asmaka, Mulaka and Kalinga.[11][12][13][14][15]

They are also mentioned in the Vayu and Matsya Purana.[16] In the Mahabharata the infantry of Satyaki was composed of a tribe called Andhras, known for their long hair, sweet language, and mighty prowess.[17] They lived along the banks of the Yamuna river. Andhras and Kalingas supported the Kauravas during the Mahabharata war. Sahadeva defeated the kingdoms of Pandya, Dravida, Odra, Chera, Andhra, and Kalinga while performing the Rajasuya yajna. Chanoora was killed by Krishna in Mathura. Hari Vamsa Purana corroborates the fact that Chanoora was the king of Karoosa Desa (to the North of the Vindhyas and on the North Bank of the Yamuna river) and was an Andhra. Buddhist references to Andhras are also found.




In Ancient times Telugu, the language of the Andhras, seems to have been spoken as far north as the mouth of the Ganges. This appears both from the geographic limits which the Greeks have assigned, to the territory of the Andhra race and from many of the names and places mentioned by Ptolemy up to that delta being found to be Telugu. Telugu is a name mentioned by the Greek geographers as that of a nation dwelling on or near the Ganges. In respect to antiquity of culture and glossarial copiousness, it is the oldest of the Dravidian languages, but this has been disputed as it has a large Sanskrit influence and has a different structure to that of other Dravidian languages. It is also named as the Italian of the East as most words in Telugu end in a vowel, as in Italian.




Southern Indo-Aryan Languages

Marathi and Vidarbhi are the languages directly derived from the Deccani Vibhasa with minimal external influences. Old Gujarati was known as Sauraseni, and was later displaced by Gujjari ( Khazari or Middle Gujarati ). Later this language was Sanskritized to become Gujarati ( Modern Gujarati ).

Andhri is included in this family, and not the Dravidian family for the following reasons :

1. Andhri contains a much higher percentage of Sanskrit loans than the other Dravidian languages.
2. Andhras follow the Aryan Vaishnavite religion ( cf. the Tirupati temple ), in contrast to the Dravidians, who are Shaivite.
3. Anthropological surveys indicate that the Andhras are preponderantly mulatto ( mixed white Aryan and black Dravidian ). It thus would be natural to consider Andhri to be a creole which was gradually Sanskritized.

Source : http://www.geocities.com/Athens/Ithaca/1335/Lang/prakrit.html#decc




Genetic studies

A recent genetic study in Andhra Pradesh state of India found that the upper caste Hindus were closer relatives to Eastern-Europeans than to Hindus from lower castes. [19] However, a study conducted by the Centre for Cellular and Molecular Biology in 2009 (in collaboration with Harvard Medical School, Harvard School of Public Health and the Broad Institute of Harvard and MIT) analyzed half a million genetic markers across the genomes of 132 individuals from 25 ethnic groups from 13 states in India across multiple caste groups.[20] The study asserts, based on the impossibility of identifying any genetic indicators across caste lines, that castes in South Asia grew out of traditional tribal organizations during the formation of Indian society, and was not the product of any Aryan invasion and "subjugation" of Dravidian people.



The Telugu script is derived from the Brāhmī script of the Mauryan Empire. Telugu has been subjected to prolonged, enormous influence from Sanskrit and also from the Prakrits, the spoken Indo-Aryan languages of medieval North India. Consequently, the vocabulary of Telugu is heavily Indo-Aryan.



Telugu is not related to Tamil, it is related to Sanskrit. Tamils will never accept /never Agree with evidence against Tamil.

If i start saying we are all brothers,then Tamils interpret as "we Tamils are big brothers"( No Offense)

Telugu is not derived from Tamil, 99.9 % of telugu words are exactly same as Sanskrit, but later few words are taken from Tamil, Tamil also adopted few words from telugu. Telugu is the most nearest language of Sanskrit. No where tamil maps with telugu.



Important Things:
1. Telugu and Tamil don't belong to the same group.
2. Telugu split from Proto-Dravidian between 1500-1000 BC. So, Telugu became a distinct language by the time any literary activity began to appear in the Tamil land.

This is a universal fact but (No offense) but some Tamils language fanatics always try to categorize Telugu with Tamil leaving no room for discussion.

58 comments:

  1. The vocabulary of Telugu language is largely Indo-Aryan and has been influenced by Sanskrit, which is regarded as the mother of the Indian languages.

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  2. If you see ANR movie "Tenali Ramakrishna", it that when Ramakrishna visits Sri Krishnadevaraya for the first time, the dialogue written was "నేను సంస్కృతాంధ్రాలలో చాలా కృషి చేశాను" .. this itself shows that telugu poets and pandits are generally masters in both sanskrit and telugu.

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  3. I agree that telugu is greatly influenced by sanskrit. I am a brahmin brought up in Vijayawada. Though I am 30 years old, with my limited knowledge of pure telugu that I inherited from my ancestors, telugu pandits around, old telugu movies from 1930s till 1980s and my telugu and sanskrit knowledge of text books from school it is not a surprize to me at all to accept that telugu is influenced by sanskrit.

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  4. Even if we agree that Telugu is influenced from Prakrit, it is seen that Prakrit originated from Sanskrit. Pleas refer to 1st para from http://www.engr.mun.ca/~adluri/telugu/language/script/script1d.html

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  5. If you look at the scripts and their pronunication, you will see
    for example:

    it has alphabets very similar to hindi language only.

    Here is the Telugu alphabet (correct me if I am wrong here please).
    aa, aaa, e, ee, u, oo, ru, roo, ai, eye, o, ou, um, aha;
    ka, kha, ga, gha, ngna,
    cha, chha, ja, jha, ingnya,
    ta, ttha, da, ddha, na,
    tha, thha, dha, dhha, na,
    pa, pha, ba, bha, ma,
    ya, ra, la, va, sha, shha, sa, ha, la, ksha,

    These aphabets sound the same as in Sanskrit or in hindi as far as I learnt them now. I can read sanskrit and hindi, not very fluently, but okay. Telugu, I am trying to learn the vocabulary now. The alphabets are easy for me here, as they are very closer to sanskrit and hindi, which I learnt earlier (25 yrs or so, it took! LOL:)

    I don't think the pronuniciation is any difft from how the hindi language is spoken, except for the choices of vocabulary.

    All Telugu people pray only using Sanskrit slokas and verses, if you visited Tripathi Temple. Their prayers are all in Sanskrit languages only. Just because their written script looks difft, you can't classify a language to be dravidian at all. That is wrong.

    http://www.wikipedia.org/wiki/Dravidian_languages

    check this webpage out and let them know of your opinions.
    you will find using certain alphabets in certain combination for certain words, may result in difft sounds. But that is very normal and it shows how language is difft from another. The number of alphabets and the pronunciation of them may group them together, rather than scriptural or artistic display differences.

    Please comment on this note now. I want to hear from linguistic specialists if there are any from India.

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  6. Whoever posted this..you sound so fanatic and childish..please be more matured...thanks

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  7. i my self speak Telugu ...stop dividing India ..Lunatic

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    Replies
    1. arey mental, telugu ni correctuga classify cheyyamani kada argument, adi india ni yetla vidagodutundi?

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  8. Surya Nath Upadhyaya's project "Comparative Linguistics of Telugu and Hindi including its Dialect Bhojpuri" Clearly states that his project
    compares Telugu with Hindi and both the languages are related.

    http://lingteluguhindi.net/pdf/main/Recent%20%20Project%20Work.pdf

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  9. I completely agree with your standpoint. I am a fluent speaker of both Hindi and Telugu, and I can tell that both have distinct similarities according to pronunciation and some vocabulary. However, I think that Hindi is very different in some cases because it has a great Urdu influence, which Telugu does not seem to have. But I still find it unmistakable that Hindi and Telugu are related.

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  10. Yep Telugu originated from Sanskrit or Sanskrit originated from telugu.. Its Shameful to put Telugu in different Language family

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  11. First of all, Telugu is classified as central Dravidian language and is not classified together with oth south Indian languages like Kanada or Tamil.

    second thing is, Andhra people are classified as Dravidian people because the majority of the people in the Andhra state are completely or partially dravidian (leave apart the high caste Telugus, who have significant so called Aryan component).

    I just want to take examples of Brazilians or Mexicans who speak European language as their mother tongue, which doesn't mean that they can categorized as Europeans by origin.

    ReplyDelete
    Replies
    1. Stop being such a hater. and idk if u noticed but the blog post was about the agument the Telugu should be classified as an Indo-Aryan language, meaning that it isnt! So ur comment on wat it is classified as is pretty much pointless

      second, u stated a fact, with no evidence to back it up

      third, ur argument about brazilians and mexicans is like saying just because somebody a is a telugu speaking person in America, they cannot be classified as of indian orgin.Thats so not true, cuz an Indian in any country is indian by origin. Mexicans are of european origins cuz that where they orignally came from, u knuckle head.

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    2. Well said bro. Telugu z unique

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    3. Well said bro. Telugu z unique

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  12. Like Hindi Telugu also should be called as Indo-aryan language

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  13. Whoever wrote this, u r awesome
    I completely agree with wat u r saying. Although most other ppl agree with you, some dont understand that you are taking a stand on wat u think Telugu should be classified as and supporting it with an enormity of credible details. I believe you make an extremely strong argument and I support every detail of it. I'm a telugu speaking person in US, who was researching this topic, man u completely answered my questions and cleared my doubts in ur blog... I think you should take your argument up a notch and actually do something to make telugu and telugu-speaking Andhras be classified in the indo-aryan family.

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  14. but telugu alphabets and basic words are dravidian

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    Replies
    1. Telugu alphabets very similar to Sanskrit and Hindi language. Sanskrit and Telugu alphabets exhibit one-one corresponding. Even spelling and pronunciation of the words is similar in Telugu to Sanskrit.

      Delete
  15. Telugu Consonants/Vyanjana or Hallu:
    ka (క), kha (ఖ), ga (గ), gha (ఘ),ṅa (ఙ), cha (ఛ), ja (జ), jha (ఝ), ña (ఞ), ṭa (ట), ṭha (ఠ), ḍa (డ),
    ḍha (ఢ), ṇa (ణ), ta (త), tha (థ), da (ద), dha (ధ),
    na (న), pa (ప), pha (ఫ), ba (బ), bha (భ), ma (మ),
    ya (య), ra (ర), la (ల), va (వ), śa (శ), ṣa (ష),
    ha (హ).

    Irregular Consonant Clusters:
    kṣa(క్ష), tra (త్ర), jña (జ్ఞ), śra (శ్ర)

    ReplyDelete
  16. Telugu Consonants/Vyanjana or Hallu:
    ka (క), kha (ఖ), ga (గ), gha (ఘ),ṅa (ఙ),
    ca (చ), cha (ఛ), ja (జ), jha (ఝ), ña (ఞ),
    ṭa (ట), ṭha (ఠ), ḍa (డ), ḍha (ఢ), ṇa (ణ),
    ta (త), tha (థ), da (ద), dha (ధ), na (న),
    pa (ప), pha (ఫ), ba (బ), bha (భ), ma (మ),
    ya (య), ra (ర), la (ల), va (వ), śa (శ), ṣa (ష),
    sa (స), ha (హ).

    Irregular Consonant Clusters:
    kṣa(క్ష), tra (త్ర), jña (జ్ఞ), śra (శ్ర)

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  17. Telugu has full-Zero or anusvāra( ం ), half-zero or arthanusvāra or Chandrabindu (ఁ) and Visarga to convey various shades of nasal sounds. la and La, ra and Ra are differentiated.[5]
    Avagraha (ఽ) is used for extra length with long vowels.

    Telugu script can reproduce the full range of Sanskrit phonetics without losing any of the text's originality.

    (wiki)

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  18. Telugu grammar follows the patterns which existed in grammatical treatises like Aṣṭādhyāyī and Vālmīkivyākaranam but unlike Pāṇini, Nannayya divided his work into five chapters, covering samjnā, sandhi, ajanta, halanta and kriya.

    Every Telugu grammatical rule is derived from Pāṇinian, Katyayana and Patanjali concepts. However high percentage of Paninian aspects and technics borrowed in Telugu.

    Any language in Telugu literature without 'Niyama' or the language which doesn't adhere to Vyākaranam is called 'Grāmya' or Apabhraṃśa and hence it is unfit for literary usage. All the literary texts in Telugu follows Vyākaranam.

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  19. Telugu is one such language which exhibits the Diglossia (literally meaning two lexicons) you are talking about. In fact it is not even traditional diglossia because the two "source" lexicons aren't related at all : Proto-dravidian and Sanskrit!

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  20. Telugu has seen almost excessive Sanskritization, even preserving some features lost in exclusively Sanskrit- based languages like Hindi, like anusvara, arthanusvara etc. Telugu script can reproduce the full range of Sanskrit phonetics without losing any of the text's originality. Hindi for example, cannot represent the "pha", it can only represent "ph" in terms of "fa" as in "fart" but not with a "ph" as in "phart"

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  21. As such, formal Telugu employs Sanskrit to a great degree (sometimes upto 70-80%) in official communications or literature/prosody.

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  22. I am surprised at the insecurity of Telugu people that they want to be tagged as Aryans. I thought you would be happy to be just Telugu people.

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    Replies
    1. You should remember that the 'so-called' insecure people are very few in number. I think most of the Telugu speaking people don't even care about these contentious, intricate categories.

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    2. Lmao what insecurity . It's the Tamils who are insecure. You are still trying to apply your supremacy and say that telugu is a Dravidian language but it doesn't change the fact that telugu is an Aryan language

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  23. Andhras are Aryans as per Aitreya Brahmana

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  24. But Recent findings shows that Aryan never invaded India and there is no Genetic prove can be found in India that is related to Aryans.

    Secondly, new refined search has being circulating that Sanskrit and Tamil is correlated way before any other langusge came into action in India.

    Finally, why some fanatic Telugu doesnt cant get along with the Tamils? In the most humilating way, the ppl love to divide the India that we know and for their own Interest, trying to gain Independence from India. What the hell they are thinking? To gain Independence, the politics should be clean.. How clean are your State compare to others? All corrupted and like how the corrupted destroying INDIA, the NEW country will have the same fate.....

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    1. Someone is being patriotic here. But face this hard fact: India as we know it (as a nation-state) is relatively new development. I would advice not to get too attached to this newfangled, imaginary category. I mean the northern states of India have some much culture in common with their neighboring countries than with south India. But, nobody cares about it. All we know is that we should love the people who fall inside our country's geographical territories, and be cautious (sometimes even hate) the ones who fall outside our territories. I don't think this is going to last for a long time.

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  25. Hi Pavan,

    I'm from TamilNadu and I'm researching on the historical past, linguistics and stuff. I agree to your fact that Telugu is more closer to Sanskrit, I too found it when I mapped smiliar words but I was not getting anywhere with the script since it was more closer to Dravidian. Thanks you've provided an explanation for that also. From my research I have found few things,
    1. Chola kings were a mixed race of Aryan and Dravidian - may be the roots are Aryan

    2. There were Dravidian kings in ancient India. Yes, they were the early Pandiyans who ruled with Muziri as their seaport. The people of Pandiyan kingdom were dark skinned.
    3. I don't agree with Aryan invasion theory, it was more of an Aryan migration theory.

    I'm awaiting your reply, thanks.
    PS: when you discuss history you should always maintain a status quo, never mention this is the best language :)

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    Replies
    1. @Arun Kumar: Telugu uses Brahmi script and I don't know what you mean by Dravidian script. Go and find any Telugu linguistic books, none of them have compelling arguments as to why it should be classified as Dravidian language...

      Any Native Telugu Speaker will agree that Telugu is derived from Sanskrit.

      Even spellings in Telugu are similar to Sanskrit words and no Visarga, Maha-Prana, Anusvara, Arthaanusvara(Chandra Bindu) is missed in spelling..

      Telugu Distinguishes between śa, ṣa, and sa just like sanskrit.. but so called Modern Indo Aryan languages doesnt make distinction between śa and ṣa similarly. So Only Telugu is the language which preserved the pronunciation of sanskrit.

      Only Sanskrit, Telugu, Marathi and Oriya has ళ (ḷ),, Example Mangaḷa and not Mangala like other languages of India...

      Every Sanskrit word is a Telugu word too.. WITHOUT any corruption of Phonetics or Pronunciation...

      Telugu has been Clearly Derived from Sanskrit

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  26. Tamil is like an ameba. Simple, and is not rich like Sanskrit based languages. It has stayed that way. Other languages evolved and are rich in features like variety of fauna we see now. There - it is that simple.

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  27. Tamil is greater than telugu. We have distinct language and culture. Telugu is 70 percent sanskrit than how u call it a distinct language?! You follow aryan language and culture and you are proud of it!

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    1. Dear telugu people stop being aryan tail waggers..defend your own culture and identity like tamils. ( No offense)

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    2. Dear telugu people stop being aryan tail waggers..defend your own culture and identity like tamils. ( No offense)

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    3. tamil is not at all grater than telugu.tamilians cannot prononce words like ha ka fa sha .tamil may be an ancient language but you cannot say greater

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  28. You seemed to been sleeping under a rock for a long while. The aryan - dravidian theory has been debunked by historians. The vedas were composed much earlier than the dates mentioned here. As a speaker of Kannada, Telgu and Tamil I can tell you kannada follows sanskrit more closely than telgu.

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    1. Agree 100%. I see that the current trend in andhra is to blindly ape US and white culture as they have some sort of a deep inferiority complex and they bring out these funny ideas trying to show themselves as a better language and people. I am 50% kannada and 50% andhra and can vouch that this is some desperation to save their skin which is very rampant now that, the andhrans have become a menace in karnataka. I hope god gives them good thoughts and better things to do.

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    2. Nikal chutiye

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    3. Lol do your research.. Telugu is more close to Sanskrit than any language in the whole world. Telugu is an Indo Aryan language

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  29. Sounds like a wish list belonging to a fool, desiring a different identity, because he has no pride in his own reality.

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    1. Lol he really has pride in his own reality that's why he is writing this answer. Telugu is an Indo Aryan language born from Sanskrit and it is an undeniable reality. How much ever you try to mislead, it still doesn't change the fact that telugu is an Aryan language and is no way related to Tamil except the influence

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    2. Google language group of Telugu 🤣

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  30. I think this has to be written to Linguistic society of India and get ait properly classified.Dravidians are polluting Telugu land before they attach beef eating to us.Dravida Desha is land of Tamils and Keralites.

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    1. Telugu is a dravidian language /substrate, Telugus are dravidians genetically, just because some powerful people deployed to rule Andhra and it found new clutches to alter its grammar and add new vocabulary does not make it Indo Aryan, roots persist.

      Just because you got an opputunity to exploit modesty of another man's wife, his wife does not belong to you.

      Respect and honour the language, such wishes are illegitimate.

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    2. Lmfaooo. Telugus are first of all not Dravidians genetically. Only the low caste people and the nom high caste people residing im southern Andhra are dravisions. The remaining population of telugu is completely Aryan. Even the DNA tests have proven. If you look at the skin colour too, the South Andhra people have kind of darker skin and the low caste people in north Andhra have dark skin. But the remaining people are all either fair or light brown. Also, telugu derived it's grammar completely from Sanskrit.

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    3. So then who is genetically Dravidians? Only Tamils???

      And the last part is so fake loooool

      Search up what is Telugu derived from

      Proto Dravidian not Sanskrit

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  31. Great research work ! Lets go Africa, Japan, China, Hongkong, Russia, south America and start add some Sanskrit words and influence their languages, within fifty 50 years we can establish Sanskrit around the world, time to start calling them indo-Aryan languages.,
    Jai Sanskrit
    Jai Sanskrit...
    Jai janma Bhoomi

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    1. Aaa ja mere lund bsdk. Telugu is an Indo Aryan language born from Sanskrit and it's a fact

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    2. It’s literally derived from Proto Dravidian not Sanskrit 🤣

      Speak in Telugu see if it sounds anything like Hindi

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  32. I think Kannada too, has a lot of Sanskrit in it. Apparently, the ruling kings of the various kingdoms of Karnataka encouraged their Brahmins to borrow freely from Sanskrit in developing modern Kannada. Three of the four principal Dravidian languages, Kannada, Telugu and Malayalam have a significant Sanskrit content in their vocabulary and grammar. I do not belong to any of them, but have been looking into it out of curiosity.

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  33. True. Telugu is an Indo Aryan language. The Andhra people are Indo Aryans. We are not Dravidians. Telugu is not a Dravidian language. We aren't related to Tamil. We are related to Sanskrit.

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  34. YES . Telugu IS A DIRECT DESCENDANT OF SANSKRIT and not Dravidian language LIKE Tamil. Most TELUGU WORDS ARE FROM Sanskrit.

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  35. This is a joke right…. Why are so many people saying Telugu is Indo Aryan language

    Telugu is derived from Porto Dravidian it is Dravidian language

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