India Languages, asked by mohammedusman794895, 9 months ago

Kannada text book 9th in the first lesson rajarathnam in the story what is the name of the swami ji

Answers

Answered by kalakumar30
0

Answer:

The name of the swami ji is - rajarathnam

Answered by tanyasharma456
2

Answer:

Explanation:

lesser known as Kanarese)[9][10] is a Dravidian language spoken predominantly by people of Karnataka in Southwestern India and by linguistic minorities in the states of Maharashtra, Andhra Pradesh, Tamil Nadu, Telangana, Kerala and Goa; and also by Carnatican expats abroad. The language has roughly 44 million native speakers,[11] who are called Kannadigas. Kannada is also spoken as a second and third language by over 12.9 million non-Kannada speakers in Karnataka, which adds up to 56.9 million speakers.[12] It is one of the scheduled languages of India and the official and administrative language of the state of Karnataka.[13] Kannada was the court language of some of the most powerful empires of South and Central India, such as the Chalukya dynasty, the Rashtrakuta dynasty, the Vijayanagara Empire and the Hoysala Empire.

Kannada

ಕನ್ನಡ

Kannada in Kedage font.png

Pronunciation

[ˈkɐnnɐɖaː]

Native to

India

Region

Karnataka with border communities in neighbouring states. Place of Origin Bidar & parts of North Karnataka.

Ethnicity

Kannadigaru

Native speakers

44 million (2011)[1][2]

L2 speakers: 13 million[1]

Language family

Dravidian

Southern

Tamil–Kannada[3]

Kannada–Badaga

Kannada

Early form

Old Kannada

Writing system

Kannada script

Kannada Braille

Tigalari script (formerly)

Official status

Official language in

India (Karnataka)

Regulated by

Various academies and the government of Karnataka[4]

Language codes

ISO 639-1

kn

ISO 639-2

kan

ISO 639-3

kan

Glottolog

nucl1305[5]

Linguasphere

49-EBA-a

Idioma kannada.png

Distribution of Kannada native speakers, majority regions in dark blue and minority regions in light blue.[6]

This article contains IPA phonetic symbols. Without proper rendering support, you may see question marks, boxes, or other symbols instead of Unicode characters. For an introductory guide on IPA symbols, see Help:IPA.

The Kannada language is written using the Kannada script, which evolved from the 5th-century Kadamba script. Kannada is attested epigraphically for about one and a half millennia and literary Old Kannada flourished in the 6th-century Ganga dynasty[14] and during the 9th-century Rashtrakuta Dynasty.[15][16] Kannada has an unbroken literary history of over a thousand years.[17] Kannada literature has been presented with 8 Jnanapith awards, the most for any Dravidian language and the second highest for any Indian language.[18][19][20]

Based on the recommendations of the Committee of Linguistic Experts, appointed by the ministry of culture, the government of India designated Kannada a classical language of India.[21][22] In July 2011, a center for the study of classical Kannada was established as part of the Central Institute of Indian Languages in Mysore to facilitate research related to the language.[23]

Contents

Development Edit

Kannada is a Southern Dravidian language, and according to scholar Sanford B. Steever, its history can be conventionally divided into three periods: Old Kannada (Halegannada) from 450–1200 CE, Middle Kannada (Nadugannada) from 1200–1700, and Modern Kannada from 1700 to the present.[24] Kannada is influenced to an appreciable extent by Sanskrit. Influences of other languages such as Prakrit and Pali can also be found in the Kannada language. The scholar Iravatham Mahadevan indicated that Kannada was already a language of rich oral tradition earlier than the 3rd century BCE, and based on the native Kannada words found in Prakrit inscriptions of that period, Kannada must have been spoken by a widespread and stable population.[25][26] The scholar K. V. Narayana claims that many tribal languages which are now designated as Kannada dialects could be nearer to the earlier form of the language, with lesser influence from other languages.[25]

Sanskrit and Prakrit influence

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