History, asked by shruti2527, 10 months ago

who was William jones?​


vivek5347: William jones is welsh mathamatician
aditya5389: No,he is judge
vivek5347: I see this information on google

Answers

Answered by shaunajazlyn
23

Answer:

Sir William Jones (1746–1794) was an English philologist, Orientalist, and jurist. While serving as a judge of the high court at Calcutta, he became a student of ancient India and founded the Asiatic Society of Bengal. He is best known for his famous proposition that many languages sprang from a common source. His scholarship helped to generate widespread interest in Eastern history, language and culture, and it led to new directions in linguistic research.

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Answered by Jaswindar9199
0

SIR WILLIAM JONES

  • Sir William Jones was born on 28th September 1746 and died on 27 April 1794.
  • He was a British philologist, a puisne judge on the Supreme Court of Judicature at Fort William in West Bengal, and an intellectual of historical India.
  • He is especially known for his recommendation of the presence of a relationship among European Indo-Aryan languages, which later appeared to be known as the Indo-European languages.
  • Jones is also attributed to ascertaining the Asiatic Society of Bengal in 1784.
  • The youthful William Jones was a verbal prodigy, who in extension to his native languages English and Welsh, comprehended Greek, Latin, Persian, Arabic, Hebrew and the basics of Chinese composition at an early age.
  • By the verge of his existence, he knew eight languages with significant thoroughness, was polished in an additional eight, with a dictionary at hand, and had a reasonable competence in another twelve.

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