All
social animals communicate with each other, from bees and ants to whales and
apes, but only humans have developed a language which is more than a set of
prearranged signals.
Language, as per the Oxford dictionary, is defined as the method of human communication, either spoken or written, consisting of the use of words in a structured and conventional way. Language helps in expressing our thoughts, ideas and feelings. What lies in our mind and heart can be conveyed by this powerful tool.
Language, as per the Oxford dictionary, is defined as the method of human communication, either spoken or written, consisting of the use of words in a structured and conventional way. Language helps in expressing our thoughts, ideas and feelings. What lies in our mind and heart can be conveyed by this powerful tool.
Languages
change as they are handed down from generation to generation.
In a large population,
languages are likely to be relatively stable - simply because there are more
people to remember what previous generations did. Some have argued that
language evolved independently in different parts of the world, while others
say it evolved just once, and that all languages are descended from a single
ancestral mother tongue. Over the years, the
style of speech and expression has changed. There have been new additions in
dictionaries. Some words have evolved while others have completely acquired a
new meaning.
The question
is where did it all start?
Statistics show that
the 1.8 billion speakers in the world communicate in English thus making it the
largest spoken language in the world. Let’s go back in history. The form of
English spoken from mid 5th to mid 11th century was Old English which is derived
from Latin.
In 1786 Sir William
Jones, the English Chief Justice in India, noticed similarities between Greek
and the ancient language of India, Sanskrit. This observation led Jones to
hypothesize that Greek and Sanskrit, as well as Latin, descended from a common
linguistic ancestor. Going deeper, we see that Latin was actually a form of a
group of languages that are known as the Proto Indo European languages.
What sparks the debate
is whether Sanskrit is the mother of all languages.
The
word "samskrata", in the strictest sense, means "purified,
consecrated, sanctified". Sanskrit, usually referred to as "Samskrata
Vāk", would mean a "refined language". Sanskrit has, by
definition, always been considered to have been a language chiefly employed for
religious and scientific discourse and is assumed to have contrasted with the
languages spoken by the people.
Sanskrit was introduced
on the earth planet, by the eternal Sages of Sanatan Dharm along with
the Divine scriptures such as the Vedas, the Upanishads and the Puranas. Since
the start of human civilization on the earth, people and the Sages both spoke
pure Sanskrit language. The historical records indicate that three public
programs of the recitation of the Bhagwatam and the discourses on Krishna leelas had happened in Sanskrit language in
3072 BC, 2872 BC and 2842 BC in which Saints and the devotees participated.
In the Classical period
Sanskrit was used much like Latin in Medieval Europe, as a literary language of
educated elite.
Sanskrit
has a similar position in India to that of Latin and Greek in Medieval Europe,
and is a central part of Hindu/Vedic traditions. In its pre-classical form,
called Vedic Sanskrit, Sanskrit is one of the earliest attested members of the
Indo-European language family. The oldest example of Sanskrit literature
available is the Rig-Veda.
After
the 11th century, the development of Sanskrit literature considerably declined
due to the rise of derivative languages like Hindi, Bengali and other
languages. However, the influence of Sanskrit in the literary cultures in these
languages is very evident, with earlier works in Sanskrit constantly undergoing
reinvention and reinterpretation over subsequent ages.
As the Latin language
evolved into the Romance languages in Europe, Sanskrit gave rise to a variety
of dialects that in time became separate languages.
Perhaps
Sanskrit is the beginning of it all?
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