Tamil has come from Sanskrit amd prakrit and come from sanskrit too @mAHiTh1708
@ShAwN1708 said in #11:
> Tamil has come from Sanskrit and Prakrit and come from Sanskrit too @mAHiTh1708
Tamil has not come from Sanskrit neither has Sanskrit come from Tamil both are completely different languages both have borrowed from each other as they originated at the nearly same time
> Tamil has come from Sanskrit and Prakrit and come from Sanskrit too @mAHiTh1708
Tamil has not come from Sanskrit neither has Sanskrit come from Tamil both are completely different languages both have borrowed from each other as they originated at the nearly same time
Nooooo, Tamil has come from sanskrit
Sanskrit is the mother of all languages. Well, we can save it before it gets extinct but I don't think it'd be saved in majority. People would learn it but not use it in daily conversations I guess. My school will be teaching me Sanskrit next year so I'll be learning.
@ShAwN1708 said in #11:
> Tamil has come from Sanskrit amd prakrit and come from sanskrit too @mAHiTh1708
Most south indian languages are dravidian, they are not based on Sanskrit
> Tamil has come from Sanskrit amd prakrit and come from sanskrit too @mAHiTh1708
Most south indian languages are dravidian, they are not based on Sanskrit
Probably you are right #15
Sanskrit is an easy language but boring and incase of exam 😂😂 you can score good marks
@Pro1234Player said in #15:
> Most south indian languages are dravidian, they are not based on Sanskrit
no only Tamil is not based on Sanskrit all other south Indians languages have the influence of both Sanskrit and Tamil there's proof for that and funnily enough "Dravid" is a sanskrit word
> Most south indian languages are dravidian, they are not based on Sanskrit
no only Tamil is not based on Sanskrit all other south Indians languages have the influence of both Sanskrit and Tamil there's proof for that and funnily enough "Dravid" is a sanskrit word
@mAHiTh1708 Dravid is a bengal word
Invest your time into learning and improving your English instead, a truly uniting, equalizing communication tool. The world doesn't need yet another tongue, while we could concentrate on the living ones.
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