hidden pixel

Indian English Information

Indian English is an umbrella term used to describe dialects of the English language spoken primarily in the Republic of India.

As a result of British colonial rule until Indian independence in 1947 English is an official language of India and is widely used in both spoken and literary contexts. The rapid growth of India's economy towards the end of the 20th century led to large-scale population migration between regions of the Indian subcontinent and the establishment of English as a common lingua franca between those speaking diverse mother tongues.

With the exception of the relatively small Anglo-Indian community and some families of full Indian ethnicity where English is the primary language spoken in the home, speakers of English in the Indian subcontinent learn it as a second language in school. In cities this is typically at English medium schools, but in smaller towns and villages instruction for most subjects is in the local language, with English language taught as a modular subject. Science and technical education is mostly undertaken in English and, as a result, most university graduates in these sectors are fairly proficient in English.[1]

Idiomatic forms derived from Indian literary and vernacular language have become assimilated into Indian English in differing ways according to the native language of speakers. Nevertheless, there remains general homogeneity in phonetics, vocabulary, and phraseology between variants of the Indian English dialect.

Contents

Grammar

The role of English within the complex multilingual society of India is far from straightforward: it is used across the country, by speakers with various degrees of proficiency; the grammar and phraseology may mimic that of the speaker's first language. While Indian speakers of English use idioms peculiar to their homeland, often literal translations of words and phrases from their native languages, this is far less common in proficient speakers, and the grammar itself tends to be quite close to that of Standard English, while exhibiting some features of American English.

Phonology

Indian accents vary greatly. Some Indians speak English with an accent very close to a Standard British (Received Pronunciation) accent (though not the same); others lean toward a more 'vernacular', native-tinted, accent for their English speech.

Vowels

In general, Indian English has fewer peculiarities in its vowel sounds than the consonants, especially as spoken by native speakers of languages like Hindi, the vowel phoneme system having some similarities with that of English. Among the distinctive features of the vowel-sounds employed by some Indian English speakers are:

Consonants

Among the most distinctive features of consonants in Indian English are:

Spelling pronunciation

A number of distinctive features of Indian English are due to "the vagaries of English spelling".[6] Most Indian languages, unlike English, have a nearly phonetic pronunciation with respect to their script, so the spelling of a word is a highly reliable guide to its modern pronunciation. Indians' tendency to pronounce English phonetically as well can cause divergence from Western English. For example, "jewellery" is pronounced "dʒʋeləriː" and "jewel" as "dʒʋel" where Western Anglophones might omit the final e, pronouncing them as "dʒʋelriː" and "dʒʋl".

Supra-segmental features

Any of the native varieties of English produce unique stresses on the language. English is a stress-timed language, and both syllable stress and word stress, where only certain words in a sentence or phrase are stressed, are important features of Received Pronunciation. Indian native languages are actually syllable-timed languages, like Latin and French. Indian-English speakers usually speak with a syllabic rhythm.[8] Further, in some Indian languages, stress is associated with a low pitch,[9] whereas in most English dialects, stressed syllables are generally pronounced with a higher pitch. Thus, when some Indian speakers speak, they appear to put the stress accents at the wrong syllables, or accentuate all the syllables of a long English word. Certain Indian accents are of a "sing-song" nature, a feature seen in a few English dialects in Britain, such as Scouse and Welsh English.[10]

Vocabulary and colloquialisms

Indians continue to use phrases from British English that other English speakers now consider antiquated. Official letters include phrases such as "please do the needful", "... will revert back ..." and "you will be intimated shortly". In conversational speech it is common to ask, "What is your good name?" to a person of higher authority or social standing where a modern Western Anglophone would omit the word "good". Recent influences from American English have created inconsistencies. For instance, both "program"[11] and "programme"[12] can be found in Indian newspapers.

Numbering system

The Indian numbering system is preferred for digit grouping. When written in words, or when spoken, numbers less than 100,000 are expressed just as they are in Standard English. Numbers including and beyond 100,000 are expressed in a subset of the Indian numbering system. Thus, the following scale is used:

In digits (Standard English) In digits (Indian English) In words (Standard English) In words (Indian English)
10 ten
100 one hundred
1,000 one thousand
10,000 ten thousand
100,000 1,00,000 one hundred thousand one lakh
1,000,000 10,00,000 one million ten lakh
10,000,000 1,00,00,000 ten million one crore

Larger numbers are generally expressed as multiples of the above.[16][17]

Medical terms

Often the cause of undesirable confusion.

Food

Most Indians are more familiar with local names for food items and ingredients than their English translations. To accommodate this, Indian English frequently uses local (especially Hindi) names for food items. On an Indian cooking show, it would not be uncommon to see "bhindi" and "apple" in a single list of ingredients.

Mathematics

Addressing others

This unreferenced section requires citations to ensure verifiability.

Divergent usage

Terms unique to South Asia (i.e. not generally well-known outside the region) and/or popular in India include those in the following by no means exhaustive list:

Terms that are considered archaic in some varieties of English, but are still in use in Indian English:

See also

India portal
Languages portal

References

  1. ^ [1] UGC, explaining its reasons for making it mandatory for all PhD theses to be submitted in English
  2. ^ a b c d Wells, p. 627
  3. ^ a b Wells, p. 626
  4. ^ Wells, pp. 627-628
  5. ^ a b c d Wells, p. 62
  6. ^ a b c d e Wells, p. 629
  7. ^ Wells, p. 630
  8. ^ Cambridge Encyclopedia of the English Language (Cambridge University Press, 1995), page 360
  9. ^ http://www.linguistics.uiuc.edu/sala25/verma.htm "Onset of Rising Pitch in Focused Words in Hindi: an Experimental Study"
  10. ^ Varshney, R.L., "An Introductory Textbook of Linguistics and Phonetics", 15th Ed. (2005), Student Store, Bareilly.
  11. ^ [2]
  12. ^ [3]
  13. ^ http://www.amritt.com/IndianEnglish.html
  14. ^ BBC. Also see the OED.
  15. ^ "Wheatish". MSN Encarta dictionary. http://encarta.msn.com/dictionary_701711679/wheatish.html. Retrieved 2010-08-08.
  16. ^ "Investors lose Rs 4.4 lakh crore in four days", Business Standard
  17. ^ "Back Corporate chiefs getting crores in salaries: 100 and counting!", SmartInvestor.in
  18. ^ multiply, v., Oxford English Dictionary, 2009, Accessed on July 1, 2009
  19. ^ dicky, dickey, n., Oxford English Dictionary, 2009, Accessed on July 1, 2009
  20. ^ 1756 BURKE Subl. & B. IV. iii, "An unnatural tension of the nerves"
  21. ^ like, a., adv. (conj.), and n.2, Oxford English Dictionary, 2009, Accessed on July 1, 2009
  22. ^ http://dictionary.reference.com/search?q=like%20anything Reference.com, Accessed on July 1, 2009

Bibliography

Further reading

Please expand this article. Some suggested sources are given hereafter. More information might be found in a section of the talk page. (February 2012)

External links

Articles Related to Indian English
Dialects and accents of Modern English by continent
Europe
Great Britain
Ireland
Other
North America
United States
Canada
Other
Oceania
Australia
Other
South America
Africa
Asia
Official languages of India
Union-level

Hindi · English

State-level

Assamese · Bengali · Bodo · Chhattisgarhi · Dogri · English · Garo · Gujarati · Hindi · Kannada · Kashmiri · Khasi · Kokborok · Konkani · Maithili · Malayalam · Manipuri · Marathi · Mizo · Nepali · Oriya · Punjabi · Sanskrit · Santali · Sindhi · Telugu · Tamil · Urdu

English-speaking world

Click on a coloured region to get related article:

English language in Europe Languages of Malta Canadian English Quebec English Canadian English Alaska#Languages Falkland Islands English Scottish English Hiberno-English Mid Ulster English British English Demographics of Lesotho South African English Swaziland#Languages Languages of Madagascar Mauritius#Language Sierra Leone#Demographics Liberian English Languages of Ghana Namlish Demographics of Botswana#Languages Languages of Zimbabwe Languages of Zambia Malawian English Tanzania#Language Rwanda#Demographics Ugandan English Languages of Kenya Languages of Sudan Languages of Eritrea Languages of Ethiopia Languages of Nigeria Cameroon English Pakistani English Indian English Australian English New Zealand English Languages of Papua New Guinea Solomon Islands#Demographics Palau#Demographics Federated States of Micronesia#Languages Languages of Fiji Malaysian English Singapore English Philippine English Hong Kong English Marshall Islands#Culture Languages of Nauru Bahamian English American English Demographics of the Cayman Islands#Languages Jamaican English Languages of Belize Demographics of Saint Helena Languages of Guyana Puerto Rico#Language English of the Windward Islands and Leeward Islands Bermudian English
  • Countries and territories where English is the national language or the native language of the majority.
Africa
Americas
Europe
Oceania
  • Countries and territories where English is an official language, but not the majority language.
Africa
Americas
Asia
Europe
Oceania

Categories:

 

The above information uses material from Wikipedia and is licensed under the GNU Free Documentation License.
Some facts may not have been fully verified for accuracy. [Disclaimers]
This page was last archived by our server on Sat Apr 21 21:54:38 2012.
Displaying this page or its contents does not use any Wikimedia Foundation's resources.
The owners of this site proudly support the Wikimedia Foundation.



Matching Results for Indian English:

Indian
We're going out tonight for an Indian. Synonyms (indigenous person of the ... Most common English words before 1923: prepared support bit #824 ...

English
Indian English; King's English; Korean English; Medieval English; Middle English; Modern English; Multicultural London English; Newfoundland English; Old English


from: Wiktionary: indian english,
Sun Mar 25 04:46:18 2012

Matching Results for Indian English:

Indian proverbs
See also: Bengali proverbs, Hindi proverbs, Kumaoni Proverbs, Sanskrit proverbs, Punjabi proverbs, Kashmiri proverbs, Malayalam proverbs, Tamil proverbs, Telugu proverbs ...

Konkani proverbs
This article does not cite its references or sources. You can help Wikiquote by introducing appropriate citations.

English proverbs
Proverbs are popularly defined as short expressions of popular wisdom. Efforts to improve on the popular definition have not led to a more precise definition.


from: Wikiquote: indian english,
Sat Jun 25 23:25:03 2011