World Hindi Day 2023:

World Hindi  Day 2023:

Learn 10 Fascinating Facts About Hindi And How It Differs From National Hindi Day? 

 

World Hindi Day 2023: 

•    Every year on January 10 World Hindi Day is observed worldwide to promote Hindi around the world.
 
•    World Hindi Day is observed not only to promote Hindi on a global scale but also to unite Indians living abroad in their shared love of Hindi.
 
•    Let us clarify that World Hindi Day and Hindi Day are not the same thing.
 
India celebrates Hindi Diwas on September 14.
 
World Hindi Day is observed on January 10 each year.
•    Both holidays are intended to promote Hindi.
 
•    The goal of World Hindi Day is to spread awareness of it worldwide. The Constituent Assembly voted to make Hindi the national tongue of India on September 14, 1949.
 
•    In honor of this day, National Hindi Day is observed.
 
•    While promoting Hindi over the world is the goal of World Hindi Day.
 
•    The first World Hindi Conference took place in Nagpur on January 10, 1975.
 
•    In the past, conferences on world Hindi have been held in India, including those in Port Louis, Spain, London, New York, Johannesburg, etc.
 
•    Any Indian, no matter where s/he is, communicates with another Indian in Hindi.
 
•    The only language in which our heart and mind can be effortlessly expressed is Hindi.
 
•    Not only is Hindi our home tongue or country's official language, but it also represents our sense of pride and identity. 
 

10 Fascinating Hindi-Related Facts:

World Hindi Day 2023
•    After Mandarin and English, Hindi is the third most widely spoken language in the world.
 
•    Every year, Indian words gain space in the Oxford Dictionary, the most widely used dictionary in the world.
 
•    The phrases self-reliance, tights, Bapu, Surya Namaskar, Aadhaar, women power, and nice words have also been added to Oxford's illustrious dictionary.
 
•    In 2017, there were over 70 Indian words in Oxford, more than 33 of which were in Hindi.
 
•    Avatar, Cheetah, Guru, Gymkhana, Mantra, Maharaja, Bhelpuri, Churidar, Dhaba, Crook, Chup, Funda, Chacha, Chowdhary, Chamcha, Dadagiri, Jugaad, Pajama, Keema,Papad, Curry, Chutney, There are existing words like Mughal, Nirvana, Pandit, Thug, and Veranda.
 
•    In the South Pacific Ocean, there is an island nation called Fiji, where Hindi has been designated as an official language. 
 
•    In addition to India, places where Hindi is correctly spoken and understood include Mauritius, the Philippines, Nepal, Fiji, Guyana, Suriname, Trinidad, Tibet, and Pakistan.
 
•    To support advanced Hindi study, the Indian government founded the Central Hindi Institute in 1963.
 
•    There are eight of them spread across the nation.
 
•    There are currently millions of people who speak Hindi around the world, and Hindi is taught at hundreds of universities.
 
•    In more over a hundred and fifty American educational institutions, Hindi is taught.
 
•    "Making Hindi the language of public opinion, without forgetting the importance of their mother tongue" is the topic of this year's Hindi Day.
 
•    In addition to India, there are also Fiji, Mauritius, the Philippines, the United States, New Zealand, Uganda, Singapore, Nepal, Guyana, Suriname, Trinidad, Tibet, South Africa, Suriname, the United Kingdom, Germany, and Pakistan with minor modifications, with correctly spoken Hindi And it is comprehended 
 
•    The Persian word "Hind," which signifies the region around the Indus River, is the source of the name Hindi.
 
•    The language spoken along the banks of the Indus River was given the name "Hindi" by the Persian-speaking Turks who invaded the Gangetic plain and the Punjab in the early 11th century.
 
•    The language is acknowledged as a minority language in the United Arab Emirates and as an official language of India.
 
•    Due to a split in the voting, Hindi was unable to become the country's official language.
 
•    Hindi was referred to as the language of the people by Mahatma Gandhi, the Father of the Nation.
 
•    He desired that Hindi become the official language.
 
•    He requested that Hindi become the official language during the 1918 Hindi Literature Conference.
 
•    After attaining independence, after many deliberations, finally on 14 September 1949, the Constituent Assembly chose to make Hindi the official language.
 
•    Making Hindi the official language of India did not sit well with many people.
 
•    Some questioned the significance of independence if everyone was required to speak only Hindi.
 
•    Hindi would not be able to take over as the official tongue in this circumstance.

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