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Pratap Sarnaik who is a close aide of Eknath Shinde, said, “Hindi has become the spoken language of Mumbai”. However, the transport minister said that Hindu spoken in Mumbai is not pure as ...
A customer took to social media to call out Union Bank of India for not offering Kannada as a language choice at an ATM outside its Nagarbhavi branch near the NLS campus.
Nigam targets ‘language politics’ Nigam, known for not mincing words, fired back at the MP’s comments with a sarcastic and pointed post. “Don’t dub Kannada movies in Hindi!
Sanskrit is the most computer-friendly language," Gupta was quoted as saying by news agency PTI. Also Read | Switch off electricity for 5 minutes on World Earth Day: Delhi CM Rekha Gupta ...
However, for most people counted among these so-called Hindi speakers, language is not a seat of power but a narrow corridor of access – the only path left open when all others are shut.
The government decision taken last week to make Hindi compulsory as a third language for students of Classes 1 to 5 in Marathi and English-medium schools in the state had met with stiff resistance ...
In a viral video, a Bengaluru man was seen confronting an auto driver and asking him to speak Hindi. The argument perhaps broke out after the driver told him to speak in the local language, Kannada.
The ongoing Marathi Vs Hindi language debate has taken a sharp turn, with Raj Thackeray-led Maharashtra Navnirman Sena (MNS) ramping up its opposition to the promotion of Hindi. In a bold move ...
Hindi becomes mandatory as third language in Maharashtra for Classes 1-5 under NEP. Till now, only Marathi and English have been taught as mandatory languages from Classes 1 to 4 in these schools.
Similarly, in Uttar Pradesh, 94% taught Hindi, 75.3% taught English, and 65.2% taught Sanskrit in the primary, with just 7% offering other languages.
Hindi imposition on the non-Hindi speaking states has become a serious problem over the years. In Karnataka, most of the public examinations are usually conducted in English and/or Hindi.
A former bank officer, Ramanujam Sridhar, on Monday said the anti-Hindi sentiment in Tamil Nadu during the 1960s was a “political trap” that cost him professionally later in life.
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