Life
Hinglish2English
India now has the largest English-speaking population in the world, surpassing the United States. David Crystal, professor of linguistics and the author of The Stories of English, estimates that India’s English speaking population now exceeds 350 million. For most it is a second language.
It should come as no surprise that Indians have given their own twist to the language of their colonizers. As early as 1886 Indian English terms, endearingly known as Hinglish, were compiled by Colonel Henry Yule and A.C. Burnell in Hobson-Jobson: A Glossary of Anglo-Indian Words, which is now available online ( http://dsal.uchicago.edu/dictionaries/hobsonjobson ) More recently, another Britisher living in Delhi since 1945, Nigel Hankin pulled together 2000 common Hinglish words, such as mistri (artisan), moolah (money) in Hanklyn-Janklin. The internet has spawned other attempts at documenting Indian English contributions, such as the Online Dictionary of Indian English ( http://www.vsubhash.com/desienglish.asp ). Hinglish terms are peculiarly Indian, their meaning and usage confined to India. However, Hinglish is increasingly being absorbed by English speakers outside India. Words such as chai, mantra, pundit, avatar, guru and karma, for example, have acquired widespread acceptance worldwide. Several other popular English words have Indian roots: |
||||||||||||||||||||||||||
|
The venerable Oxford English Dictionary, which professes to be “the accepted authority on the evolution of the English language over the last millennium” has adopted 600 Indian words. The Revised 2nd Edition, released last year, introduced the world to several new words, from those familiar to the tech savvy, like podcast and phishing, Hinglish terminology, like desi and kitty party. Among the Indian words, introduced by the Revised Oxford Dictionary of English, which “traces the usage of words through 2.5 million quotations from a wide range of international English language sources, from classic literature and specialist periodicals to film scripts and cookery books”:
|
Agitation | noun (Indian) a public demonstration. |
bindaas | adjective Indian informal carefree, fashionable, and independent-minded: Bombay’s most bindaas babe |
Desi | noun a person of Indian, Pakistani or Bangladeshi birth or descent |
Hinglish | noun [mass noun] informal a blend of Hindi and English, in particular a variety of English used by speakers of Hindi, characterized by frequent use of Hindi vocabulary or constructions. |
Kitty party | noun (chiefly Indian) a regular gathering of a group of women (usually over a meal) in which each member contributes money to a central pool ad lots are drawn to decide which member will get the entire sum as well as who will host the next gathering. |
Lehnga | noun a full ankle-length skirt worn by Indian women, usually on formal or ceremonial occasions |
Mehndi | noun 1. The art or practice of applying temoporary henna tattoos, especially as part of a bride or groom’s preparation for a wedding. 2. A temporary henna tattoo. |
Tamasha | noun (Indian) a fuss or commotion |
Vinyasa | noun 1. Movement between poses in yoga, typically accompanied by regulated breathing. 2. A method of yoga in which these movements form a flowing sequence in coordination with the breath. |