India, the names of

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Revision as of 11:17, 19 July 2023

This is a collection of articles archived for the excellence of their content.
Additional information may please be sent as messages to the Facebook
community, Indpaedia.com. All information used will be gratefully
acknowledged in your name.

India, in the official languages of India

Assamese ভাৰত Bhārôt

Bengali ভারত Bhārot

Bodo भारत Bhārôt

Dogri भारत Bhārat

Gujarati ભારત Bhārat

Hindi भारत Bhārat

Kannada ಭಾರತ Bhārata

Kashmiri ہِندوستان Hindōstān

Konkani भारत Bharot

Maithili भारत Bhārat

Malayalam ഭാരതം Bhāratam

Marathi भारत Bhārat

Meitei (Manipuri) (Bengali Assamese ভারত Bharôt) ( Meitei script ꯏꯟꯗꯤꯌꯥ[D] Indiyā)

Nepali भारत Bhārat

Odia ଭାରତ Bhārata

Punjabi ਭਾਰਤ Bhārat

Sanskrit भारतम् Bhāratam

Santali (Ol Chiki ᱥᱤᱧᱚᱛ[E] Siñôt) (Devanagari भारोत Bharot)

Sindhi भारत Bhārat/ ڀارت

Tamil இந்தியா (official), பாரதம்[F][8] Intiyā, Pāratam

Telugu భారతదేశం Bhārata

Urdu ہندوستان Hindustān

The word India

The Avestan name for Sindh is Hinduš. It was inscribed by Persian emperor Darius I (550-486 BC) on the Persepolis terrace

The ancient Greeks used the name Ἰνδία (Indía). Herodotus (484 – 425/413 BC) referred to "Indian land" Ἰνδός/ Indos (‘an Indian’), following the Persians.

The Byzantine people used the word Iindía to describe the region beyond the Indus (Ἰνδός) River

Ancient Latin speakers borrowed the name India from the Greeks.

Most European languages—including English—use a variant of the Latin word India.

In English, King Alfred (A.D. 848-899)'s translation of Orosius is the oldest known use of the word India in the English language.

However, English writers who were influenced by the French replaced India with Ynde and Inde. Inde remains the French spelling.

William Shakespeare (1564- 1616) and the first edition of the King James Bible (1611) used the spelling Indie

In the 1600s the Spanish and the Portuguese spelt the word as it is today, India, which was also the official Latin spelling. This could have induced the British to revert to the spelling India.

Summary: The British did not ‘give’ us the name India. They took it from the Latin languages, which in turn took it from the Greeks, who were influenced by the Persians, who preceded the oldest known use of the word India by the British by more than 1300 years

The names of India in the languages of the world

Afrikaans Indië

Albanian India

Arabic الهند Al Hind

Belarusian Індыя

Bulgarian Индия

Cambodia. in ancient times knew India by the name "Suvarnabhumi," Sanskrit for the "Land of Gold" or "Golden Land."

Catalan Índia

Czech Indie

Chinese: 印度 (Yìndù) . Ancient name 天竺 (Tiānzhú) The Chinese name "Tiānzhú" means "Heavenly Land",

Danish Indien

Dutch Indië

English India

Estonian India

Farsi هندوستان Hindostan, with an o

Filipino: India

Finnish Intia

French Inde

Galician India

German Indien

Greek Ινδία

Hebrew הודו Hodu is the Biblical Hebrew name for India mentioned in the Book of Esther

Hindi भारत

Hungarian India

Icelandic Indland

Indonesian India Ancient name: Hindia

Irish An India

Italian India

Japanese インド (Indoku) Tenjiku was the ancient Japanese name for India, somewhat similar to the Chinese name. It is said that a merchant-adventurer Tokubei (1612–1692) had a lifelong ambition to visit 'Tenjiku' (the Heavenly Land). He even renamed himself Tenjiku Tokubei out of reverence for India.

Khmer ប្រទេសឥណ្ឌា bratesa Inda

Korean 인도 (Indeo)

Lao ປະເທດອິນເດຍ pathed India

Latvian Indija

Lithuanian Indija

Macedonian Индија

Malay: India

Mandarin 印度

Norwegian India

Polish Indie (Indi)

Portuguese Índia

Romanian India

Russian Индия (Indiya)

Serbian Индија

Slovak India

Slovenian Indija

Spanish India

Southeast Asia (Thailand, Malaysia, Java and Bali) Ancient name: Jambu Dwipa

Swahili Uhindi

Swedish Indien

Tagalog. Filipino Indiya

Thai อินเดีย (Indiya/ In-thi-ya )

Tibet: Ancient names:

i) Gyagar: This is the name that the people of Ladakh use to this day.

ii) བོད་ཡུལ་ (Bod-yul) The Tibetan name "Bod-yul" means "Land of the Bhoṭiya people" who live in the Himalayan area bordering Tibet and Nepal and are found in three states of India – Sikkim, West Bengal and Utarakhand. In Utarakhand, the Bhotia primarily reside in the districts of Pithoragarh, Chamoli, Almorah, Utarkashi and Nainital.

iii) Phagyul: the land of the Aryas i

Turkish Hindistan

Ukrainian Індія

Vietnamese Ấn Độ

Welsh India

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