Classical Languages of India
classical languages of the Indian Republic
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Classical Languages of India
Summary
Classical Languages of India is a heritage designation[1]. It ranks in the top 5% of heritage_designation entities by monthly Wikipedia readership (494 views/month).[2]
Key Facts
- Classical Languages of India is in the country of India[3].
- Classical Languages of India's instance of is recorded as heritage designation[4].
- Classical Languages of India's subclass of is recorded as classical language[5].
- Classical Languages of India's Commons category is recorded as Classical languages of India[6].
- Classical Languages of India's has part is recorded as Tamil[7].
- Classical Languages of India's has part is recorded as Sanskrit[8].
- Classical Languages of India's has part is recorded as Kannada[9].
- Classical Languages of India's has part is recorded as Telugu[10].
- Classical Languages of India's has part is recorded as Malayalam[11].
- Classical Languages of India's has part is recorded as Odia[12].
- Classical Languages of India's has part is recorded as Assamese[13].
- Classical Languages of India's has part is recorded as Bangla[14].
- Classical Languages of India's has part is recorded as Marathi[15].
- Classical Languages of India's has part is recorded as Pali[16].
- Classical Languages of India's has part is recorded as Prakrit[17].
- Classical Languages of India's conferred by is recorded as Ministry of Culture[18].
Why It Matters
Classical Languages of India ranks in the top 5% of heritage_designation entities by monthly Wikipedia readership (494 views/month).[2]