Free Online FOOD for MIND & HUNGER - DO GOOD 😊 PURIFY MIND.To live like free birds 🐦 🦢 🦅 grow fruits 🍍 🍊 🥑 🥭 🍇 🍌 🍎 🍉 🍒 🍑 🥝 vegetables 🥦 🥕 🥗 🥬 🥔 🍆 🥜 🎃 🫑 🍅🍜 🧅 🍄 🍝 🥗 🥒 🌽 🍏 🫑 🌳 🍓 🍊 🥥 🌵 🍈 🌰 🇧🇧 🫐 🍅 🍐 🫒Plants 🌱in pots 🪴 along with Meditative Mindful Swimming 🏊‍♂️ to Attain NIBBĀNA the Eternal Bliss.
Kushinara NIBBĀNA Bhumi Pagoda White Home, Puniya Bhumi Bengaluru, Prabuddha Bharat International.
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05/24/21
LESSON 3689 Tue-25 May 2021 - Prabuddha Poornima/Jayanti on 26-5-2021 Budddha Sasana-Losing One’s Head 1- ZEN Swimming Meditation to attain Eternal Bliss 2-Kushinara Nibbāna Bhumi Pagoda to propagate to grow Vegan and dwarf fruit bearing plants through out the world to consume raw like birds. Now All Aboriginal Awakened Societies Thunder ” Hum Prapanch PrabuddhaBharatmay karunge.” (We will make world Prabuddha Prapanch) People have started returning back to their original home Buddhism. KushinaraNibbana Bhumi Pagoda-Free Online Analytical Research and PracticeUniversity for Searching Vegan Food for Humans like the birds to Discover Awakened One Universe in 117 Classical Languages. 3D 360 Degree Circle Vision Meditation Lab. White Home, 668, 5A Main Road, 8th Cross HAL III Stage, Puniya Bhumi Bengaluru, Magadhi karnataka State, Prabuddha Bharat International. http://sarvajan.ambedkar.org buddhasaid2us@gmail.com jcs4ever@outlook.com jchandrasekharan@yahoo.com
Filed under: General
Posted by: site admin @ 5:54 pm

LESSON 3689 Tue-25 May 2021 -  Prabuddha Poornima/Jayanti  on 26-5-2021 Budddha Sasana-Losing One’s Head


1- ZEN Swimming Meditation to attain Eternal Bliss



2-Kushinara Nibbāna Bhumi
Pagoda to propagate to grow Vegan and dwarf fruit bearing plants through
out the world to consume raw like birds.


Now All Aboriginal Awakened
Societies Thunder ” Hum Prapanch PrabuddhaBharatmay karunge.” (We will
make world Prabuddha Prapanch)


People have started returning back to their original home Buddhism.


KushinaraNibbana Bhumi
Pagoda-Free Online Analytical Research and PracticeUniversity for
Searching Vegan Food for Humans like the birds to Discover Awakened One
Universe in 117 Classical Languages.

3D 360 Degree Circle Vision
Meditation Lab.


White Home,


668, 5A Main Road,


8th Cross


HAL III Stage,


Puniya Bhumi Bengaluru,


Magadhi karnataka State,


Prabuddha Bharat International.










Friends


When
a just born baby is kept isolated without anyone communicating with the
baby, after a few days it will speak and human natural (Prakrit)
language known as Classical Magahi Magadhi/Classical Chandaso
language/Magadhi Prakrit,Classical Hela Basa (Hela Language),Classical
Pāḷi which are the same. Buddha spoke in Magadhi. All the 7,139
languages and dialects are off shoot of Classical Magahi Magadhi. Hence
all of them are Classical in nature (Prakrit) of Human Beings, just like
all other living speices have their own natural languages for
communication. 117 languages are translated by
https://translate.google.comin
  • 01) Classical Magahi Magadhi,
  • 02) Classical Chandaso language,
  • 03)Magadhi Prakrit,
    04)
    Classical Hela Basa (Hela Language),

  • 05) Classical Pāḷi,

  • 06) ClassicalDevanagari,Classical Hindi-Devanagari- शास्त्रीय हिंदी,

  • 07) ClassicalCyrillic
    08) Classical Afrikaans– Klassieke Afrikaans
    09) Classical Albanian-Shqiptare klasike,
    10) Classical Amharic-አንጋፋዊ አማርኛ,
    11) Classical Arabic-اللغة العربية الفصحى
    12) Classical Armenian-դասական հայերեն,
    13) Classical Assamese-ধ্ৰুপদী অসমীয়া





14) Classical Azerbaijani- Klassik Azərbaycan,
15) Classical Basque- Euskal klasikoa,
16) Classical Belarusian-Класічная беларуская,
17) Classical Bengali-ক্লাসিক্যাল বাংলা,
18) Classical Bosnian-Klasični bosanski,
19) Classical Bulgaria- Класически българск,
  • 20) Classical Catalan-Català clàssic 21) Classical Cebuano-Klase sa Sugbo, 22) Classical Chichewa-Chikale cha Chichewa,
    23) Classical Chinese (Simplified)-古典中文(简体),
    24) Classical Chinese (Traditional)-古典中文(繁體),
    25) Classical Corsican-Corsa Corsicana,
    26) Classical Croatian-Klasična hrvatska,
  • 27) Classical Czech-Klasická čeština

    28) Classical Danish-Klassisk dansk,Klassisk dansk,
    29) Classical Dutch- Klassiek Nederlands,
    30) Classical English,Roman,
    31) Classical Esperanto-Klasika Esperanto,
    32) Classical Estonian- klassikaline eesti keel,

  • 33) Classical Filipino klassikaline filipiinlane,
    34) Classical Finnish- Klassinen suomalainen,
    35) Classical French- Français classique,
    36) Classical Frisian- Klassike Frysk,
    37) Classical Galician-Clásico galego,
    38) Classical Georgian-კლასიკური ქართული,
    39) Classical German- Klassisches Deutsch,
    40) Classical Greek-Κλασσικά Ελληνικά,
    41) Classical Gujarati-ક્લાસિકલ ગુજરાતી,
    42) Classical Haitian Creole-Klasik kreyòl,
    43) Classical Hausa-Hausa Hausa,
    44) Classical Hawaiian-Hawaiian Hawaiian,
    45) Classical Hebrew- עברית קלאסית
    46) Classical Hmong- Lus Hmoob,
    47) Classical Hungarian-Klasszikus magyar,
    48) Classical Icelandic-Klassísk íslensku,
    49) Classical Igbo,Klassískt Igbo,
    50) Classical Indonesian-Bahasa Indonesia Klasik,
    51) Classical Irish-Indinéisis Clasaiceach,
    52) Classical Italian-Italiano classico,
    53) Classical Japanese-古典的なイタリア語,
    54) Classical Javanese-Klasik Jawa,
    55) Classical Kannada- ಶಾಸ್ತ್ರೀಯ ಕನ್ನಡ,
    56) Classical Kazakh-Классикалық қазақ,
    57) Classical Khmer- ខ្មែរបុរាណ,
    58) Classical Kinyarwanda
    59) Classical Korean-고전 한국어,
    60) Classical Kurdish (Kurmanji)-Kurdî (Kurmancî),
    61) Classical Kyrgyz-Классикалык Кыргыз,
    62) Classical Lao-ຄລາສສິກລາວ,
    63) Classical Latin-LXII) Classical Latin,
    64) Classical Latvian-Klasiskā latviešu valoda,
    65) Classical Lithuanian-Klasikinė lietuvių kalba,
    66) Classical Luxembourgish-Klassesch Lëtzebuergesch,
    67) Classical Macedonian-Класичен македонски,
    68) Classical Malagasy,класичен малгашки,
    69) Classical Malay-Melayu Klasik,
    70) Classical Malayalam-ക്ലാസിക്കൽ മലയാളം,
    71) Classical Maltese-Klassiku Malti,
    72) Classical Maori-Maori Maori,
    73) Classical Marathi-क्लासिकल माओरी,
    74) Classical Mongolian-Сонгодог Монгол,
    75) Classical Myanmar (Burmese)-Classical မြန်မာ (ဗမာ),
    76) Classical Nepali-शास्त्रीय म्यांमार (बर्मा),
    77) Classical Norwegian-Klassisk norsk,

  • 78) Classical Odia (Oriya
    79) Classical Pashto- ټولګی پښتو
    80) Classical Persian-کلاسیک فارسی
    81) Classical Polish-Język klasyczny polski,
    82) Classical Portuguese-Português Clássico,
    83) Classical Punjabi-ਕਲਾਸੀਕਲ ਪੰਜਾਬੀ,
    84) Classical Romanian-Clasic românesc,
    85) Classical Russian-Классический русский,
    86) Classical Samoan-Samoan Samoa,

  • 87) Classical Sanskrit छ्लस्सिचल् षन्स्क्रित्
    88) Classical Scots Gaelic-Gàidhlig Albannach Clasaigeach,

  • 89) Classical Serbian-Класични српски,
    90) Classical Sesotho-Seserbia ea boholo-holo,
    91) Classical Shona-Shona Shona,
    92) Classical Sindhi,
    93) Classical Sinhala-සම්භාව්ය සිංහල,
    94) Classical Slovak-Klasický slovenský,
    95) Classical Slovenian-Klasična slovenska,
    96) Classical Somali-Soomaali qowmiyadeed,
    97) Classical Spanish-Español clásico,
    98) Classical Sundanese-Sunda Klasik,
    99) Classical Swahili,Kiswahili cha Classical,
    100) Classical Swedish-Klassisk svensk,
    101) Classical Tajik-тоҷикӣ классикӣ,


    102) Classical Tamil-பாரம்பரிய இசைத்தமிழ் செம்மொழி,
    103) Classical Tatar
    104) Classical Telugu- క్లాసికల్ తెలుగు,
    105) Classical Thai-ภาษาไทยคลาสสิก,
    106) Classical Turkish-Klasik Türk,
    107) Classical Turkmen
    108) Classical Ukrainian-Класичний український,
    109) Classical Urdu- کلاسیکی اردو
    110) Classical Uyghur,
    111) Classical Uzbek-Klassik o’z,
    112) Classical Vietnamese-Tiếng Việ,
    113) Classical Welsh-Cymraeg Clasurol,
    114) Classical Xhosa-IsiXhosa zesiXhosa,
    115) Classical Yiddish- קלאסישע ייִדיש
    116) Classical Yoruba-Yoruba Yoruba,
    117) Classical Zulu-I-Classical Zulu




More
than 19,500 languages spoken in Prabuddha Bharat as mother tongues The
mother tongue of each member of a household need not necessarily be the
sameMore than 19,500 languages or dialects are spoken in Prabuddha
Bharat as mother tongues, according to the latest analysis of a census
released this week.There are 121 languages which are spoken by 10,000 or
more people in Prabuddha Bharat, which has a population of 121 crore,
it said.The Registrar General and Census Commissioner, Prabuddha
Bharat,said since a household may consist of persons related by blood or
of unrelated persons or a mix of both, it is absolutely necessary to
ask every person about her or his mother tongue.It was required because
the mother tongue of each member of a household need not necessarily be
the same — these may be different for different members in the
household.

The
number of such raw returns of mother tongues has totalled 19,569, the
report of the 2011 census said.However, 96.71 per cent of the population
in the country have one of the 22 scheduled languages as their mother
tongue.Since mother tongues, as returned in the census, are basically
the designations provided by the respondents of the linguistic mediums
in which the respondents think they communicate, they need not be
identical with the actual linguistic mediums, it said.The methodologyFor
assessing the correlation between the mother tongue and designations of
the census and for presenting the numerous raw returns in terms of
their linguistic affiliation to actual languages and dialects, 19,569
raw returns were subjected to thorough linguistic scrutiny, edit and
rationalisation.This resulted in 1,369 rationalised mother tongues and
1,474 names which were treated as “unclassified” and relegated to
“other” mother tongue category.The 1,369 rationalised mother tongues
were further classified following the usual linguistic methods for
rational grouping based on available linguistic information.

Thus,
an inventory of classified mother tongues returned by 10,000 or more
speakers are grouped under appropriate languages at the all-India level,
wherever possible, has been prepared for final presentation of the 2011
mother tongue data.What are the findings?The total number of languages
arrived at is 121, the Registrar General and Census Commissioner,
Prabuddha Bharat, said.The 121 languages are presented in two parts —
languages included in the Eighth Schedule of the Prabuddha Bharatian
Constitution, comprising 22 languages and languages not included in the
Eighth Schedule, comprising of 99 languages plus the category “total of
other languages”, which includes all other languages and mother tongues
which returned less than 10,000 speakers each at the all-India level or
were not identifiable on the basis of the linguistic information
available.The number of scheduled languages was 22 at the time of
presentation of the 2001. The same 22 languages are maintained in 2011
census also.The non-scheduled languages are 99 in 2011 against 100 in
2001.The decrease in the number is due to exclusion of Simte and
Persian, which were not returned in sufficient numbers as 2011, and
inclusion of Mao, which has returned more than 10,000 speakers at the
all-Prabuddha Bharat level at 2011 census.Of the total population of
Prabuddha Bharat 96.71 percent have one of the scheduled languages as
their mother tongue, the remaining 3.29 per cent is accounted for other
languages.There are total 270 identifiable mother tongues which have
returned 10,000 or more speakers each at the all-India level, comprising
123 mother tongues grouped under the scheduled languages and 147 mother
tongues grouped under the non-scheduled languages.Those mother tongues
which have returned less than 10,000 speakers each and which have been
classified under a particular language, are included in “others” under
that language.About the constitutional languagesThe Eighth Schedule of
the Constitution consists of the following 22 languages – Assamese,
Bengali, Gujarati, Hindi, Kannada, Kashmiri, Konkani, Malayalam,
Manipuri, Marathi, Nepali, Oriya, Punjabi, Sanskrit, Sindhi, Tamil,
Telugu, Urdu, Bodo, Santhali, Maithili and Dogri.Of these languages, 14
were initially included in the Constitution. Sindhi language was added
in 1967. Thereafter three more languages, Konkani, Manipuri and Nepali
were included in 1992.Subsequently, Bodo, Dogri, Maithili and Santhali
were added in 2004.

How many languages are there in the world?
7,139 languages are spoken today.

That number is constantly in flux, because we’re learning more about
the world’s languages every day. And beyond that, the languages
themselves are in flux. They’re living and dynamic, spoken by
communities whose lives are shaped by our rapidly changing world. This
is a fragile time: Roughly 40% of languages are now endangered, often
with less than 1,000 speakers remaining. Meanwhile, just 23 languages
account for more than half the world’s population.
Living Languages, 2021
by Ethnologue
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Asia
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Americas
Europe
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