Hindi

<p style="text-align:justify;"> Hindi, including its older version, has been used by Indian Muslims in various contexts from at least the seventh/thirteenth century. 1. The semantic range of Hindi and its synonyms The term hindī and its more archaic forms, such as hindavī/hindūʾī an...

Full description

Bibliographic Details
Main Author: Bangha, I
Format: Book section
Published: Brill Publishers 2018
_version_ 1826265601540096000
author Bangha, I
author_facet Bangha, I
author_sort Bangha, I
collection OXFORD
description <p style="text-align:justify;"> Hindi, including its older version, has been used by Indian Muslims in various contexts from at least the seventh/thirteenth century. 1. The semantic range of Hindi and its synonyms The term hindī and its more archaic forms, such as hindavī/hindūʾī and hindīya, were first used in Arabic and Persian sources in the sense of “Indian (language).” Their specific meaning, however, was not initially fixed (Chatterji, 35–7). Already in third/ninth-century Arab sources, the term hindiyya referred to the language of India (Flood, 44) but it is unclear what language was meant. … </p>
first_indexed 2024-03-06T20:26:14Z
format Book section
id oxford-uuid:2f7c9247-ced7-4eff-a090-b5b302d8820f
institution University of Oxford
last_indexed 2024-03-06T20:26:14Z
publishDate 2018
publisher Brill Publishers
record_format dspace
spelling oxford-uuid:2f7c9247-ced7-4eff-a090-b5b302d8820f2022-03-26T12:55:46ZHindiBook sectionhttp://purl.org/coar/resource_type/c_3248uuid:2f7c9247-ced7-4eff-a090-b5b302d8820fSymplectic Elements at OxfordBrill Publishers2018Bangha, I <p style="text-align:justify;"> Hindi, including its older version, has been used by Indian Muslims in various contexts from at least the seventh/thirteenth century. 1. The semantic range of Hindi and its synonyms The term hindī and its more archaic forms, such as hindavī/hindūʾī and hindīya, were first used in Arabic and Persian sources in the sense of “Indian (language).” Their specific meaning, however, was not initially fixed (Chatterji, 35–7). Already in third/ninth-century Arab sources, the term hindiyya referred to the language of India (Flood, 44) but it is unclear what language was meant. … </p>
spellingShingle Bangha, I
Hindi
title Hindi
title_full Hindi
title_fullStr Hindi
title_full_unstemmed Hindi
title_short Hindi
title_sort hindi
work_keys_str_mv AT banghai hindi