Indo-Aryan languages

Indo-Aryan
Indic
Geographic
distribution
South Asia, Europe
Native speakers
(est. 800 million cited 2000's)
Linguistic classificationIndo-European
Proto-languageProto-Indo-Aryan
Subdivisions
Language codes
ISO 639-2 / 5inc
Linguasphere59= (phylozone)
Glottologindo1321
Present-day geographical distribution of the major Indo-Aryan language groups. Romani, Domari, Kholosi, Luwati, Parya, Fiji Hindi and Caribbean Hindustani are outside the scope of the map.
  Khowar (Dardic)
  Shina (Dardic)
  Kohistani (Dardic)
  Kashmiri (Dardic)
  Sindhi (Northwestern)
  Gujarati (Western)
  Khandeshi (Western)
  Bhili (Western)
  Central Pahari (Northern)
  Eastern Pahari (Northern)
  Eastern Hindi (Central)
  Bihari (Eastern)
  Odia (Eastern)
  Halbic (Eastern)
  Sinhala-Dhivehi (Southern)
(not shown: Kunar (Dardic), Chinali-Lahuli (Unclassified))

The Indo-Aryan languages (or sometimes Indic languages) are a branch of the Indo-Iranian languages in the Indo-European language family. As of the early 21st century, there were 800 million speakers, primarily concentrated east of the Indus River in South Asia, spread across Eastern Pakistan, Northern India, southern Nepal, Bangladesh, Sri Lanka, and Maldives. Moreover, apart from the Indian subcontinent, large immigrant and expatriate Indo-Aryan–speaking communities live in Northwestern Europe, Western Asia, North America, the Caribbean, Southeast Africa, Polynesia and Australia, along with several million speakers of Romani languages primarily concentrated in Southeastern Europe. There are in the vicinity of 200 Indo-Aryan languages.

Proto-Indo-Aryan was very close to Vedic Sanskrit, though some of the later Prakrits retain features that had been lost from Vedic Sanskrit, showing that they had a separate descent from Proto-Indo-Aryan. The largest such languages in terms of first-speakers are Hindustani (Hindi/Urdu) (c. 330 million), Bengali (242 million), Punjabi (about 150 million), Marathi (112 million), and Gujarati (60 million). A 2005 estimate placed the total number of native speakers of the Indo-Aryan languages at nearly 900 million people. Other estimates are higher, suggesting a figure of 1.5 billion speakers of Indo-Aryan languages.