Sanskrit is known to be a religious language of hindu's and all the sacred books and chants are written in sanskrit so one to understand and speak these mantras have to learn sanskrit..........
Sanskrit should be studied by those who would love to organize themselves, whether it is your speech, thoughts or behavior.
The language has an elaborate grammar so requires painstaking study to really master in an excellent way. People who have spent years studying the language claim in all humility,"what is the capacity of this language in expressional clarity and richness!?!". In fact Swami Vivekananda has wondered, "This langugae Sanskrit baffles me... so much so that everytime I come across a new usage, and as new stream of meanings emanate... I suspect whether I have mastered the language at all.
The religious purpose of learning the language is just about one of the many reasons. There is a world of secular literature in sanskrit that must be savored too.
Yes there are many schools in assam which teaches sanskrit like Kendriya Vidyalaya Khanapara.
The Sanskrit word for "knowledge" is "Jnana", as in the system of "Jnana Yoga" which is the study of intellectual information.
aham aathhvi kakshaayaam asmi
Sanskrit was the language of high caste people like Brahmins in the history. As Brahmins know it well, many of our Vedas, epics are written in Sanskrit. So, it was always language of choice.
no i think french is more easy 2 choose as your third language
Sanskrit is an artificial, highly inflected, literary language. There are no native speakers of Sanskrit to learn it from, but there are many books and courses of study, generally at the University level. Many such courses begin with Whitney's Sanskrit Grammar (Harvard University Press).
De saussure is a well known scholar, he studied comparative linguistics and Sanskrit in Geneva, Leipzig and Paris.
Sanskrit (India)
Archaic Sanskrit means Ancient Classical Sanskrit.
Answer is "Broccoli", Broccoli is Sanskrit word, it is come from Sanskrit.
There is no 'The'in Sanskrit.
sanskrit