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Indic
1[in-dik]
noun
a subgroup of the Indo-Iranian branch of Indo-European languages that includes Sanskrit, Hindi, Urdu, Bengali, and many other languages of India, Pakistan, and Sri Lanka; Indo-Aryan.
adjective
of or relating to India; Indian.
of or relating to Indic; Indo-Aryan.
indic.
2abbreviation
indicating.
indicative.
indicator.
indic.
1abbreviation
indicating
indicative
indicator
Indic
2/ ˈɪԻɪ /
adjective
denoting, belonging to, or relating to a branch of Indo-European consisting of the Indo-European languages of India, including Sanskrit, Hindi and Urdu, Punjabi, Gujerati, Bengali, and Sinhalese
noun
this group of languages
Word History and Origins
Example Sentences
“Dharma,” one of the great untranslatable Indic words, can mean “duty,” or “religion” or “vocation,” but it is fundamentally a duty to oneself, to one’s nature.
Content from Indian publisher partners in English and Hindi will begin to appear in News Showcase panels in Google News and on Discover, Google said, adding it would launch additional Indic languages this year.
“The Mahabharata is one of two ancient poems. It was written in Sanskrit, an ancient Indic language that is no longer spoken.”
I first came to Katmandu in 1983 as a backpacker and returned while working on a master’s degree in Indic studies.
Other companies too are shifting their focus to what many are calling the new 'Indic web'.
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