The Eastern Indo-Aryan Languages are spoken throughout the Eastern Subcontinent of India. These include Bengali, Assamese, and Odia, spoken in Bengal, Assam and Odisha, respectively.
Following the decline of Sanskrit and Pali, the sets of languages that were used to construct narratives in ancient India were regarded as Prakrits. One of these is the Magadhi Prakrit, which replaces Vedic Sanskrit in the Eastern Indian Subcontinent. Bengali, Odia and Assamese are the descendants of this form of language. Since Patanjali, these sets of languages have been referred to as Magadhan Apabhramsa.
Having been documented as both the official and constitutional languages of India, these sets of languages are spoken throughout the subcontinent and also have a significant number of global speakers. The following chart gives details of how the languages have been derived, what the canonical figures in the languages are, how they are distributed and which script they are written in.
Group 4
Anusrita Chakrabarty- 1933130
Elina Ghosh- 1933167
Poulami Ghosh- 1933148
Shamayita Samanta- 1933155
Angkit Bharadwaj- 1933103
Aman Samantaray- 1933102
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