#include <caveat-toi.h>

Why did it take 9 years to release innocuous census data? I wonder if
there will ever come a day when census data (possibly aggregated at
the postal code level) is made available to the commons to make
interesting mashups.

Thaths

http://timesofindia.indiatimes.com/india/Indiaspeak-English-is-our-2nd-language/articleshow/5680962.cms
<quote>
More Indians speak English than any other language, with the sole
exception of Hindi. What's more, English speakers in India outnumber
those in all of western Europe, not counting the United Kingdom. And
Indian English-speakers are more than twice the UK's population.

These facts emerge from recently released census 2001 data on
bilingualism and trilingualism in India. Indians' linguistic prowess
stood revealed with as many as 255 million speaking at least two
languages and 87.5 million speaking three or more. In other words,
about a quarter of the population speaks more than one language.

English was the primary language for barely 2.3 lakh Indians at the
time of the census, more than 86 million listed it as their second
language and another 39 million as their third language. This puts the
number of English speakers in India at the time to more than 125
million.

The only language that had more speakers was Hindi with 551.4 million.
This includes 422 million, who list it as the primary language, 98.2
million for whom it was a second language and 31.2 million who listed
it as their third.

The rise of English puts Bengali, once India's second largest language
in terms of primary speakers, in distant third place. Those who spoke
Bengali as their first, second or third language add up to 91.1
million, far behind English.

Telugu with 85 million speakers in all and Marathi with 84.2 million
retain their position behind Bengali as does Tamil with 66.7 million
and Urdu with 59 million.

Gujarati now falls behind Kannada though it has a sizeable number of
primary speakers — 6.1 million — compared to Kannada's 37.9 million.

Karnataka's linguistic diversity means that many list other languages
as their first and Kannada as a second language. This adds 11.5
million to the ranks of Kannada speakers and another 1.4 million use
it as a third language. In total, Kannada had 50.8 million speakers in
2001 compared to Gujarati's 50.3 million.

Oriya overtakes Malayalam thanks to the 3.3 million people who listed
it as their second language and 3.2 lakh who said it was their third
language.

The total number of Oriya speakers was 36.6 million against 33.8
million who spoke Malayalam. Punjabi, with 31.4 million speakers, and
Assamese with 18.9 million are among India's most spoken languages.

Unfortunately, the census asked people to list a maximum of three
languages, so it is not known how many speak more languages.

The data covers only those over five because the census assumed that
younger children would only know their mother tongue.

As expected, urban Indians are more likely to be multi-lingual but as
many as 136.7 million rural Indians speak at least two languages.
</quote>

-- 
"Marge, you being a cop makes you the man! Which makes me the woman... and
I have no interest in that, besides wearing the occasional underwear, which
as we discussed is strictly a comfort thing." -- Homer J. Simpson
Sudhakar Chandra                                    Slacker Without Borders

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