释义 |
Definition of Indic in English: Indicadjective ˈɪndɪkˈindik Relating to or denoting the group of Indo-European languages comprising Sanskrit and the modern Indian languages that are its descendants. Also called Indo-Aryan Example sentencesExamples - Gypsies speak Romany, an Indic language of the Indo-European language family.
- Since the Buddhist Canon is written in the ancient Indic language of Pali, Pali functions as the sacred or religious language of Thai Buddhism.
- An additional 439,239 people reported speaking other Indic languages, such as Punjabi, Bengali and Malayalam.
- Oriya's one of the more obscure of the Indic scripts in Unicode.
- The mangling of his name is partly due to an inability of certain English speakers to pronounce the ‘dd’ sound common in the Semitic and Indic languages.
noun ˈɪndɪkˈindik mass nounThe Indic language group. Example sentencesExamples - If there are applications in Indic, operating system vendors will build the fundamental capabilities in, and if they are built in, there will be more applications.
- Here there are two basic religious ideologies, traditions or whatever one might like to call them - Indic and Semitic.
Origin Via Latin from Greek Indikos, from India (see India). Definition of Indic in US English: Indicadjectiveˈindik Relating to or denoting the group of Indo-European languages comprising Sanskrit and the modern Indian languages that are its descendants. Also called Indo-Aryan Example sentencesExamples - Gypsies speak Romany, an Indic language of the Indo-European language family.
- An additional 439,239 people reported speaking other Indic languages, such as Punjabi, Bengali and Malayalam.
- Oriya's one of the more obscure of the Indic scripts in Unicode.
- The mangling of his name is partly due to an inability of certain English speakers to pronounce the ‘dd’ sound common in the Semitic and Indic languages.
- Since the Buddhist Canon is written in the ancient Indic language of Pali, Pali functions as the sacred or religious language of Thai Buddhism.
nounˈindik The Indic language group. Example sentencesExamples - Here there are two basic religious ideologies, traditions or whatever one might like to call them - Indic and Semitic.
- If there are applications in Indic, operating system vendors will build the fundamental capabilities in, and if they are built in, there will be more applications.
Origin Via Latin from Greek Indikos, from India (see India). |