tamil language img updated

This commit is contained in:
Selvi 2025-07-26 20:58:59 +05:30
parent 88abdc2313
commit 0c7a77fe40
16 changed files with 19 additions and 25 deletions

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@ -34,7 +34,7 @@ export default function TamilLanguageData() {
<Layout headerStyle={1} footerStyle={1}>
<div
className="inner-page-header"
style={{ backgroundImage: 'url(/assets/img/bg/header-bg11.png)' }}
style={{ backgroundImage: 'url(/assets/img/tamil-lang/big-img/tamil-inner-banner.webp)' }}
>
<div className="container">
<div className="row">

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@ -82,8 +82,6 @@ export default function HomeUpcomingEvent() {
<Link href="#" className="head">Thai Pongal 2024</Link>
<div className="space24" />
<p>Holy Family Croatian Roman Catholic Parish Hall</p>
<p>Holy Family Croatian Roman Catholic Parish Hall</p>
<p>Holy Family Croatian Roman Catholic Parish Hall</p>
{/* <div className="author-area">
<div className="autho-name-area">
<div className="img1">
@ -108,7 +106,7 @@ export default function HomeUpcomingEvent() {
</div> */}
<div className="space24" />
<div className="btn-area1">
<Link href="#" className="vl-btn3"><span className="demo">Online Tickets</span></Link>
<Link href="#" className="vl-btn3"><span className="demo">purchase ticket</span></Link>
</div>
</div>
</div>
@ -127,7 +125,7 @@ export default function HomeUpcomingEvent() {
<div className="content-area">
<ul>
<li>
<Link href="/#"><img src="/assets/img/icons/clock1.svg" alt="" />14th April 2024 <span> | </span></Link>
<Link href="/#"><img src="/assets/img/icons/clock1.svg" alt="" />Apr 14, 2024<span> | </span></Link>
</li>
<li>
<Link href="/#"><img src="/assets/img/icons/location1.svg" alt="" />Christ Lutheran Church , Waterloo, ON. </Link>
@ -136,9 +134,7 @@ export default function HomeUpcomingEvent() {
<div className="space20" />
<Link href="#" className="head">AGM</Link>
<div className="space20" />
<p>Holy Family Croatian Roman Catholic Parish Hall</p>
<p>Holy Family Croatian Roman Catholic Parish Hall</p>
<p>Holy Family Croatian Roman Catholic Parish Hall</p>
<p>Christ Lutheran Church , Waterloo, ON.</p>
{/* <div className="space24" />
<div className="author-area">
<div className="autho-name-area">
@ -195,18 +191,16 @@ export default function HomeUpcomingEvent() {
<div className="content-area">
<ul>
<li>
<Link href="/#"><img src="/assets/img/icons/clock1.svg" alt="" />22-22rd Jun 2024<span> | </span></Link>
<Link href="/#"><img src="/assets/img/icons/clock1.svg" alt="" />Jun 22-23, 2024<span> | </span></Link>
</li>
<li>
<Link href="/#"><img src="/assets/img/icons/location1.svg" alt="" />Indian & Sri Lankan Food Court, Kitchener. </Link>
<Link href="/#"><img src="/assets/img/icons/location1.svg" alt="" />Indian & Sri Lankan Food Court, Kitchener.</Link>
</li>
</ul>
<div className="space20" />
<Link href="#" className="head">KW Multicultural Festival</Link>
<div className="space24" />
<p>Holy Family Croatian Roman Catholic Parish Hall</p>
<p>Holy Family Croatian Roman Catholic Parish Hall</p>
<p>Holy Family Croatian Roman Catholic Parish Hall</p>
<p>Indian & Sri Lankan Food Court, Victoria Park, Kitchener, ON.</p>
{/* <div className="author-area">
<div className="autho-name-area">
<div className="img1">

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@ -3736,7 +3736,7 @@ export const tamilculture = {
InnerData: [
{
title: "Old Dravidian",
image: "/assets/img/all-images/memory/memory-img4.png",
image: "/assets/img/tamil-lang/big-img/old-dravidian.webp",
para1: "In the distant historical past, the Proto-Dravidian language was spoken widely across the Indian subcontinent. This ancient linguistic group is believed to have been the foundation of many early Indian languages before the arrival of foreign ethnic groups. When the Turanians and later the Aryans migrated into India through the Khyber and Bolan passes, they encountered the Proto-Dravidian-speaking population in the northern regions. Over time, as these incoming groups mingled with the indigenous people, significant linguistic transformations took place. The original Dravidian idioms of the North gradually gave way to new languages such as Praakrit and Paali, which emerged as the dominant tongues of the masses in northern India. These languages bore signs of both Dravidian and Indo-Aryan influence, reflecting the extensive cultural and ethnic blending that occurred during this period.",
@ -3767,7 +3767,7 @@ export const tamilculture = {
InnerData: [
{
title: "North Indian Languages",
image: "/assets/img/all-images/memory/memory-img4.png",
image: "/assets/img/tamil-lang/big-img/north-indian.webp",
para1: "Since the Dravidians lived throughout the Indian subcontinent at some historical past, certain syntactical affinities are noticeable even today between the South and a large number of North Indian languages.",
para2: "When Praakrit and Paali became popular in the North, the Proto-Dravidian language lost its ground there, and confined itself entirely to the South. Even in South India it did not remain as one single language for a long time. Dialectical differences arose partly due to the political division of the Tamil country into three distinct Tamil kingdoms and partly due to the natural barriers created by rivers and mountains. The absence of proper land communication among the three Tamil kingdoms also accentuated this process of dialectal differences. As a result the Dravidian language spoken by the people. who lived in the regions north and south of the Tirupati mountains, varied to such an extent as to become two independent languages, Tamil and Telugu. The language spoken in the region of Mysore came to be known as Kannada. Malayalam emerged as yet another distinct language in Kerala. All these far-reaching changes occurred at different periods of time in the history of the Dravidian languages. Among these four languages, it is only the Tamil language which has a long literary tradition.",
@ -3797,7 +3797,7 @@ export const tamilculture = {
InnerData: [
{
title: "South Indian Languages",
image: "/assets/img/all-images/memory/memory-img4.png",
image: "/assets/img/tamil-lang/big-img/south-indian.webp",
para1: "The Dravidian languages, though now recognized as distinct tongues, still exhibit many common linguistic features that point to their shared ancestry. It is estimated that around 5,000 words are common across Tamil, Telugu, Kannada, and Malayalam. In addition to vocabulary, several grammatical structures, syntactical patterns, and phonetic characteristics also overlap among these languages. These similarities underline the fact that these languages once evolved from a single Proto-Dravidian source. However, as time progressed, external influences, especially that of Sanskrit, played a crucial role in shaping their individuality. For example, Kannada and Telugu began diverging significantly from Tamil due to the strong and early influence of Sanskrit, roughly 1,500 years ago. Sanskritization led to major shifts in vocabulary, literary expression, and grammatical structure, carving out distinct identities for these languages.",
@ -3829,7 +3829,7 @@ export const tamilculture = {
InnerData: [
{
title: "Contact with Foreign Countries",
image: "/assets/img/all-images/memory/memory-img4.png",
image: "/assets/img/tamil-lang/big-img/trading.webp",
para1: "Tamil occupies a distinctive position among the Dravidian languages owing to its geographical expansion, for it has spread beyond the frontiers of India. Apart from being the language of forty million people in Tamil Nadu it is the spoken and written language of several millions of Tamils living in Ceylon, Burma, Singapore, Malaysia, Indonesia, South Africa, Fiji Islands and Mauritius.",
@ -3863,7 +3863,7 @@ export const tamilculture = {
InnerData: [
{
title: "Antiquity of Tamil Grammatical Works",
image: "/assets/img/all-images/memory/memory-img4.png",
image: "/assets/img/tamil-lang/big-img/grammatical-works.webp",
para1: "Among the various ancient grammatical texts of Tamil, the Tolkappiyam stands out as the earliest and most foundational. Believed to have been composed around the third century B.C., it is a pioneering work in Tamil linguistics and poetics. Despite its antiquity, Tolkappiyam demonstrates a remarkably sophisticated understanding of language structure, phonology, and grammar. Its composition during such an early period reflects the deep-rooted literary and linguistic traditions that Tamil had already developed by then.",
@ -3899,7 +3899,7 @@ export const tamilculture = {
InnerData: [
{
title: "Tamil Scripts",
image: "/assets/img/all-images/memory/memory-img4.png",
image: "/assets/img/tamil-lang/big-img/scripts.webp",
para1: "The earlier Tamil inscriptions were written in braahmi, grantha and vaTTezuttu scripts.* Inscriptions after the seventh century A.D. contain Tamil characters similar to the one now in vogue. This prompted some scholars to argue that vatteluttu and Tamil scripts originated from braahmi scripts. This view has no solid base, for one can see a copious description of Tamil scripts in Tolkaappiyam, which belongs to third century B.C. It is obvious therefore, that Tamil language had a distinct script of its own even at that early period. In fact vaTTezuttu is none other than the old Tamil script. Even the southern braahmi was a corrupt form of vaTTezuttu . Distinct differences exist between the southern and the northern braahmi script, for the southern one had its genesis in vaTTezuttu . Much before brahmi scripts could become popular the Tamils possessed a script of their own which they put to use in their commercial transactions and in their writings.",
@ -3931,7 +3931,7 @@ export const tamilculture = {
InnerData: [
{
title: "Classification and Formation of Words",
image: "/assets/img/all-images/memory/memory-img4.png",
image: "/assets/img/tamil-lang/big-img/formation.webp",
para1: "There are four types of words in Tamil. Among them, uriccol or root words, which were used in ancient poetry, are now rarely used. If we exclude uriccol, Tamil has only three primary categories of words: nouns, verbs, and itaiccol (particles). Nouns denote both living and non-living things and convey information about gender, number, and person. The classification of nouns (tiNai) is further divided into uyartiNai and akRiNai. UyartiNai includes personal beings like humans, gods, and demons, whereas akRiNai refers to lesser beings and objects.",
@ -3968,7 +3968,7 @@ export const tamilculture = {
InnerData: [
{
title: "Unnecessary Polemics",
image: "/assets/img/all-images/memory/memory-img4.png",
image: "/assets/img/tamil-lang/big-img/polemics.webp",
para1: "Tamil is one of the oldest spoken languages of India that reached literary perfection even during the prehistoric period. Its classical literature developed independently from folk songs and poetry, without borrowing from other languages.",
@ -4003,7 +4003,7 @@ export const tamilculture = {
InnerData: [
{
title: "Tanit-Tamil Iyakkam (Pure Tamil Movement)",
image: "/assets/img/all-images/memory/memory-img4.png",
image: "/assets/img/tamil-lang/big-img/tanit.webp",
para1: "Several centuries ago, Sanskrit scholars attempted to Sanskritise the Tamil language by incorporating a liberal mix of Sanskrit words. They claimed this blend enhanced the beauty of Tamil, comparing it to an ornament made of pearls and corals. This mixed style was called Manipravala, and they tried to popularize it across Tamil-speaking regions. Some Jain and Vaishnava scholars even employed the Grantha script to promote this hybrid form. However, the movement didnt succeed, primarily due to Tamils naturally rich vocabulary and deep literary tradition that stood strong on its own merit.",
@ -4039,7 +4039,7 @@ export const tamilculture = {
InnerData: [
{
title: "Two Different Types of Tamil Style",
image: "/assets/img/all-images/memory/memory-img4.png",
image: "/assets/img/tamil-lang/big-img/two-different-type.webp",
para1: "Although the attempts to Sanskritise Tamil have diminished over time, the effects of those historical efforts continue to influence contemporary Tamil society. The imposition of Sanskrit vocabulary on Tamil created a strong and lasting opposition among Tamil scholars and language purists. This resistance still exists today, especially among those committed to preserving Tamils original identity and richness.",
@ -4082,7 +4082,7 @@ export const tamilculture = {
InnerData: [
{
title: "Dialectical Conventions",
image: "/assets/img/all-images/memory/memory-img4.png",
image: "/assets/img/tamil-lang/big-img/dialectical.webp",
para1: "Tamil spoken across different regions of Tamil Nadu exhibits noticeable dialectical variations, especially between areas like Tirunelveli, Coimbatore, Thanjavur, Tiruchirappalli, and Chennai, with the latter incorporating many borrowed words from Telugu, Urdu, and English due to its urban and cosmopolitan nature.",
@ -4117,7 +4117,7 @@ export const tamilculture = {
InnerData: [
{
title: "Foreign Loan Words in Tamil",
image: "/assets/img/all-images/memory/memory-img4.png",
image: "/assets/img/tamil-lang/big-img/foreign-loan-words.webp",
para1: "In Sri Lanka, English words are phonetically modified and written in Tamil script—for example, bun becomes pan, coffee becomes koppi, and shirt becomes set—while many Tamil words also undergo similar phonetic changes in Sri Lankan usage.",