States of India by Bengali speakers
This is a list of States and Union Territories of India by Bengali speakers at the time of the 2011 Census.[1]
2011 Census
State / Union Territory | Bengali speakers[2] | Percentage of population speaking Bengali[3] |
---|---|---|
West Bengal | 78,698,852 | 86.22% |
Tripura | 2,414,774 | 65.73% |
Assam | 9,024,324 | 28.92% |
Andaman & Nicobar Islands | 108,432 | 28.49% |
Mizoram | 107,840 | 9.83% |
Jharkhand | 3,213,423 | 9.73% |
Meghalaya | 232,525 | 7.84% |
Arunachal Pradesh | 100,579 | 7.27% |
Nagaland | 74,753 | 3.78% |
Daman & Diu | 5,232 | 2.15% |
Uttarakhand | 150,933 | 1.50% |
Delhi | 215,960 | 1.29% |
Odisha | 504,570 | 1.20% |
Sikkim | 6,986 | 1.14% |
Manipur | 30,611 | 1.07% |
Chhattisgarh | 243,597 | 0.95% |
Dadra and Nagar Haveli | 3,116 | 0.91% |
Bihar | 810,771 | 0.78% |
Chandigarh | 6,236 | 0.59% |
Goa | 7,099 | 0.49% |
Maharashtra | 442,090 | 0.39% |
Haryana | 70,948 | 0.28% |
Lakshadweep | 1,509 | 0.22% |
Madhya Pradesh | 109,185 | 0.15% |
Jammu & Kashmir | 19,830 | 0.16% |
Karnataka | 87,963 | 0.14% |
Gujarat | 79,648 | 0.13% |
Pondicherry | 1,509 | 0.12% |
Uttar Pradesh | 241,007 | 0.12% |
Rajasthan | 81,658 | 0.12% |
Punjab | 27,030 | 0.10% |
Himachal Pradesh | 6,214 | 0.09% |
Kerala | 29,061 | 0.09% |
Andhra Pradesh | 57,804 | 0.07% |
Tamil Nadu | 22,969 | 0.03% |
India | 97,237,669 (First language speakers) | 8.3%[4](Second most spoken in India) |
2001 Census
State / Union Territory | Bengali speakers[5] | Percentage of population speaking Bengali [4] |
---|---|---|
West Bengal | 68,369,255 | 85.34% |
Tripura | 2,147,944 | 67.14% |
Assam | 7,343,338 | 27.55% |
Andaman & Nicobar Islands | 91,582 | 25.71% |
Jharkhand | 2,607,601 | 9.68% |
Mizoram | 80,389 | 9.05% |
Arunachal Pradesh | 97,149 | 8.85% |
Meghalaya | 185,692 | 8.01% |
Nagaland | 58,890 | 2.96% |
Delhi | 208,414 | 1.50% |
Uttarakhand | 123,190 | 1.45% |
Odisha | 490,857 | 1.33% |
Manipur | 27,100 | 1.25% |
Sikkim | 6,320 | 1.18% |
Daman & Diu | 1,810 | 1.16% |
Chhattisgarh | 208,669 | 1.00% |
Dadra and Nagar Haveli | 1,382 | 0.63% |
Chandigarh | 5,491 | 0.61% |
Bihar | 443,425 | 0.53% |
Maharashtra | 310,137 | 0.32% |
Goa | 4,111 | 0.31% |
Haryana | 39,199 | 0.19% |
Madhya Pradesh | 105,399 | 0.17% |
Jammu & Kashmir | 14,416 | 0.14% |
Pondicherry | 1,180 | 0.12% |
Uttar Pradesh | 181,634 | 0.11% |
Rajasthan | 54,172 | 0.10% |
Gujarat | 40,780 | 0.08% |
Himachal Pradesh | 4,772 | 0.08% |
Karnataka | 41,256 | 0.08% |
Punjab | 20,655 | 0.08% |
Andhra Pradesh | 41,293 | 0.05% |
Lakshadweep | 24 | 0.05% |
Kerala | 3,387 | 0.01% |
Tamil Nadu | 8,805 | 0.01% |
India | 83,369,769 (First language speakers) 91,115,079 (First+Second+Third language speakers)[6] |
8.12%[4] |
gollark: One can only hope.
gollark: It probably stands for "Windows packet capture", considering.
gollark: It might be related to your apparent virus infection. Probably something is trying to meddle with network traffic.
gollark: Why do you ask?
gollark: > For many years, WinPcap has been recognized as the industry-standard tool for link-layer network access in Windows environments, allowing applications to capture and transmit network packets bypassing the protocol stack, and including kernel-level packet filtering, a network statistics engine and support for remote packet capture.
References
- "Report of the Commissioner for linguistic minorities: 50th report (July 2012 to June 2013)" (PDF). Commissioner for Linguistic Minorities, Ministry of Minority Affairs, Government of India. Archived from the original (PDF) on 8 July 2016. Retrieved 13 November 2017.
- "Distribution of the 22 Scheduled Languages – India, States & Union Territories – 2011 Census" (PDF). Government of India.
- "Census of India - Distribution of 10,000 persons by language – India, States and Union Territories-2011". Government of India.
- "Census of India - Distribution of 10,000 persons by language – India, States and Union Territories-2001".
- "Distribution of the 22 Scheduled Languages – India, States & Union Territories – 2001 Census".
- "Indiaspeak: English is our 2nd language". Times of India. Retrieved 28 December 2017.
This article is issued from Wikipedia. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.