. . . . "Desi words"@en . . . . . . . "1095696272"^^ . . . . . . . . "De\u015Bi words, also known as De\u015Bya words (Sanskrit: \u0926\u0947\u0936\u094D\u092F), represent the vocabulary in Indo-Aryan languages which are of non-Indo-European origin, mostly borrowed from Dravidian languages and Munda languages, the languages which are currently native to South India and East India respectively. They are also known as Deshaj words (Hindi: \u0926\u0947\u0936\u091C), and considered one of the three etymological classes defined by native grammarians of Middle Indo-Aryan languages, alongside tatsama and tadbhava words. The word \"desi\" in this context means \"local\" (or \"of the countryside\"), referring that these loanwords are from the native languages of the Indian subcontinent that existed before the Indo-Aryan migrations."@en . . "De\u015Bi words, also known as De\u015Bya words (Sanskrit: \u0926\u0947\u0936\u094D\u092F), represent the vocabulary in Indo-Aryan languages which are of non-Indo-European origin, mostly borrowed from Dravidian languages and Munda languages, the languages which are currently native to South India and East India respectively. They are also known as Deshaj words (Hindi: \u0926\u0947\u0936\u091C), and considered one of the three etymological classes defined by native grammarians of Middle Indo-Aryan languages, alongside tatsama and tadbhava words. The word \"desi\" in this context means \"local\" (or \"of the countryside\"), referring that these loanwords are from the native languages of the Indian subcontinent that existed before the Indo-Aryan migrations."@en . . . . "71185289"^^ . . . . . . "1640"^^ . . . .