Indo-Aryan people, live mostly in South Asia and the Indian subcontinent. This incliudes the modern day countries of India, Pakistan, Bengladesh, Sri Lanka and Nepal. I don't know about Bhutan or Myanmar. They speak Indo-Aryan languages. Indians, speak a variety of Indo-Aryan languages and dialects; the main national language of India being the Hindi language. While other sub-ethnic groups from India speak their own such as Punjabi. Bengali people speak the Bengali language, Sri Lankans speak the Sinhala language. Nepalese people speak Nepali.
Although, I don't exactly see the correlation between Germans and Indo-Aryans, because Adolf Hitler claimed he was a pure Aryan.
i dont know l've been trying to find if they are. but the good news is..... english came from indo aryans.
The Indo-Aryans :)
Hinduism foo
The ancient Aryans are believed to have spoken a language known as Proto-Indo-Iranian, which later evolved into two distinct language branches: Indo-Aryan (Sanskrit, Hindi, Bengali, etc.) and Iranian (Persian, Kurdish, Pashto, etc.).
The book The Aryans: A Study of Indo-European Origins was written by Gordon Childe.
Indo-Aryans from the original Aryavarta. They belonged to the Deva work shipping branch of Aryans.
Praphullachandra Basu has written: 'Indo-Aryan polity' -- subject(s): Civilization, Economic conditions, Indo-Aryans, Social conditions, Vedas 'Indo-Aryan polity, Rigvedic period' -- subject(s): Civilization, Indo-Aryans, Vedas
Marriage
Yes, the Indo-Europeans were sometimes known as Aryans. The term "Aryan" was previously used to describe Indo-European-speaking peoples who migrated across Eurasia. However, the term has been misappropriated by Nazi ideology, leading to a shift in its meaning and connotations.
Indo-Iranian
Aryans spoke an Indo-European language, so most assume that they came from Anatolia. Anatolia is known in modern time as Turkey.
The sacred hymns and poems of the Aryans were composed in Sanskrit. Sanskrit is an ancient Indo-European language that was considered sacred in ancient India and is still used in religious and ceremonial contexts in Hinduism.