It doesn't. There is no reference whatsoever to a "national language" in the US Constitution.
Perhaps you are thinking of the Indian Constitution, which lists the official national languages of India in schedule the EIGHTH Schedule.
There are no national languages recognized by the Indian constitution. India has no national languages.For more information about the official languages of India, click here.
urdu
A)14 languages B)15 languages C)16 languages
Hi, There are 22 National Languages have been recognized by the Constitution of India, of which Hindi is the Official Union Language. Besides these, there are 844 different dialects that are practiced in various parts of the Country Hope this helps !!!
The constitution of India in its eighth schedule reconises is 14 languages
Sindhi
A Democratic federal secular government system lists scheduled languages as those languages other than the official languages given a place in the constitution of a country.Often they are regional languages/languages of the minority community.
Yes, Kokborok, Meitheilon, and Mizo are category II languages according to the Eighth Schedule of the Indian Constitution, which means they are among the languages recognized by the government for official purposes and development.
the two languages where Hindi and English.
The eight schedule of the Indian constitution recognises 22 languages (and a huge number of dialects) so there is no single term for a village square. The best that I can suggest is "chowk".
All the languages in 8th schedule of Constitution say 38 cannot be accommodated in Indian currency for want of present designs. Languages cannot be part of security measures. We need security in the note. Only majority speaking languages and Sanskrit from where other languages are derived with English which is cosidered as international language might have been considered for printing on Indian currency.
In the Indian Constitution, the Anti-Defection Law is mentioned in the Tenth Schedule. (10th Schedule). --- Asad