There is no such thing as an "official Indian language". If you are asking what the languages of India are that have any kind of official status, they are:
Assamese
Kokborok
Chhattisgarhi
English
Gujarati
Hindi
Santali
Kannada
Konkani
Maithili
Malayalam
Marathi
Meiteilon (Manipuri)
Mizo
Nepali
Oriya
Punjabi
Tamil
Telugu
Urdu
punjba
Gujarati is a scheduled Indian language, which is also official language of the State of Gujarat.
nagaland
Hindi was made the official language of the Indian government after the adoption of the Indian Constitution in 1950. However, it is important to note that India does not have a national language, but rather, Hindi is recognized as an official language along with English.
Tamil has official status in the Indian state of Tamil Nadu and the territory of Puducherry.It is an official language of Sri Lanka and Singapore.Tamil is the official language of Tamil Nadu (India).It's one of the official languages of the Indian union territories of Pondicherryand the Andaman & Nicobar Islands and one of the official languagesof Sri Lanka and Singapore.
Under Article 345 of the Constitution, the UttarakhandLegislative Assembly has passed the proposal to make Hindi the official language and Sanskrit the second official language of Uttarakhand state.
The official language on the website Andhrajyothi is in an Indian language called Telugu. This website was launched on October 15th in 2009, and is owned by Vemuri Radhakrishna.
in india there are about 1618 languages;among which 22 are official. In what language do you want? Hehe......
The official language is English, but there are also many others languages such as Spanish, French, Italian, Japanese, Mandarin, German, Indian and Latin.
Actually there is no such language called "Indian", just like "Chinese" is not a language (Cantonese is). Hindi is the language spoken by most and is the official language of Republic of India. And there are many (around 20) regional official languages. It is hard to say what is the exact translation in Hindi for "share", it mostly depends on the context.
Assuming you mean official languages, the official language of Mexico is Spanish though indigenous Indian languages are recognised. The USA does not have an official language though English is the de facto language. Canada has English and French as official languages and recognises several regional ones. There is no set language for north America.
English is the a foreign language that has become a major official language of India. Indians who speak different Indian languages typically revert to English as it is a second language for everyone and therefore makes everyone equal.