The language of the Harappans was partially deciphered in May 2010 by comparing it with Brahmi script and Linear Elamite.
The seals were found to be Sanskrit, Tamil and Prakrit personal names, for the most part.
No. The connection between the Harappan language and Indian languages is theoretical, so at best you could say that the Harappan language is distantly related to the languages spoken in India, but this is only a possibility.
Where language is difficult to decipher, try consulting sources that state the information in clearer terms.
Recently an palm leaf with seven lines in harappan language found on harappan site in afganistan ,
Linguists have not found any inscription that are bilingual
The Harappan people, part of the Indus Valley Civilization (circa 3300-1300 BCE), did not speak Sanskrit. Instead, their language remains largely unknown due to the lack of decipherable written records. While Sanskrit emerged later in ancient India, during the Vedic period (around 1500 BCE), it is believed that the Harappan civilization spoke a different, unrecorded language. Thus, there is no evidence to support that the Harappans spoke Sanskrit.
No inscriptions have been found that are bilingual, so linguists can not compare another language to that of the Harappan, and therefore it has been impossible to crack.
Sanskrit
The language that helped decipher the hieroglyphics was Greek.
We can't understand the Harappan language.
No. The connection between the Harappan language and Indian languages is theoretical, so at best you could say that the Harappan language is distantly related to the languages spoken in India, but this is only a possibility.
Dont know
Where language is difficult to decipher, try consulting sources that state the information in clearer terms.
Where language is difficult to decipher, try consulting sources that state the information in clearer terms.
Where language is difficult to decipher, try consulting sources that state the information in clearer terms.
Saga is of Norse origin (not Arabic origin)Cipher and Decipher come from the Arabic Shifra (شيفرة), the "de" in decipher is a French prefix.
The Harappan language was an Indus valley language. 2. They spoke a form of Sanskrit, according to a recent decipherment.
Recently an palm leaf with seven lines in harappan language found on harappan site in afganistan ,