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ateSomeBo t1_j0tcbjr wrote

Because, they are mostly modern day priests and their families living in India, who learned them as religious scripts passed on through generations. Lot of intricacies are lost through this method, but it's the only way the language has survived as a spoken language. Almost none of those 25000 speakers really speak or use sanskit for their day to day activity, rather they use it as a secondary language mainly to perform religious rituals and prayers.

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ragnarok62 t1_j0u55mx wrote

That’s good to know. Thank you for doing the work the article author should have done.

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