top of page
An impressionistic history of the
SAengAnchor
South Asian Subcontinent
VED from VICTORIA INSTITUTIONS
It is foretold! The torrential flow of inexorable destiny!
Vol 1 - An ephemeral glance at feudal languages!

Chapter Five


Feudal languages and planar languages


This writer, after a lot of observations and experimentations, has defined languages as of two different categories. Languages like English were categorised as planar languages. Languages which have word-codes of feudal lowliness versus heights were defined as feudal languages.


In connection with this, a draft form of the book MARCH of the EVIL EMPIRES: English versus the feudal languages was first written in the year 1989. Around the year 2000, the completed version of this book was published online.


In this book, a contention that languages are either software codes or software applications had been mentioned.


After many years, when direct observations on the real codes in languages were made, it was felt that the word ‘feudal’ was inadequate as a technical word to define the phenomenon.


It was then that a few years back that it was understood that a more apt technical usage would be: '3-D Virtual Arena-coded languages'. In accordance with this understanding, this technical usage was made in the book: Pristine-English: What is different about it?


However, it must be admitted that the usage ‘feudal language’ is relatively more comfortable to use.


The languages of South Asian peninsular region do have the codes of Asian feudal hierarchy encoded inside them. It is not possible to claim that this is a new discovery. This is a fact which is commonly known by all people of this geographical region.


When this fact was mentioned in the Wikipedia page on languages, it was immediately removed.


When a request was made in the Talk page of Malayalam language in Wikipedia to mention the feudal features of the Malayalam languages, some over-intelligent, self-conceited ‘language scholar’ who was administering that page, after placing a very sarcastic hint that Wikipedia is not a place for uneducated persons to write, and using low-quality shortcuts to display his English language acumen, had the request strikethroughed. After sometime, the whole request was seen removed.


When a government order was promulgated in 2011, making it compulsory to study Malayalam language, this writer did file a writ-petition against that order (https://t.me/VED_036/5001)in the Hon’ble High Court of Kerala.


The contentions were that feudal languages were against the basic tenets of the Constitution of India; that these languages were totally against the right to equality before the law, and the right to personal dignity and stature of the citizen; and that these kinds of languages would create at least three different levels of citizenship in the nation. This writer himself did the arguments in the High Court.


In these arguments, Malayalam was also mentioned as a feudal language. However, both the government side as well as the Malayalam language protection organisation which joined the opposite side, claimed that there is no such things as a ‘feudal language’, mentioned in language science.


Almost all people in this peninsular region are aware of the fact that the native languages here do have words of Asian feudal hierarchy. The claim that even this very simple fact is not known to language science, only points to the very shallow depth of such ‘sciences’.


I do feel that language science does use a terminology mentioned as ‘Honorific’. However, this word is not apt or capable enough to define feudal languages.

0. Book profile

1. The introduction

2. Subjective or objective?

3. The personal deficiencies

4. Desperately seeking pre-eminence

5. Feudal languages and planar languages

6. History and language codes

7. The influence and affect on human beings

8. Malabari and Malayalam

9. Word-codes that deliver hammer blows

10. On being hammered by words!

11. What the Negroes experienced

12. Who should be kept at a distance?

13. Word codes which induce mental imbalance

14. Codes of false demeanours

15. Self-esteem and the urge to usurp

16. Urge to place people in suppression

17. The mental codes of ‘Upstartedness’

18. Codes of rough retorts!

19. The diffused personality

20. The spreading of the substandard

21. How the top layer got soiled

22. Government workers and ordinary workers

23. How the pulling down is done

24. The antipathy for English

25. Quality depreciation in pristine-English

26. Dull and indifferent quality of English

27. Unacceptable efficiency and competence

28. Subservience and stature enhancement

29. Codes of crushing and mutilation

30. The essentialness of a servile subordinate

31. The repository of negativity!

32. The craving for ‘respect’

33. The structure of the Constitution of India

34. The situation in Britain

35. The rights of a citizen of India

36. When rights get translated

37. Three different levels of citizenship!

38. How the mysterious codes get disabled!

39. The craving and the urge to achieve

40. A Constitution in sync with native-culture

41. A people-uprising in the history

42. The new ‘higher caste persons’

43. When the nation surrenders

44. The nonsense in academic textbooks

45. The bloody fool George Washington

46. The wider aims of English education

47. Administration in Malayalam

48. Who should ‘respect’ whom?

49. When antique traditions come back

50. The competition among the oppressed

51. The terror of a lower becoming a higher!

52. The battering power of language codes

53. Verbal sounds which create cataclysm

54. The demise of the power of small despots



bottom of page