Bengali or Bangla is an Indo-Aryan language of East South Asia, evolved from
Prakrit, Pali and Sanskrit. With nearly 200 million native
speakers, Bengali is one of the most widely spoken languages
of the world (it is ranked between four[1] and seven[2]
based on the number of speakers). Bengali is the main language
spoken in Bangladesh, and the second most commonly spoken
language in India (after Hindi-Urdu).
Along with Assamese, it is geographically the most eastern
of the Indo-European languages. Owing to the Bengal renaissance
in the 19th and 20th centuries, Bengali literature emerged
among the richest in South Asia, and includes luminaries
such as Rabindranath Tagore, the first Asian to be awarded
a Nobel Prize.