Tamil is a classical language and one of the major languages of the Dravidian
language family. Spoken predominantly by Tamils in India,
Sri Lanka, Malaysia, and Singapore, it has smaller communities
of speakers in many other countries. As of 1996, it was
the eighteenth most spoken language, with over 74 million
speakers worldwide. It is one of the official languages
of India, Singapore and Sri Lanka.
Tamil is one of the few living classical languages and
has an unbroken literary tradition of over two millennia.
The written language has changed little during this period,
with the result that classical literature is as much a part
of everyday Tamil as modern literature. Tamil school-children,
for example, are still taught the alphabet using the átticúdi,
an alphabet rhyme attributed to the poet Auvaiyar who lived
during the thirteenth century CE.