Hindi gets its title from the persian word 'Hind', which suggests 'Land of the Indus River'.
September 14, 1949 was the day when the Constituent Assembly of India acknowledged Hindi written in Devanagri script as one of the official dialect of India.
World Hindi Day was first celebrated in 2006 and Hindi was perceived as an offical dialect in Article 343 of the Constitution on January 26, 1950.
Hindi is spoken in Nepal, New Zealand, United Arab Emirates, Uganda, Fiji, Mauritius, Suriname, Guyana, Trinidad, Bangladesh, Pakistan, USA, UK, Germany and Tobago.
English words counting avatar, bangla, master, wilderness, khaki, karma, plunder, mantra, nirvana, punch, pajama, syrup, shampoo, thug, storm and yoga were borrowed from Hindi.
India's first Prime Serve Jawaharlal Nehru had chosen to celebrate Hindi Diwas on 14 September.
Former Prime Minster Dr. Manmohan Singh celebrated World Hindi Day in 2006 for first time with the aim of advancing Hindi dialect over the world.
Hindi language is one of the modern Aryan languages.
In 1881, Bihar recognised Hindi as its official state language and become the first state to authoritatively adopt the language.
Numerous Hindi words like 'good' and 'surya namaskar' have been included within the oxford dictionary.