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Option 2 : Sanskrit
The correct answer is Sanskrit.
- Kalidasa, one of the finest Sanskrit poets, wrote the lyric poem Meghaduta around the fourth or fifth century CE.
- It tells the story of a yaka (or nature spirit) who begged a cloud to deliver a message of love to his wife after being banished by his lord for a year to a faraway area.
- The poem gained notoriety in Sanskrit literature and influenced other poets to produce Sandesha Kavya, or "messenger-poems," on related subjects.
- A follow-up to Meghduta, Ghanavrttam, was written by Korada Ramachandra Sastri.
- The Indo-European language family includes Sanskrit. Vedic Sanskrit (c. 1500–500 BCE) is one of the three oldest ancient languages that have been recorded. It developed from a single root language that is today known as Proto-Indo-European language.
- Native to the Indian subcontinent, Pali is a Middle Indo-Aryan liturgical language.
- A set of Middle Indo-Aryan languages known as the Prakrits were spoken in the Indian subcontinent from roughly the third century BCE to the eighth century CE.
- The Hindi Belt region, which includes sections of northern, central, eastern, and western India, is home to the Hindi language, or more specifically Modern Standard Hindi, which is an Indo-Aryan language.
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