Number Of Speakers (Est.)
~9.8 Million reported Haryanvi as a mother tongue in Indiaโs 2011 census tables.
Real-world use can be higher because many speakers also report โHindiโ in formal counts and use Haryanvi at home.
Where It Is Spoken
Primarily in Haryana and Delhi. You may also hear Haryanvi in nearby areas through migration and local networks.
Haryana
Delhi
Regional Mobility
Family / Branch
Indo-European โ Indo-Iranian โ Indo-Aryan โ Central Zone โ Western Hindi โ Haryanvi
Western Hindi
Indo-Aryan
Writing System
Most commonly written in Devanagari. In digital spaces, Latin spelling is also common.
Some communities use Nastaliq for closely related local varieties.
Devanagari
Latin Online
Multiple Scripts
Word Order
The common, neutral pattern is SOV (SubjectโObjectโVerb). Postpositions follow nouns, and auxiliary verbs often come after the main verb.
SOV
Postpositions
Aux After Verb
Codes
ISO 639-3: bgc โข Glottocode: hary1238
ISO
Glottocode
Names You May See
โHaryanviโ is also written as Hariyani or Haryani. Many people use local labels in daily life.
Sounds And Pronunciation Profile
Grammar Snapshot
Writing And Spelling In Practice
Devanagari can represent Haryanvi sounds well, but spelling is not always uniform across writers.
In texting and social media, Latin spellings are frequent and vary by person.
Use In Daily Life
Haryanvi is strongly rooted in conversation: family talk, local markets, village and city neighborhoods, and community events.
It also appears in popular regional music and entertainment, which helps keep it visible and modern.
Everyday Speech
Local Media
Online Growth
Phrasebook
These are widely recognized, respectful basics used by many Haryanvi speakers. Spellings can vary in Latin text.
Ram Ram (Hello / greeting)
Namaste (Hello / respectful greeting)
Haan (Yes)
Na (No)
Dhanyavaad (Thank you)
Maaf Karo (Sorry / excuse me)
Devanagari forms (common):
เคฐเคพเคฎ เคฐเคพเคฎ,
เคจเคฎเคธเฅเคคเฅ,
เคนเคพเค,
เคจเคพ,
เคงเคจเฅเคฏเคตเคพเคฆ,
เคฎเคพเคซเคผ เคเคฐเฅ
Haryanvi Builder (SOV โข Postpositions โข Questions)
This mini builder shows a common sentence shape used across Western Hindi speech, including many Haryanvi conversations:
Subject + Object + Verb. Real verb endings and particles can change by region, age group, and setting.
The goal is clarity: SOV order, postpositions after nouns, and simple question framing.