Jun 27, 2024 10:42 AM IST
Telugu has become the 11th most spoken foreign language in the USA. It is the third most spoken Indian language in the US as well, behind Hindi and Gujarati.
Telugu has become the 11th most-spoken foreign language in the USA, reported TOI, after a major growth in the community’s population. It is the third most spoken Indian language in the US as well, behind Hindi and Gujarati.
A statistical report based on US Census Bureau data shows that the Telugu-speaking population, from fourth-generation immigrants to new entrants like students, has gone from 3.2 lakh in 2016 to 12.3 lakh in 2024, which is almost a four-fold increase.
Get ready to catch the final stages of the World Cup only on Crickit. Anytime, Anywhere. Explore now!
Read more: Indian truck driver buys 5-bedroom house in the US. Watch viral video
California hosts the largest Telugu-speaking population at 2 lakh, followed by Texas at 1.5 lakh and New Jersey at 1.1 lakh. The population has also increased in states like Illinois – 83,000, Georgia – 52,000, and Virginia, 78,000. Telugu community associations in the States also agree with these estimates.
A major reason for why Telugu is the 11th most spoken foreign language out of 350 languages, is the number of students arriving in the US. According to the TOI report, around 60-70,000 students and 10,000 H1b visa holders arrive every year.
Read more: Pannun case: Seeking updates on probe from India, says US official
Ashok Kolla, former Secretary of the Telugu Association of North America, told TOI, that 80 percent of new arrivals in the US are registered with his organization. He also said that around 75 percent end up settling in the US -in places like Dallas, the Bay Area, North Carolina, New Jersey, Atlanta, Florida, and Nashville.
The older generations consist mostly of entrepreneurs, while 80 percent of the younger population is involved in IT and finance.
According to the Indian Mobility Report of 2024, students from Telangana and Andhra Pradesh form the largest community of Indian students in the US. They are 12.5 percent of the entire student crowd.
Read more: The highest-paid Indian-origin CEO in the US is… no, not Sundar Pichai or Satya Nadella
At the Kent State University, new batches of students are handed welcome pamphlets with ‘Welcome Students’ written in Telugu, TOI reported.