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Though Ikyatha herself knows a fair bit of slang, she does not shy away from learning more words from other people. Currently, my Instagram page has more than 6,000 followers and my Twitter page has about 800 followers," shares Ikyatha who took the guidance of other social media influencers to design each slang page before posting them on social media. NRIs would message me on Instagram, saying that my content made them feel nostalgic. Whenever, I was interviewed by radio channels and other platforms, people would hear me speak and subsequently follow my page. Gradually, I got followers from abroad but this was through word of mouth I did not promote it officially. "Initially, my friends and others in my circle started following the pages.

To help her friends and others like them learn the local slang, Ikyatha started the social media pages in 2018. By the time they were in their final year, they too started using these words in their conversations." They would hear me says words like 'Yappa', 'Thu', 'Ayyo' and would be curious to know their meaning. Studying Business Management at Christ University, most of my friends were from other states. She says, "Being born and brought up in Bengaluru, I have grown up hearing all sorts of slang and I have also forgotten some of them. In an attempt to keep people rooted to that colloquial world, Ikyatha Yerasala from Bengaluru started a social media page - on Instagram and Twitter - called Slangaluru, where you will find all kinds of old and new Kannada slang.
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But with the rigours of formal education and the professional word limiting our usage as we grow up, most of us tend to leave the slang world behind to a large extent.
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It is also known as Banglori, Canarese, Havyaka or Kanarese. Kannada is the official and administrative language of Karnataka, and was officially designated a classical language of India in 2011. In 2011 there were about 56.4 million speakers of Kannada, including 43 million native speakers. There are also Kannada speakers in the Indian states of Andhra Pradesh, Maharashtra, Tamil Nadu, Telangana, Goa and Kerala, and in the USA, Singapore, Australia, New Zealand and Canada. Kannada is a Southern Dravidian language spoken mainly in the state of Karnataka in the southwest of India.
