Old Hindi

Old Hindi or Khariboli was the earliest stage of the Hindustani language, and so the ancestor of today's Hindi and Urdu. It developed from Shauraseni Prakrit and was spoken by the peoples of the region around Delhi, in roughly the 10th–13th centuries before the Delhi Sultanate.

During the Muslim rule in India, Old Hindi began acquiring loanwords from the Persian language, which led to the development of Hindustani. It is attested in only a handful of works of literature, including some works by the Indo-Persian Muslim poet Amir Khusrau, verses by the poet Namdev, and some verses by the Sufi Muslim Baba Farid in the Adi Granth. The works of Kabir also may be included, as he use a Khariboli-like dialect. Old Hindi was originally written in a Nagari script (ancestor to the standardized Devanagari) and later in the Perso-Arabic script as well, in Nastaliq calligraphy.

Some scholars include Apabhraṃśa poetry as early as 769 AD (Dohakosh by Siddha Sarahapad ) within Old Hindi, but this is not generally accepted.

With loanwords from Persian being added to Old Hindi's Prakritic base, the language evolved into Hindustani, which further developed into the present-day standardized varieties of Hindi and Urdu.

Etymology
The term Old Hindi is a retrospectively coined term, to indicate the ancestor language of Modern Standard Hindi, which is the official language in the Indian Republic. The term Hindi literally means Indian in Classical Persian, and was also referred as Hindustani to denote that it was the language of the Hindustan's capital, predominantly during the Delhi Sultanate.