Tamil Erotic

Homeland

India (Tamil Nadu, Puducherry) and Sri Lanka and global diaspora

Region

South Asia

About Tamil People

Tamils comprise approximately 6% of the Indian population — approximately 69 million Tamil Mother Tongue speakers in India per the 2011 Census, concentrated in Tamil Nadu and Puducherry. Cross-border population includes ~3M+ Sri Lankan Tamils, ~3M+ Malaysian Tamils, ~250,000+ Singaporean Tamils, ~500,000+ in the US, ~150,000+ in Canada, ~180,000+ Mauritian Tamils, ~70,000+ Réunion Tamils, ~80,000+ South African Tamils, plus communities in the United Kingdom, Australia, Trinidad and Tobago, Guyana, Suriname, Fiji, and elsewhere — totaling approximately 80-85 million Tamils globally. The Tamil language is part of the Dravidian language family (distinct from Indo-Aryan) and is one of the longest continuously-documented literary languages in the world (the Sangam-period Tamil literature, ~300 BCE to 300 CE). Tamil-Brahmi script and the modern Tamil script descend from a long continuous literary tradition. Tamil culture includes the Bharatanatyam classical-dance tradition, the Carnatic classical music tradition (shared with the broader South Indian Dravidian-language sphere), the Tamil Sangam-era literary heritage, and the Shaiva-Siddhanta and Vaishnava religious traditions.

Typical Tamil Phenotypes

Reference for AI generation — hair, eyes, skin, facial structure, build

Skin tone spans Fitzpatrick IV-VI with V the modal value — among the darker-skinned Indian populations, reflecting both UV exposure in the tropical Tamil Nadu region and the higher Ancestral South Indian (ASI) ancestry concentration in southern Indian Dravidian populations. Hair texture is most often straight to wavy with curly textures present (Andre Walker 1A-3B), uniformly black to very dark brown. Facial features track South Indian Dravidian source populations: epicanthic-fold variants very rare, moderate nasal bridges, full lips, oval face shapes. Eye color is predominantly brown to dark brown. Build is typically intermediate to slightly shorter than Northern Indian populations.

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