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Alphabets
How Many Vowels
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Hello
Thank You
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Good Night
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Please
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Dialect 1
Where They Speak
How Many People Speak
Dialect 2
Where They Speak
How Many People Speak
Dialect 3
Where They Speak
How Many People Speak
Total No. Of Dialects
How Many People Speak?
Speaking Population
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ISO 639 1
ISO 639 2/T
ISO 639 2/B
ISO 639 3
ISO 639 6
Glottocode
Linguasphere
Language Type
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Language Morphological Typology
Not spoken in any of the countries
- Assamese was reinstated as the state language of Assam in 1873.
- Assamese language has its own stream of origin, it is evolved in a different way from rest of the Indo-Aryan languages of India.
Assamese-Alphabets.jpg#200
Left-To-Right, Horizontal
Not spoken in any of the countries
Committee for the Standardisation of the Tibetan Language
- Tibetan dialects vary alot, so it's difficult for tibetans to understand each other if they are not from same area.
- Tibetan is tonal with six tones in all: short low, long low, high falling, low falling, short high, long high.
Nepali and Bhutanese Languages
Tibetan-Alphabets.jpg#200
Tibetan alphabet, Tibetan Braille
Left-To-Right, Horizontal
བཀྲ་ཤིས་བདེ་ལེགས། (tashi delek)
ཐུགས་རྗེ་ཆེ་། (tujay-chay)
ཁྱེད་རང་སྐུ་གཇུགས་བདེ་པོ་ཡིན་པས།
(kayrang kusu debo yimbay?)
གཟིམ་ལཇག་གནང་དགོས་། (sim-jah nahng-go)
སྔ་དྲོ་བདེ་ལེགས། (nga-to delek)
ག་ལེར་ཕེབས་། (kha-leh phe)
ང་ཁྱེད་རང་ལ་དགའ་པོ་ཡོད་ (nga kayrâng-la gawpo yö)
དགོངས་དག བཟོད་དུ་གསོལ། ཐུགས་རྗེ་གཟིགས།
Bhotia, Dbus, Dbusgtsang, Phoke, Tibetan, U, Wei, Weizang, Zang
Old Tibetan, Classical Tibetan