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Tibetan
Tibetan

Arabic
Arabic



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Tibetan and Arabic

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Countries

Countries

Total No. Of Countries

National Language

Second Language

Speaking Continents

Minority Language

Regulated By

Interesting Facts

Similar To

Derived From

Alphabets

Alphabets in

Alphabets

How Many Vowels

How Many Consonants

Scripts

Writing Direction

Language Levels

Time Taken to Learn

Greetings

Hello

Thank You

How Are You?

Good Night

Good Evening

Good Afternoon

Good Morning

Please

Sorry

Bye

I Love You

Excuse Me

Dialects

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

How Many People Speak?

Speaking Population

Native Speakers

Second Language Speakers

Native Name

Alternative Names

French Name

German Name

Pronunciation

Ethnicity

History

Origin

Language Family

Subgroup

Branch

Early Forms

Standard Forms

Language Position

Signed Forms

Scope

Code

ISO 639 1

ISO 639 2/T

ISO 639 2/B

ISO 639 3

ISO 639 6

Glottocode

Linguasphere

Language Type

Language Linguistic Typology

Language Morphological Typology

 
China, Nepal
2
Nepal, Tibet
Not spoken in any of the countries
Asia
China, India, Nepal
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
35
5
30
Tibetan alphabet, Tibetan Braille
Left-To-Right, Horizontal
2
24 weeks
 
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)
དགོང་དྲོ་བདེ་ལེགས།
ཉིན་གུང་བདེ་ལེགས།
སྔ་དྲོ་བདེ་ལེགས། (nga-to delek)
thu-je zig / ku-chee.
ཀོང་དགས་། (gawn-da)
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།
 
Central Tibetan
China, India, Nepal
1,200,000.00
Khams Tibetan
Bhutan, China
1,400,000.00
Amdo Tibetan
China
1,800,000.00
6
 
1.20 million
0.05 %
1.20 million
6.00 million
བོད་སྐད་ (pö-gay)
Bhotia, Dbus, Dbusgtsang, Phoke, Tibetan, U, Wei, Weizang, Zang
tibétain
Tibetisch
[tibetan]
tibetan people
 
c. 650
Sino-Tibetan Family
Tibeto-Burman
-
Old Tibetan, Classical Tibetan
Standard Tibetan
29
Tibetan Sign Language
-
 
bo
bod
tib
bod
bod
tibe1272
No data Available
-
-
-
 
Algeria, Bahrain, Chad, Comoros, Djibouti, Egypt, Eritrea, Iraq, Israel, Jordan, Kuwait, Lebanon, Libya, Mauritania, Morocco, Oman, Qatar, Saudi Arabia, Somalia, Sudan, Tunisia, United Arab Emirates, Yemen
23
Algeria, Bahrain, Comoros, Djibouti, Egypt, Jordan, Kuwait, Lebanon, Libya, Mauritania, Morocco, Oman, Palestine, Qatar, Saudi Arabia, Somalia, Sudan, Syria, United Arab Emirates, Yemen
Not spoken in any of the countries
Africa, Asia
Not spoken in any of the countries
Academy of the Arabic Language, Arabic Language International Council
  • Arabic is 5th common language in world.
  • Classical Arabic is the language of Quran and also it is official language. Classical Arabic is the only way to learn Arabic language in academic way and it does not change.
Amharic and Hebrew
-
 
Arabic.jpg#200
28
8
28
Arabic
Right-To-Left, Horizontal
4
88 weeks
 
مرحبا
شكرا
كيف حالك؟
تصبح على خير
مساء الخير
مساء الخير
صباح الخير
من فضلك
آسف
وداعا
أحبك
اعذرني
 
Maghrebi
Algeria, Libya, Maghreb, Morocco, Tunisia
310,000,000.00
Sudanese
Sudan
17,000,000.00
Levantine
Cyprus, Levant
21,000,000.00
26
 
452.00 million
4.43 %
206.00 million
246.00 million
(al arabiya) العربية
Al-’Arabiyya, Al-Fusha, Literary Arabic
arabe
Arabisch
/al ʕarabijja/, /ʕarabi/
Arabs
 
512 CE
Afro-Asiatic Family, Semitic Family
Semitic
North Arabic
No early forms
Modern Standard Arabic
25
Signed Arabic
Macrolanguage
 
ar
ara
ara
ara
ara
arab1395
12-AAC
Living
Subject-Verb-Object
Fusional, Synthetic

Tibetan and Arabic Alphabets

Tibetan and Arabic Alphabets provides you with alphabets, vowels and consonants in Tibetan and Arabic. In Tibetan Alphabets there are letters while in Arabic Alphabets there are letters. To learn Tibetan and Arabic languages the very first thing is to understand and learn alphabets of Tibetan and Arabic languages. The Tibetan phonology consist Tibetan vowels and Tibetan consonants. After alphabets, words are to be learned and after words, phrases in that language. Take a look at Tibetan vs Arabic, where you will find numerous useful phrases. Find whether Tibetan and Arabic are Most Spoken Languages.

All Tibetan and Arabic Dialects

Most languages have dialects where each dialect differ from other dialect with respect to grammar and vocabulary. Here you will get to know all Tibetan and Arabic dialects. Various dialects of Tibetan and Arabic language differ in their pronunciations and words. Dialects of Tibetan are spoken in different Tibetan Speaking Countries whereas Arabic Dialects are spoken in different Arabic speaking countries. Also the number of people speaking Tibetan vs Arabic varies from few thousands to many millions. Some of the Tibetan dialects include: , . Arabic dialects include: , . Also learn about dialects in South American Languages and North American Languages.

Tibetan and Arabic Speaking population

Tibetan and Arabic speaking population is one of the factors based on which Tibetan and Arabic languages can be compared. The total count of Tibetan and Arabic Speaking population in percentage is also given. The percentage of people speaking Tibetan language is whereas the percentage of people speaking Arabic language is . When we compare the speaking population of any two languages we get to know which of two languages is more popular. Find more details about how many people speak Tibetan and Arabic on Tibetan vs Arabic where you will get native speakers, speaking population in percentage and native names.

Tibetan and Arabic Language Codes

Tibetan vs Arabic are used in those applications where using language names are tedious. Tibetan and Arabic Language Codes include all the international language codes, glottocodes and linguasphere.