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Newar language

From Simple English Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Newa
Nepal Bhasa
नेवाः भाय् Newāh Bhāy
The word "Nepal Bhasa" written in the Ranjana alphabet and the Prachalit Nepal alphabet
Native toNepal
Ethnicity1.26 million Newa people (2001 census?)[1]
Native speakers
860,000 (2011 census)[2]
Early form
Dialects
Ranjana alphabets and various in the past, Devanagari currently
Official status
Regulated byNepal Bhasa Academy
Language codes
ISO 639-2new Nepal Bhasa, Newari
ISO 639-3Either:
new – Newar
nwx – Middle Newa
newa Nepal Bhasa
 nwx Middle Newa
Glottolognewa1247
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Nepal Bhasa is a language spoken by indigenous Newa people of Nepal. It is a Himalayan language of Tibeto-Burman branch of the Sino-Tibetan languages group.

Newah Bhaaye is the term used for Nepal Bhasa by its native speakers. The term 'Newari' has been used in derogatory form to replace the original name of the language. [3]

Linguistics

[change | change source]

Nepal Bhasa shares the feature of Kirant and Tibetan dialects of Northern Himalayas. It consists of five major dialects and several sub-dialects spoken by Newa people living throughout the country.

References

[change | change source]
  1. Newa at Ethnologue (15th ed., 2005)
  2. Newa at Ethnologue (18th ed., 2015)
    Middle Newa at Ethnologue (18th ed., 2015)
  3. Kapali, Rukshana (2018-12-08). "Why using the word 'Newari' is problematic". Rukuchee Blog. Retrieved 2018-12-13.[permanent dead link]