Jad
[también conocido como Bhotia, Dzad]Clasificación: Sino-Tibetan
·en peligro de extinción
Clasificación: Sino-Tibetan
·en peligro de extinción
Bhotia, Dzad |
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Sino-Tibetan, Bodish |
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ISO 639-3 |
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jda |
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Como csv |
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La información está incompleta “A Study on the Tibeto-Burman Languages of Uttar Pradesh” . Suhnu Ram Sharma (2001)
"[Tibeto-Burman language] speakers in this area are in close contact with the dominant speakers of Garhwali and Kumauni in their oral communication and with Hindi in written and spoken modes due to the nature of the socio-political and educational systems. The TB speakers start learning both their native languages and Kumauni or Garhwali simultaneously. Native languages are learnt at home within the family and Garhwali or Kumauni is learnt from friends outside the home... There is an increasing amount of code switching between Hindi and Kumauni/Garhwali in discussions, both formal and informal. Hindi enjoys high prestige and the TB languages have low prestige... If the present socio-political and economic situation, and the sociolinguistic patterns of language use continue to exist, it is possible to predict that the speakers of the TB languages in this region will eventually shift completely to the majority languages, though it may turn out that a stable bilingualism will continue to exist, preserving the TB languages."
Hindi; English; Garhwali; Kumauni
"Hindi is the official language of Uttar Pradesh and is widely used as a medium of education and instruction from primary school to the university level. All written communication, mass media, radio and television, political speeches, and formal and official discussions take place in Hindi. English is taught as one of the subjects at the high school level and some of the science subjects are also taught in English at the university level... All the [Tibeto-Burman] languages are used in the home with family members and friends from the same group... Code switching and code mixing are very common. A coordinate and stable type of bilingualism must have existed for a long time. No one has been reported to be a monolingual in any age group among the speakers of TB languages."
"[These Tibeto-Burman] languages are not used in any type of written communication."
"Jad is spoken in several villages, the major ones being Jadang and Nilang in Harsil Sub-division in Uttarkashi District. The name Jad seems to be derived from the village name 'Jadang', which is the summer village of the Jad speakers. During the winter the Jad speakers migrate to Dunda Sub-division, just 17 kilometers below the Uttarkashi district town on the banks of the river Bhagirathi."
La información está incompleta “Some aspects of Jad: An Endangered Language” . Rastogi, Kavita; Shukla, Sumedha; Singh, Ajay Kumar (2017) SEL
"...[T]he whole community is either bilingual or multilingual. Most of them speak Garwali and Hindi fluently. It is alarming that several younger speakers do not speak Jad at all. Those who use it speak a highly mixed variety."
Hindi
Garwali
La información está incompleta “Ethnologue: Languages of the World, 16th Edition (2009)” . M. Paul Lewis · SIL International
Data for the number of native speakers comes from Breton (1997).
Uttar Pradesh
La información está incompleta “Atlas of the World’s Languages in Danger” . Christopher Moseley (ed.) (2010) UNESCO Publishing
Otros |
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Isbn | Series | Month | Edition | Num | Year | Title | Booktitle | Pages | Note | Editor | Howpublished | Publisher | Journal | Volume | Address | Institution | Chapter | Translator | School | Url | Author | Free Text Citation | Copied From | Older Adults | Ethnic Population | Young Adults | Private Comment | Speaker Number Text | Date Of Info | Speaker Number | Public Comment | Semi Speakers | Elders | Second Language Speakers | Domains Other Langs | Other Languages Used | Private Comment | Government Support | Speaker Attitude | Public Comment | Institutional Support | Number Speaker Other Languages | Endangerment Level | Transmission | Private Comment | Public Comment | Domains Of Use | Speaker Number Trends | Private Comment | Public Comment | Places | Description | Coordinates |
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New Research on Zhangzhung and Related Himalayan Languages | 2001 | A Study on the Tibeto-Burman Languages of Uttar Pradesh | Departmental Bulletin Paper | National Museum of Ethnology (Minpaku) | http://ir.minpaku.ac.jp/dspace/handle/10502/1327?mode=full&submit_simple=Show+full+item+record | Suhnu Ram Sharma | Suhnu Ram Sharma. 2001. "A Study On the Tibeto-Burman Languages of Uttar Pradesh." Online: http://ir.minpaku.ac.jp/dspace/handle/10502/1327?mode=full&submit_simple=Show+full+item+record. | ~2,000 | 1991 | 1000-9999 | Education; mass media; government | Hindi; English; Garhwali; Kumauni | "Hindi is the official language of Uttar Pradesh and is widely used as a medium of education and instruction from primary school to the university level. All written communication, mass media, radio and television, political speeches, and formal and official discussions take place in Hindi. English is taught as one of the subjects at the high school level and some of the science subjects are also taught in English at the university level... All the [Tibeto-Burman] languages are used in the home with family members and friends from the same group... Code switching and code mixing are very common. A coordinate and stable type of bilingualism must have existed for a long time. No one has been reported to be a monolingual in any age group among the speakers of TB languages." | Endangered (40 percent certain, based on the evidence available) | "[Tibeto-Burman language] speakers in this area are in close contact with the dominant speakers of Garhwali and Kumauni in their oral communication and with Hindi in written and spoken modes due to the nature of the socio-political and educational systems. The TB speakers start learning both their native languages and Kumauni or Garhwali simultaneously. Native languages are learnt at home within the family and Garhwali or Kumauni is learnt from friends outside the home... There is an increasing amount of code switching between Hindi and Kumauni/Garhwali in discussions, both formal and informal. Hindi enjoys high prestige and the TB languages have low prestige... If the present socio-political and economic situation, and the sociolinguistic patterns of language use continue to exist, it is possible to predict that the speakers of the TB languages in this region will eventually shift completely to the majority languages, though it may turn out that a stable bilingualism will continue to exist, preserving the TB languages." | 13 | India | "Jad is spoken in several villages, the major ones being Jadang and Nilang in Harsil Sub-division in Uttarkashi District. The name Jad seems to be derived from the village name 'Jadang', which is the summer village of the Jad speakers. During the winter the Jad speakers migrate to Dunda Sub-division, just 17 kilometers below the Uttarkashi district town on the banks of the river Bhagirathi." | |||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
World Oral Literature Project | http://www.oralliterature.org | "World Oral Literature Project." Online: http://www.oralliterature.org. | 300 | 100-999 | Endangered (20 percent certain, based on the evidence available) | ||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
2017 | Some aspects of Jad: An Endangered Language | SEL | SEL Journal | 2 (I) | https://selindia.org/wp-content/uploads/2021/02/Vol_II-Issue_I-2017_Rastogi-Shukla.pdf | Rastogi, Kavita; Shukla, Sumedha; Singh, Ajay Kumar | ~2000 | 1000-9999 | Hindi, Garwali | Threatened (60 percent certain, based on the evidence available) | 12 | "...[T]he whole community is either bilingual or multilingual. Most of them speak Garwali and Hindi fluently. It is alarming that several younger speakers do not speak Jad at all. Those who use it speak a highly mixed variety." | |||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
3rd | 2010 | Atlas of the World’s Languages in Danger | UNESCO Publishing | Paris | http://www.unesco.org/culture/en/endangeredlanguages/atlas | Christopher Moseley (ed.) | Moseley, Christopher (ed.). 2010. Atlas of the World’s Languages in Danger, 3rd edn. http://www.unesco.org/culture/en/endangeredlanguages/atlas. (03 June, 2011.) | ll_pub | 30.645,78.3627 | ||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
16 | 2009 | Ethnologue: Languages of the World, 16th Edition (2009) | M. Paul Lewis | SIL International | Dallas, TX | http://www.ethnologue.com/ | Lewis, M. Paul (ed.). 2009. Ethnologue: Languages of the World, 16 edn. http://www.ethnologue.com/home.asp. (15 February, 2011.) | ll_pub | 300 | 100-999 | Data for the number of native speakers comes from Breton (1997). | Endangered (20 percent certain, based on the evidence available) | India; Pakistan | Uttar Pradesh |