Tibetic languages
Tibetic | |
---|---|
Tibetan Central Bodish | |
Ethnicity | Tibeto-Burman
|
Early forms | |
Subdivisions |
|
Glottolog | oldm1245 |
Division of Tibetic Cultural Areas |
The Tibetic languages form a well-defined group of languages descended from Old Tibetan (7th to 9th centuries).[2] According to Tournadre (2014), there are 50 languages, which split into over 200 dialects or could be grouped into 8 dialect continua.[2] These languages are spoken in the Tibetan Plateau and in the Himalayas in Gilgit-Baltistan, Aksai Chin, Ladakh, Nepal, Himachal Pradesh, Uttarakhand, Bhutan, and the Kachin State of Myanmar.[3] Classical Tibetan is the major literary language, particularly for its use in Buddhist literature.
Tibetan languages are spoken by some 6 million people, not all of whom are Tibetans.[1] With the worldwide spread of Tibetan Buddhism, the Tibetan language has spread into the western world and can be found in many Buddhist publications and prayer materials; with some western students learning the language for translation of Tibetan texts. Outside Lhasa itself, Lhasa Tibetan is spoken by approximately 200,000 exile speakers who have moved from modern-day Tibet to India and other countries. Tibetan is also spoken by groups of ethnic minorities in Tibet who have lived in close proximity to Tibetans for centuries, but nevertheless retain their own languages and cultures.
Although some of the Qiang peoples of Kham are classified by China as ethnic Tibetans (see Gyalrongic languages; Gyalrong people are identified as 'Tibetan' in China), the Qiangic languages are not Tibetan, but rather form their own branch of the Tibeto-Burman language family.
Classical Tibetan was not a tonal language, but many varieties such as Central and Khams Tibetan have developed tone registers. Amdo and Ladakhi-Balti are without tone. Tibetan morphology can generally be described as agglutinative.
Terminology
Although the term "Tibetic" had been applied in various ways within the Sino-Tibetan research tradition, Nicolas Tournadre defined it as a phylum derived from Old Tibetan.[2] Following Nishi (1987)[4] and Beyer (1992),[5] he identified several lexical innovations that can be used as a diagnosis to distinguish Tibetic from the other languages of the family, such as བདུན bdun "seven".[2][6]
The "Tibetic languages" in this sense are a substitute for the term "Tibetan languages/dialects" used in the previous literature; the distinction between "language" and "dialect" is not straightforward, and labeling varieties of Tibetic as "Tibetan dialects" could be misleading not only because those "dialects" are often mutually-unintelligible, but also the speakers of Tibetic do not necessarily consider themselves as ethnic Tibetan, as is the case with Sherpas, Ladakhis, Baltis, Lahaulas, Sikkimese and Bhutanese.[2][7]
Origins
Marius Zemp (2018)
Similarly, Tamangic also has a West Himalayish superstratum, but its substratum is derived from a different Sino-Tibetan branch.
Only a few language clusters in the world are derived from a common language which is identical to or closely related to an old literary language. This small group includes the Tibetic languages, as descendants from
Classification
The more divergent languages are spoken in the north and east, likely due to
The two major Tibetic languages used for broadcasting within China are
Tournadre & Suzuki (2023)
Tournadre & Suzuki (2023) recognize 8 geographical sections, each with about 7-14 groups of Tibetic dialects.[3] This classification is a revision of Tournadre (2014).[2]
- Tibetic
- South-eastern section (14 groups):
- Eastern section (11 groups):
- North-eastern section (14 groups):
- Tsho Ngönpo (or Kokonor)
- Tsongkha
- Labrang-Rebgong
- Rwanak (Banak) pastoralist group
- Ngawa
- Arik
- Hwari (Pari)
- Mewa pastoralists’ group (with settlements in Kham)
- Washül pastoralists’group (with migrations into Kham)
- Gorkä (divergent)
- Gyälrongo-spheric Amdo (divergent)
- Dungnak and rTarmnyik (near Western Yughur in Gansu) (divergent)
- Central section (8 groups):
- Ü
- Tsang
- Phänpo
- Tö pastoralists’ dialects (Drogpä Tö-kä)
- Eastern Tö cultivators’ dialects (Sharchok Rongpä Tö-kä)
- Western Tö cultivators’ dialects (Nubchok Rongpä Tö-kä)
- Kongpo
- Lhokha
- Southern section (7 groups):
- South-western section (9 groups):
- Western section (8 groups):
- Spiti
- Khunu-Töt
- Garzha
- Pangi
- Paldar
- Durbuk Jangpa dialect
- Nyoma Jangpa dialect
- Jadang (or Dzathang) dialect
- North-western section (7 groups):
Tournadre (2014)
Tournadre (2014)[2] classifies the Tibetic languages as eight geolinguistic continua, consisting of 50 languages and over 200 dialects. This is an updated version of his work in 2008.[11] The Eastern and Southeastern branches have lower internal mutual intelligibility, but it is more limited in the Northwestern branch and between certain southern and northern Khams dialects. These continua are spread across five countries with one exception, this being Sangdam, a Khams dialect in Kachin, Myanmar.
- Tibetic
- North-Western: Purki
- Western:
- Central: )
- South-Western: Lhomi, Walungge, Tokpe Gola.
- Southern: Dzongkha, Drengjong, Tsamang, Dhromo Lakha, Dur Brokkat, Mera Sakteng Brokpa-ke
- South-Eastern: Dzayul, Derong-Jol, Chaktreng, Muli-Dappa, Semkyi Nyida
- Eastern: Drugchu, Khöpokhok, Thewo-Chone, Baima, Sharkhok, Palkyi (or Pashi; four dialects, including Chos-rje), and Zhongu
- North-Eastern
- Amdo
- Gser-Rdo:Khalong
- North-Western:
Tournadre (2005, 2008)
Tournadre (2005)[13] classifies the Tibetic languages as follows.
- Tibetic
- Central Tibetan
- The basis of Standard Tibetanthat includes various Nepalese varieties
- The basis of
- Khams
- Amdo
- Dzongkha–Lhokä
- Ladakhi–Balti
- Lahuli–Spiti
- Kyirong–Kagate
- Sherpa–Jirel
The other languages (
Tournadre (2013) adds
Bradley (1997)
According to Bradley,[15] the languages cluster as follows (dialect information from the Tibetan Dialects Project at the University of Bern):
- Tibetic
- Western Archaic Tibetan (non-tonal), including Burig
- Amdo Tibetan (including Thewo-Chone) (non-tonal)
- Khams Tibetan (tonal)
- Western Innovative Tibetan(Lahuli–Spiti) (slightly tonal)
- Dialects of Upper Ladakh and Zanskar, of the Northwest Indian Border Area (Lahaul and Spiti district and Uttarakhand), and of Zanda County (westernmost Tibet)
- Central Tibetan(slightly tonal)
- Most dialects of Standard Tibetan.
- Most dialects of
- Northern Tibetan (slightly tonal)
- Dialects of Nagqu Prefecture in north-central Tibet, and of Nangqên County in South Qinghai
(Considered dialects of Khams by Tournadre)
- Dialects of
- Southern Tibetan (slightly tonal)
- .
- Western Archaic Tibetan (non-tonal), including
- Other
Some classifications group Khams and Amdo together as Eastern Tibetan (not to be confused with East Bodish, whose speakers are not ethnically Tibetan). Some, like Tournadre, break up Central Tibetan. Phrases such as 'Central Tibetan' and 'Central Bodish' may or may not be synonymous: Southern (Central) Tibetan can be found as Southern Bodish, for example; 'Central Tibetan' may mean dBus or all tonal lects apart from Khams; 'Western Bodish' may be used for the non-tonal western lects while 'Western Tibetan' is used for the tonal lects, or 'Bodish' may even be used for other branches of the Tibeto-Kanauri languages.
Lexical similarity
Amdo Tibetan has 70% lexical similarity with Central Tibetan and Khams Tibetan, while Khams Tibetan has 80% lexical similarity with Central Tibetan.[16]
Geographical distribution
The Tibetic-speaking area spans six countries: China (PRC), Nepal, Pakistan, India, Bhutan, and Myanmar.[2][17] Tibetan is also spoken in diaspora communities in Europe, North America (e.g. Little Tibet, Toronto), Asia and Australia.[18]
China
Within
Nepal
Bhutan
The
Pakistan
Within areas administrated by Pakistan, Balti is spoken in Gilgit-Baltistan.[22]
India
Within areas administrated by India, some Tibetic varieties are spoken in Ladakh, Sikkim, Himachal Pradesh (Kinnaur, Lahul and Spiti), West Bengal (Darjeeling and Kalimpong), as well as Uttarakhand.[22][24] As with Bhutan and Nepal, there reside a number of Tibetan refugees across the country, notably in Dharamshala where the headquarter of Central Tibetan Administration is located.[25]
Myanmar
In Myanmar, a variant of Khams Tibetan is spoken near the Hkakabo Razi, Kachin State which is adjacent to Nujiang Lisu Autonomous Prefecture, Yunnan and Tibet Autonomous Region.[26] Suzuki (2012) describes the phonology of the Sangdam dialect, as well as giving a brief overview of Tibetic varieties in the country.
He estimates there are about 300 Khams Tibetan speakers inhabiting at least four villages in Dazundam Village Tract, Pannandin Sub-township, Nogmong Township, Putao District, Kachin State.[27] The four villages he mentions are Tahaundam, "Shidudan" (Japanese: シドゥダン), Sandam, Madin, the second of which he provides no romanization because the placename is uncharted on the map available to him.[27] According to Suzuki's consultant, they migrated from Zayu County, Tibet more than a century ago although they still have contact with relatives living there, and there are few differences between the dialects of the four villages .[28]
Since Rawang people are the ethnic majority of the area, the Tibetans also have a command of Rawang, which is mainly used for interethnic communication; those with primary education can speak and write Burmese as well, while they are illiterate in their own language.[28]
Writing systems
Most Tibetic languages are written in one of two
Historical phonology
Old Tibetan phonology is rather accurately rendered by the script. The finals were pronounced devoiced although they are written as voiced, the prefix letters assimilated their voicing to the root letters. The graphic combinations hr and lh represent voiceless and not necessarily aspirate correspondences to r and l respectively. The letter ' was pronounced as a voiced guttural fricative before vowels but as homorganic prenasalization before consonants. Whether the gigu verso had phonetic meaning or not remains controversial.
For instance, Srongbtsan Sgampo would have been pronounced [sroŋpʦan zɡampo] (now pronounced [sɔ́ŋʦɛ̃ ɡʌ̀mpo] in Lhasa Tibetan) and 'babs would have been pronounced [mbaps] (pronounced [bapˤ][dubious ] in Lhasa Tibetan).
Already in the 9th century the process of cluster simplification, devoicing and tonogenesis had begun in the central dialects, as can be shown by Tibetan words transliterated into other languages, particularly Middle Chinese but also Uyghur.
The combination of the abovementioned evidence enables us to form the following outline of the evolution of Tibetan. In the 9th century, as shown by the bilingual Tibetan–Chinese treaty of 821–822 found in front of Lhasa's Jokhang, the complex initial clusters had already been reduced, and the process of tonogenesis was likely well underway.
The next change took place in Tsang (Gtsang) dialects: The ra-tags were altered into retroflex consonants, and the ya-tags became palatals.
Later on the superscribed letters and finals d and s disappeared, except in the east and west. It was at this stage that the language spread in Lahul and Spiti, where the superscribed letters were silent, the d and g finals were hardly heard, and as, os, us were pronounced ai, oi, ui. The words introduced from Tibet into the border languages at that time differ greatly from those borrowed at an earlier period.
Other changes are more recent and restricted to Ü and Tsang. In Ü, the vowel sounds a, o, u have now mostly
Reconstruction
Proto-Tibetic
Proto-Tibetic, the hypothetical proto-language ancestral to the Tibetic languages, has been reconstructed by Tournadre (2014).[2] Proto-Tibetic is similar to, but not identical to, written Classical Literary Tibetan. The following phonological features are characteristic of Proto-Tibetic (Tournadre 2014: 113).
- The prefixes *s(ǝ)-, *d(ǝ)-/g(ǝ)-, *m(ǝ)-, and *b(ǝ)-, which have been retained from Proto-Tibeto-Burman. *s(ǝ)- is primarily used with animals and body parts, as well as *d(ǝ)-/*g(ǝ)- and *m(ǝ)-/*r(ǝ)-.
- Palatalization of dental and alveolar consonants before y (/j/).
- Consonant change from lateral to dental position after /m/ (e.g., *ml > *md).
- Distinctive aspirated initial stops. This phenomenon is attested by alternating aspirated and non-aspirated consonants in Old Tibetan orthography. Examples include gcig ~ gchig (གཅིག་ ~ གཆིག་) 'one'; phyin-chad ~ phyin-cad (ཕྱིན་ཆད་ ~ ཕྱིན་ཅད་) 'from now on'; ci ~ chi (ཅི་ ~ ཆི་) 'what'; and cu ~ chu (ཅུ་ ~ ཆུ་) 'water'.
Reconstructed Proto-Tibetic forms from Tournadre (2014) include:
- *g(ǝ)-tɕik 'one'
- *g(ǝ)-nyis 'two'
- *g(ǝ)-su- 'three'
- *b(ǝ)-ʑi 'four'
- *l(ǝ)-ŋa 'five'
- *d(ǝ)-ruk 'six'
- *b(ǝ)-dun 'seven'
- *b(ǝ)-rgyat 'eight'
- *d(ǝ)-gu 'nine'
- *b(ǝ)-tɕu 'ten'
- *s(ǝ)-dik-pa 'scorpion'
- *s(ǝ)-bal 'frog'
- *s(ǝ)-tak 'tiger'
- *s(ǝ)-b-rul 'snake'
- *s(ǝ)-pra 'monkey'
- *s(ǝ)-kra 'hair'
- *s(ǝ)-nyiŋ 'heart'
- *s(ǝ)-na 'nose'
- *d(ǝ)-myik 'eye'
- *m(ǝ)-go 'head'
- *r(ǝ)-na 'ear'
Pre-Tibetic
Pre-Tibetic is a hypothetical pre-formation stage of Proto-Tibetic.[2]
*ty-, *ly-, *sy- were not palatalized in Pre-Tibetic, but underwent palatalization in Proto-Tibetic (Tournadre 2014: 113-114).[2] Posited sound changes from Pre-Tibetic to Proto-Tibetic include *ty- > *tɕ-, *sy- > *ɕ-, *tsy- > *tɕ-, and *ly- > *ʑ-. However, Tournadre (2014: 114) notes that many Bodish languages such as Basum, Tamang, and Kurtöp (East Bodish) have not undergone these changes (e.g., Bake (Basum) ti 'what' vs. Proto-Tibetic *tɕ(h)i and Bake tɨ 'one' vs. Proto-Tibetic *g(ǝ)-tɕ(h)ik; Kurtöp Hla: 'iron' and Bumthap lak 'iron' vs. Proto-Tibetic *ltɕaks).
Some Pre-Tibetic reconstructions, along with reconstructed Proto-Tibetic forms and orthographic Classical Literary Tibetan, from Tournadre (2014: 114-116) are listed below.
Gloss | Pre-Tibetic | Proto-Tibetic | Classical Literary Tibetan |
---|---|---|---|
one | *g(ǝ)-tyik | *g(ǝ)-tɕ(h)ik | gcig / gchig གཅིག་ / གཆིག (Old Tibetan) |
big | *tye | *tɕ(h)e | che ཆེ་ (Old Tibetan) |
ten | *b(ǝ)-tyu | *b(ǝ)-tɕu | bcu / bchu བཅུ་ / བཆུ་ (Old Tibetan) |
what | *tyi | *tɕ(h)i | ci / chi ཅི་ / ཆི་ (Old Tibetan) |
flesh | *sya | *ɕa | sha ཤ་ |
know | *syes | *ɕes | shes ཤེས་ |
wood | *sying | *ɕiŋ | shing ཤིང་ |
to cut (past stem) | *b(ǝ)-tsyat | *b(ǝ)-tɕat | bcad བཅད་ |
spittle | *m(ǝ)-tsyil-ma | *m(ǝ)-tɕ(h)il-ma | mchil-ma མཆིལ་མ་ |
liver | *m(ǝ)-tsin-pa | *m(ǝ)-tɕ(h)in-pa | mchin-pa མཆིན་པ |
four | *b(ǝ)-lyi | *b(ǝ)ʑi | bzhi བཞི་ |
field | *lying | *ʑiŋ | zhing ཞིང་ |
flea | *ldi | *ldʑi | lji ལྗི་, 'ji ་འཇི་ |
iron | *s(ǝ)-lak(s) > *l-sak(s) > *l-tsyak(s) | *ltɕaks | lcags ལྕགས་ |
arrow | *mda | mda' མདའ་ | |
to suppress | *bnans | *mnans | mnand (Old Tibetan) |
to listen | *bnyan | *nyan | mnyand |
eye | *d(ǝ)myik | dmyig དམྱིག་ (Old Tibetan); mig | |
flower | *mentok | men-tog མེན་ཏོག (Old Tibetan); ་me-tog |
Comparison of numerals
The numerals in different Tibetan/Tibetic languages are:[29]
GLOSS | Ü-Tsang (Middle) | Amdo | Khams | CLASSICAL TIBETAN | ||||||
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Lhasa | Cheng Zhang |
Dolpo | Jirel | Mugom | Sherpa | Yohlmo | ||||
'1' | ʨiʔ53 | ʨi53 | ʂik | dokpoi | ʧɪk | ʦɪk55 | ʨīː | xʨɨx | ʨi55 | *xʨik gtšig |
'2' | ȵi55 | ȵi55 | ɲiː | ŋi | ŋi | ŋi55 | ɲìː | ɦȵi | ɲɯ53 | *gnis gnis |
'3' | sum55 | sɔ̃53 | sum | sum | sum | sum55 | sūm | sɘm | sũ53 | *xsum gsum |
'4' | ɕi13 | ɣɯ31 | ɕi̤ː | si | ɕi | ʣi55 | ʑì̤ | ɦʑɘ | ʐə33 | *βʑi bži |
'5' | ŋa53 | ɴɐ53 | ŋa | ŋa | ŋá | ŋɑ55 | ŋɑ̀ | ɦŋa | ŋɑ53 | *ɬŋɑ lŋa |
'6' | tʂʰuʔ13 | tʂu31 | ʈṳk | tʰuk | duk | ɖʊk11 | ʈṳ̀ː | tʂəx | tʂo33 | *dɽuk drug |
'7' | tỹ15 | dɛ̃24 | ty̤n | duin | dun | dɪn55 | t̪ì̤n | ɦdɘn | dĩ33 | *βdun bdun |
'8' | ɕɛʔ13 | dʑe31 | ce̤ʔ | get | ket | gæ55 | cē̤ː | ɦdʑʲɛ | ʑe33 | *βɽgjat brgyad |
'9' | ku13 | ɡɯ31 | kṳ | gu | gu | gu55 | kṳ̀ | ɦgɘ | gə33 | *dgu dgu |
'10' | ʨu53 | ʨɯ53 | tɕu | ʦutʰambaː | ʧú | ʦi55tʰɑm11ba11 | ʨʉ̄ | ʨɘ | ʨə55 | *ɸʨu btšu |
For the Central or Eastern Tibetic languages:
GLOSS | Dzongkha-Lakha | Balti-Ladakhi | Spiti bhoti | |||||
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Dzongkha | Sikkimese | Balti | Changthang | Ladakhi | Purik | Zangskari | ||
'1' | ʨí | ʧi | ʧik | ʧik | ʧik | ʧik | ʧiʔ | ʧík |
'2' | ɲí | ni | ɲis | ɲis | ɲis | ɲis | ɲiː | ɲiː |
'3' | súm | súm | xsum | sum | sum | sum | sum | súm |
'4' | ʃi̤ | ʒe | βʒi | zi | zi | ʒi | ʒi | ʒì |
'5' | ŋə | ŋa | ɣɑ | ŋa | ʂŋa | ʂŋə | ŋa | ŋá |
'6' | dʑo | tʰu | truk | ɖruk | ʈuk | ʈuk | ʈuʔ | ʈùk |
'7' | ty̤n | dĩ | βdun | dun | rdun | rdun | ðun | dùn |
'8' | kæ̤ | gɛ | βgyʌt | gʲat | rgʲat | rgyət | ʝət | ɟèt |
'9' | kṳ | go | rgu | gu | rgu | rgu | ɣu | gù |
'10' | ʨu tʰam | ʧɔːmba | ɸʧu | ʧu | rʧu | rču | ʧu | ʧú |
References
- Beyer, Stephan V. (1992). The Classical Tibetan Language. SUNY Press. ISBN 0-7914-1099-4.
- Denwood, Philip (1999). Tibetan. John Benjamins Publishing. ISBN 90-272-3803-0.
- Izzard, Jeff Robert (2015). Language attitudes and identity in the Tibetan Dharamsala diaspora (Ph.D thesis). SOAS University of London. Retrieved 2024-02-20.
- hdl:10502/2932.
- PMID 31061123.
- Suzuki, Hiroyuki (2012), "Kamutibetto-go Sangdam hoogen no onsei bunseki to sono tokutyoo" カムチベット語 Sangdam 方言の音声分析とその方言特徴 [Khams Tibetan Sangdam Dialect: Phonetic and Dialectal Analysis], Journal of Asian and African Studies, 83: 37–58.
- ISBN 978-2-490768-08-0.
- "Origin of Sino-Tibetan language family revealed by new research". ScienceDaily (Press release). May 6, 2019.
Footnotes
- ^ ISBN 978-3-11-031074-0. (preprint)
- ^ a b c d e f g h i j k l m Tournadre, Nicolas. 2014. "The Tibetic languages and their classification." In Trans-Himalayan linguistics, historical and descriptive linguistics of the Himalayan area. Berlin: Mouton de Gruyter.
- ^ a b Tournadre & Suzuki 2023.
- ^ Nishi 1987, p. 849.
- ^ Beyer 1992, p. 7.
- ^ Tournadre & Suzuki 2023, p. 654.
- ^ Tournadre & Suzuki 2023, p. 66.
- ^ Zemp, Marius. 2018. On the origins of Tibetan. Proceedings of the 51st International Conference on Sino-Tibetan Languages and Linguistics (2018). Kyoto: Kyoto University.
- ^ Tournadre & Suzuki 2023, p. 660.
- ^ Katia Chirkova, 2008, "On the position of Báimǎ within Tibetan", in Lubotsky et al. (eds), Evidence and Counter-Evidence, vol. 2.
- ^ Tournadre, Nicolas (2008). "Arguments against the Concept of 'Conjunct'/'Disjunct' in Tibetan" (PDF). In B. Huber; M. Volkart; P. Widmer; P. Schwieger (eds.). Chomolangma, Demawend und Kasbek: Festschrift für Roland Bielmeier zu Seinem 65. Geburtstag, Vol. 1. Halle: International Institute for Tibetan and Buddhist Studies. pp. 282–283. Archived from the original (PDF) on 2011-07-20.
- ^ Sun, Jackson T.-S. 2021. Gser-Rdo: A New Tibetic Language Across the Rngaba-Dkarmdzes Border.
- ^ N. Tournadre (2005) "L'aire linguistique tibétaine et ses divers dialectes." Lalies, 2005, n°25, p. 7–56 [1]
- ^ Shao, Mingyuan 邵明园 (2018). Hexi Zoulang binwei Zangyu Dongnahua yanjiu 河西走廊濒危藏语东纳话研究 [Study on the mDungnag dialect, an endangered Tibetan language in Hexi Corridor]. Guangzhou: Zhongshan University Publishing House 中山大学出版社.
- ^ Bradley (1997)
- ^ "China". Ethnologue: Languages of the World, Nineteenth Edition. 2016. Archived from the original on 2016-09-09.
- ^ Tournadre & Suzuki 2023, p. 49.
- ^ Tournadre & Suzuki 2023, p. 78.
- ^ Tournadre & Suzuki 2023, p. 62.
- ^ Tournadre & Suzuki 2023, pp. 81–83.
- ^ Denwood 1999, p. 34.
- ^ a b c d e Tournadre & Suzuki 2023, p. 54.
- ^ Denwood 1999, p. 36.
- ^ Denwood 1999, pp. 33–34.
- ^ Izzard 2015.
- ^ Tournadre & Suzuki 2023, p. 50.
- ^ a b Suzuki 2012, p. 38.
- ^ a b Suzuki 2012, p. 39.
- ^ "Bodish Numerals (Eugene Chan)". Archived from the original on 2012-03-05.
Further reading
- Denwood, Philip (2007). "The Language History of Tibetan". In Bielmeier, Roland; Haller, Felix (eds.). Linguistics of the Himalayas and beyond. Walter de Gruyter. pp. 47–70. ISBN 978-3-11-019828-7.
- Dpal ldan bkra shis (2016). "Amdo Tibetan Language: An Introduction to Normative Oral Amdo" (PDF). Asian Highland Perspectives. 43. LCCN 2008944256. Archived from the original(PDF) on 2016-06-28.
- ISBN 9004103902.
External links
- Comparative Dictionary of Tibetan Dialects (CDTD)
- Languages on the Tibetan Plateau and the Himalayas — Nicolas Tournadre
- Overview of Old Tibetan Synchronic phonology by Nathan Hill
- L'évolution des langues et les facteurs écolinguistiques : le cas des langues d'éleveurs et des langues d'agriculteurs sur le Haut Plateau tibétain at CNRS-LACITO
- China's Tibet policy continued attempt at erasing Tibetan language