@@tajup8741 Some are Nepali citizens, some Indian citizens. Most are Nepali because Solukhumbu is located in Nepal, the homeland of Sherpa people, where Chomolungma / Mt.Everest / Sagarmatha is located. A mountain very holy to the indigenous people of the East.
@@tajup8741 Yes, because most of them live in Nepal. Plus, even in India, they live in Sikkim, Kalimpong & Darjeeling (West Bengal). Where there are people who also speak Nepali, who're culturally similar.
I would really appreciate one in Bhutia ! A language spoken in Sikkim by the Bhutia people who migrated from Tibet to Sikkim in the 16th century and share 95% of the same culture
In Garo(A.chik) language the numbering is very similar, they can be seen from below: 1- Sa 2- Gni 3- Gittam 4- Bri 5- Bonga 6- Dok 7- Sni 8- Chet 9- Sku 10- Chikkung We are from Meghalaya Garo Hills (Northeast India)
@SimsangV Thank you! :) Please help me with it! Here are the things we need from you: Text and Audio for the following: (1 audio per category mp3 format) 1. The native name of the language/ dialect, 2. Numbers 1 to 10, 3. Greetings & Phrases, 4. Vocabulary, 5. Any story / Sample text, 6. Images for: Flag & Emblem, Traditional Costumes, Art/ Patterns. 7. Info about the language, people, & culture (w/ images) 8. Suggestion for Background music :D Stay happy, Andy Email: otipeps24@gmail.com
Sherpa seems to be totally different except for the numbers. I actually recognize a few Sanskrit based words, so it is likely heavily influenced by Nepali.
@@lepmuhangpa It's wasn't only the dialect, the Sherpa one is translated completely differently. Using a completely different text, the guy's basically reading the English passage translated to Nepali and then translated again to Sherpa.
How much evidence is there that any of these languages are directly descended from Old Tibetan; Or is it that all of these related languages got heavily influenced by Old Tibetan? I can see that Tibetan "dialects" & Sherpa are descended from Old Tibetan but I know for a fact that Ladakhi language is as old as Old Tibetan: Because Ladakh is very ancient. Dzongkha, a guy from Bhutan said is a constructed language from a particular people in Bhutan. As there is Tshangla & other older languages in Bhutan, that're quite different. I forgot which language Dzongkha was based on.
Well it say that dzongkha Dzongkha is considered a South Tibetic language. It is closely related to and partially intelligible with Sikkimese, and to some other Bhutanese languages such as Chocha Ngacha, Brokpa, Brokkat and Lakha. Dzongkha bears a close linguistic relationship to J'umowa, which is spoken in the Chumbi Valley of Southern Tibet. It has a much more distant relationship to Standard Tibetan. Spoken Dzongkha and Tibetan are around 50% to 80% mutually intelligible, with the literary forms of both highly influenced by the liturgical (clerical) Classical Tibetan language, known in Bhutan as Chöke, which has been used for centuries by Buddhist monks. Chöke was used as the language of education in Bhutan until the early 1960s when it was replaced by Dzongkha in public schools. Although descended from Classical Tibetan, Dzongkha shows a great many irregularities in sound changes that make the official spelling and standard pronunciation more distant from each other than is the case with Standard Tibetan. "Traditional orthography and modern phonology are two distinct systems operating by a distinct set of rules."
@@lepmuhangpa isn't magar the second most spoken sino tibetan language in Nepal, they should have easily found the volunteer Also Tamang language is divided into two different dialects western and eastern tamang language They have only covered eastern tamang language
@@tseringlama8616 3rd most spoken; 2nd is Newa Bhe & 1st is Tamang. 4th is Tamu & 5th Limbu, 6th Bantawa Yung. But, I think Limbu is the one language where there aren't really any major dialect variations. Unlike Mangar which can vary widely.
You can try to make a video about Sikkimese (Bhutia) language also which is another Tibetic language and has 75-85% mutual intelligibility with Tibetan and Dzongkha if I'm not wrong. It's spoken in the state of Sikkim in India however the official language of the state is Nepali due to the presence of a plethora of regional languages.
Actually the Mutual intelligiblity with Standard Tibetan is around the 40% mark but it's more intelligible with Dzongkha and has mutual intelligiblity with some dialect of Dzongkha.
@@LhawangPoSherpait actually depends because the bhutias use a few Tibetan and Bhutia words interchangeably especially in my family that’s the case! Like in Bhutia chicken is phya but in tibetan it’s jhya but most bhutias would understand both
@@Gr8Nate202 Yay! I'm so happy. Thank you! :) Please help me with it! :) Mp3 format (1 continuous recording per category) 1. Name of the language/dialect 2. Numbers 1-10 3. Greetings and Phrases 4. Vocabulary 5. Any Native Story 6. Music: Instrumental 7.Images: Flag & Emblem Traditional Dress Art & Patterns Culture (e.g. food, place, art, dances et.c) 8. Information: About the language, people & culture Looking forward to hearing from you! Stay happy, Andy Email: otipeps24@gmail.com
Completely unrelated. These are Tibetic languages which are (very distantly) related to Chinese, meanwhile Hindi is Indo-European, being distantly related to french, english, russian, farsi, and many others.
@@purptube678 Yes proto-Sino-Tibetan is around 7000BC and PIE is around 4500 BC and there's likely no influencing force in the area during ancient period
similar to Sino-Japanese numbers, yes (ichi, ni, san, shi), but not to native Japanese numbers (hitotsu, futatsu, mitsu, yotsu). Sino-Japanese is just Chinese numbers borrowed into Japanese, hence the similar pronunciation. Chinese and Tibetic languages belong to one language family, hence, are genetically related, so the numbers are similar to begin with. The numbers in Chinese dialect groups all sound like this as well.
I work with a Sherpa and Tibetan nurse!!
Please compare 3 Tibetan variants: Üchen (Central Tibetan), Kham and Amdo.
Kham dialects are quite diverse themselves internally. I don't know what you would call a standard Kham dialect (perhaps the one on Kangba TV?).
You should make a video on the ᰛᰩᰵᰛᰧᰵᰶ "Rong Ring" (Lepcha) language of the Rongkup people; I'm sure the resources are out there.
Great video thanks for sharing.
sherpa looks so different
The script used is the Devanagari script used to write Nepali & Hindi.
Sherpa are nepali
@@tajup8741
Some are Nepali citizens, some Indian citizens. Most are Nepali because Solukhumbu is located in Nepal, the homeland of Sherpa people, where Chomolungma / Mt.Everest / Sagarmatha is located. A mountain very holy to the indigenous people of the East.
@@lepmuhangpa so they are nepali because they are recognised as such in nepal and even in india they think of themselves as nepali
@@tajup8741
Yes, because most of them live in Nepal. Plus, even in India, they live in Sikkim, Kalimpong & Darjeeling (West Bengal). Where there are people who also speak Nepali, who're culturally similar.
They are all same at numbers part.
But text, sherpa is so different
Because of European influence, however it made the language sound like Dravidian languages for some reason.
Sherpa is a primarily spoken language which can be written in either Devanagari or Sambhota.
It's written in Devanagari, Sambhota or Latin script; But, it is a Tibetic language.
Este canal es una maravilla,me encanta❤
¿De donde eres?
@@ChimeRally Hola, soy de Colombia
Y tú?
I would really appreciate one in Bhutia ! A language spoken in Sikkim by the Bhutia people who migrated from Tibet to Sikkim in the 16th century and share 95% of the same culture
In Garo(A.chik) language the numbering is very similar, they can be seen from below:
1- Sa
2- Gni
3- Gittam
4- Bri
5- Bonga
6- Dok
7- Sni
8- Chet
9- Sku
10- Chikkung
We are from Meghalaya Garo Hills (Northeast India)
Would you like to volunteer for the Garo language. :)
@@ilovelanguages0124 Yeah Sure!!!
I would love to Sir/ Ma'am 🤗👍👍
@SimsangV Thank you! :)
Please help me with it!
Here are the things we need from you:
Text and Audio for the following: (1 audio per category mp3 format)
1. The native name of the language/ dialect,
2. Numbers 1 to 10,
3. Greetings & Phrases,
4. Vocabulary,
5. Any story / Sample text,
6. Images for:
Flag & Emblem,
Traditional Costumes,
Art/ Patterns.
7. Info about the language, people, & culture (w/ images)
8. Suggestion for Background music :D
Stay happy,
Andy
Email: otipeps24@gmail.com
Sherpa seems to be totally different except for the numbers. I actually recognize a few Sanskrit based words, so it is likely heavily influenced by Nepali.
Sherpa has like a 2-3% lexical similarity to Nepali, the guy in the video is speaking a heavily modified Sherpa.
It depends on where the Sherpa speaker is from; Some dialects are more conservative than let's say, those living in big cities.
@@lepmuhangpa yeah, unlike Tibetan there is no "Standard" dialect for Sherpa.
@@lepmuhangpa It's wasn't only the dialect, the Sherpa one is translated completely differently. Using a completely different text, the guy's basically reading the English passage translated to Nepali and then translated again to Sherpa.
@@LhawangPoSherpa
The choice of words seems quite different.
Could you do The Lord's Prayer in
Na'vi and Quenya
Or
Klingon and High Valerian!
My favourite language family!!!!
The same
Balti language is my most favorite
This family is really diverse and I want to cover them more in the future! Manifesting for more Sino-Tibetan volunteers! ✨✨✨
@@ilovelanguages0124Good luck I want to hear all the language families
Wonderful video Andy! 💪😎
Waiting for tamangic language which includes tamang, gurung, thakali and neshyang language
How much evidence is there that any of these languages are directly descended from Old Tibetan; Or is it that all of these related languages got heavily influenced by Old Tibetan? I can see that Tibetan "dialects" & Sherpa are descended from Old Tibetan but I know for a fact that Ladakhi language is as old as Old Tibetan: Because Ladakh is very ancient. Dzongkha, a guy from Bhutan said is a constructed language from a particular people in Bhutan. As there is Tshangla & other older languages in Bhutan, that're quite different. I forgot which language Dzongkha was based on.
Well it say that dzongkha Dzongkha is considered a South Tibetic language. It is closely related to and partially intelligible with Sikkimese, and to some other Bhutanese languages such as Chocha Ngacha, Brokpa, Brokkat and Lakha.
Dzongkha bears a close linguistic relationship to J'umowa, which is spoken in the Chumbi Valley of Southern Tibet. It has a much more distant relationship to Standard Tibetan. Spoken Dzongkha and Tibetan are around 50% to 80% mutually intelligible, with the literary forms of both highly influenced by the liturgical (clerical) Classical Tibetan language, known in Bhutan as Chöke, which has been used for centuries by Buddhist monks. Chöke was used as the language of education in Bhutan until the early 1960s when it was replaced by Dzongkha in public schools.
Although descended from Classical Tibetan, Dzongkha shows a great many irregularities in sound changes that make the official spelling and standard pronunciation more distant from each other than is the case with Standard Tibetan. "Traditional orthography and modern phonology are two distinct systems operating by a distinct set of rules."
Yeslai nepal ko sabbai sino tibetan language ko video banau vannu parne yeso volunteer khojdeu bro baru gurung, magar vasa haru ko lagi
@@tseringlama8616
Limbu-Sherpa-Tamang ta bhayo tara abo Mangar-Tamu-Rongring baki major languages ma; Also Kirawa Bantawa: Banaudai hola: Time lagne.
@@lepmuhangpa isn't magar the second most spoken sino tibetan language in Nepal, they should have easily found the volunteer
Also Tamang language is divided into two different dialects western and eastern tamang language
They have only covered eastern tamang language
@@tseringlama8616
3rd most spoken; 2nd is Newa Bhe & 1st is Tamang. 4th is Tamu & 5th Limbu, 6th Bantawa Yung. But, I think Limbu is the one language where there aren't really any major dialect variations. Unlike Mangar which can vary widely.
Could you make Taiwanese Chinese and Japanese?
Wouldn't it have made more sense scientifically to say Hokkien vs Japanese
❤❤
You can try to make a video about Sikkimese (Bhutia) language also which is another Tibetic language and has 75-85% mutual intelligibility with Tibetan and Dzongkha if I'm not wrong. It's spoken in the state of Sikkim in India however the official language of the state is Nepali due to the presence of a plethora of regional languages.
Actually the Mutual intelligiblity with Standard Tibetan is around the 40% mark but it's more intelligible with Dzongkha and has mutual intelligiblity with some dialect of Dzongkha.
@@LhawangPoSherpait actually depends because the bhutias use a few Tibetan and Bhutia words interchangeably especially in my family that’s the case! Like in Bhutia chicken is phya but in tibetan it’s jhya but most bhutias would understand both
ladakhi pronounces some of the letters that are silent in standard tibetan
Sherpa sounds like Hangul😂😂
Can you do a comparison of the northern pakistani languages: Shina and Khowar, they are Dardic languages and kinda similar with almost same accents
Sherpa sounds like Korean 😂❤
That's what I was thinkin😂😂
Request: Estonian and Japanese?
Y?☠️☠️☠️
Cool
1 to 10 sounds are very similar to Burmese language form Myanmar.
Well still in same language family.
Aksai chin language
You ---> 1:07
If there were no English translation, it wouldn't have crossed my mind that this was a prayer...XD
Wow ...the pronunciations of numbers in those languages are similar to Burmese, my language...
Can you make a video on Bukharian language? (Judeo-tajik language)?
I need a volunteer. :)
@@ilovelanguages0124 I can volunteer
@@ilovelanguages0124 I can volunteer, no problem
@@Gr8Nate202 Yay! I'm so happy. Thank you! :) Please help me with it! :)
Mp3 format (1 continuous recording per category)
1. Name of the language/dialect
2. Numbers 1-10
3. Greetings and Phrases
4. Vocabulary
5. Any Native Story
6. Music: Instrumental
7.Images:
Flag & Emblem
Traditional Dress
Art & Patterns
Culture (e.g. food, place, art, dances et.c)
8. Information:
About the language, people & culture
Looking forward to hearing from you!
Stay happy,
Andy
Email: otipeps24@gmail.com
Why Sherpa is using Nepali writing in this video ??I know Sherpa has their own writing ✍️ similar to Tibetan n Bhutanese
The lord's prayer 👍🙏✝️
Drenjonke please
Bhutia hell yea😎
Sherpa sounds so nepali
That's because the guys speaking a broken version of the Sherpa language and mixing it with Nepali words, he's also using a Nepali text.
Fake sherpa using the Sherpa last name for money
Sherpa seems more of a polysyllabic language than the others . Interesting .
👍🏽💪🏽❤
I am Balti
First
Next
Javanese
Sundanese
Balinese
Madurese
🔥🔥🔥🔥🔥🔥
Udah ada bng cuman Balinya gakaada
Rashpuri, please
Sherpa sounds like korean
How similar is this to Hindi?
Completely unrelated. These are Tibetic languages which are (very distantly) related to Chinese, meanwhile Hindi is Indo-European, being distantly related to french, english, russian, farsi, and many others.
@@SquigPie Hindi basic numbers are similar sounding to numbers in German, English, as well as Latin and Greek.
Comparing Tibetan and Hindi is like comparing Hungarian and German.
Sherpa is 2-3% lexically similar to Nepali, Hindi would be very low.
Next Burmese tibetan and old chinese
Do they sound like Chinese languages, yes or no?
They are related but it's like comparing English and Russian
Distantly related.
@@scurly0792pretty sure English and russian would still be a lot more closer than the tibetan and sinitic languages are today
@@purptube678 It was just a rough example off the top of my head, couldn't think of the best comparison in the moment
@@purptube678 Yes proto-Sino-Tibetan is around 7000BC and PIE is around 4500 BC and there's likely no influencing force in the area during ancient period
Kirat language family must be done from now
One language less in this comparison: Balti
is purgi and balti same?
Pa'O please
Tibetan 1.2.3…10
sounds like Japanese‼︎‼︎
indeed we call water as chu and japanese call it mizu which sound similar lol also number system is same tbh
That's Japanese borrowed the Chinese number system. They have their own native number system too. Hitatsu, futatsu
Numbers sound Japanese
Common Japanese numerals are of Middle Chinese origin, and Tibetic languages are very distant relatives to Chinese, that's why they are similar
Yeah, cause they were burrowed from Chinese.
similar to Sino-Japanese numbers, yes (ichi, ni, san, shi), but not to native Japanese numbers (hitotsu, futatsu, mitsu, yotsu). Sino-Japanese is just Chinese numbers borrowed into Japanese, hence the similar pronunciation. Chinese and Tibetic languages belong to one language family, hence, are genetically related, so the numbers are similar to begin with. The numbers in Chinese dialect groups all sound like this as well.
All are the sames
india is wrong map
Free Tibet! ✌️
@victoriahartmann858 In your dream 🤡🤡