bxr ISO 639

буряад хэлэн‎ (buryaad xelen) Autonyms

Buriat, Russia

  • Geography

    RU Buryatia republic; Irkutsk province; Zabaykalsky krai; Siberia, east of Lake Baikal, Mongolia border.
  • Language Cloud

A language of Russian Federation

bxr
Buriat-Mongolian, Buryat, Northern Mongolian
буряад хэлэн‎ (buryaad xelen)
219,000 (2010 census). Ethnic population: 461,000 (2010 census).
Buryatia republic; Irkutsk province; Zabaykalsky krai; Siberia, east of Lake Baikal, Mongolia border.
Central Russian Federation
2 (Provincial). Statutory provincial language in Buryatia Republic (1994, Constitution of the Republic of Buryatia, Article 67).
Mongolic, Eastern, Oirat-Khalkha, Khalkha-Buriat, Buriat
Ekhirit-Bulagat, Selengin, Unga, Ninzne-Udinsk, Barguzin, Tunka, Oka, Alar, Bohaan, Bokhan, Khori. Less influenced by Russian [rus] east of Lake Baikal; more similar to Mongolia. Literary dialect differs considerably from those in Mongolia and China, which are influenced by other languages. Khori is the main dialect in the Russian Federation. Speakers in Russian Federation appear to understand each other well. A member of macrolanguage Buriat [bua].
Children in rural areas usually learn Buriat, but in cities Russian [rus] is often spoken even between Buriat speakers (Salminen 2007). Home, community. Used by all. Neutral attitudes. Most also use Russian [rus], especially younger people in the cities. Used as L2 by Evenki [evn].
Those on both sides of Lake Baikal are fully literate in the literary variety. Literature. Newspapers. Dictionary. Grammar. Bible: 1846.
Cyrillic script [Cyrl].
Heavily influenced by Russian [rus]. Buddhist, traditional religion.
OLAC resources in and about Buriat, Russia