dis ISO 639

Grao Dima Autonyms

Dimasa

  • Geography

    IN Assam state: north Cachar district and Cachar hills; Karbi Anglong and Nagaon districts; Nagaland state: Haflong district; Meghalaya and Mizoram states.
  • Language Cloud

A language of India

dis
Dimasa Kachari, Grau Dima, Hills Kachari, Magrau
Grao Dima
137,000 (2011 census).
Assam state: north Cachar district and Cachar hills; Karbi Anglong and Nagaon districts; Nagaland state: Haflong district; Meghalaya and Mizoram states.
India, Map 5
5* (Developing).
Sino-Tibetan, Tibeto-Burman, Sal, Boro-Garo, Dimasa-Kokborok
Hasao, Hawar, Dembra, Dijuwa, Humri, Semsa, Walgong. Related to Kachari [xac].
SOV; agglutinative; tonal; honorific.
Largely assimilated into Bengali [ben] and Assamese [asm] communities (Van Driem 2007). Some also use Assamese [asm], especially in Karbi Anglong and Nagaon districts (Longmailai 2012). Some also use Bengali [ben], especially in Cachar plains (Longmailai 2012). Some also use Nagamese [nag], especially in Nagaland with speakers of other languages (Longmailai 2012). Also use English [eng]. Used as L2 by Sakachep [sch].
Literacy rate in L2: 60% in Assam (2001 census). Literature. Dictionary. NT: 2005.
Bengali (Bangla) script [Beng]. Latin script [Latn].
Some ethnic Dimasa speak other languages as L1: Mikir Karbi [mjw], Bengali [ben], and Assamese [asm]. Hindu, Christian, traditional religion.
OLAC resources in and about Dimasa