dzo ISO 639

རྫོང་ཁ་‎ (Dzongkha) Autonyms

Dzongkha

  • Geography

    BT Haa, Paro, Punakha, and Wangdue Phodrang districts.
  • Language Cloud

A language of Bhutan

dzo
Bhotia of Bhutan, Bhotia of Dukpa, Bhutanese, Drukha, Drukke, Dukpa, Jonkha, Zongkhar
རྫོང་ཁ་‎ (Dzongkha)
304,000 in Bhutan (2021 Joshua Project), based on ethnicity. Total users in all countries: 315,080.
Haa, Paro, Punakha, and Wangdue Phodrang districts.
Bhutan, India, Map 4
1 (National). Statutory national language (2008, Constitution, Article 1(8)).
Sino-Tibetan, Tibeto-Burman, Western Tibeto-Burman, Bodish, Central Bodish, Central, Southern
Wang-The (Thimphu-Punakha), Ha, Northern Thimphu, Adap. As different from Central Tibetan [bod] as Nepali [npi] is from Hindi [hin]. Partially intelligible with Sikkimese [sip] (Denjoke). Dialects may be separate languages. Lexical similarity: 77% with Adap dialect, 48% with Tshangla [tsj], 47%–52% with Bumthangkha [kjz].
Literacy rate in L1: 54%. Literacy rate in L2: Below 5%. Taught in many primary schools in early grades and as subject thereafter. Taught as subject in all secondary schools. Taught as subject in some tertiary schools. Literature. Radio. Dictionary. Grammar. Bible: 2010.
Tibetan script [Tibt], official usage.
Buddhist.
OLAC resources in and about Dzongkha
Dzongkha
11,000 in India (2007).
West Bengal state: Darjeeling and Kalimpong, just inside the Indo-Bhutan border; Arunachal Pradesh, Assam, Manipur, Meghalaya, Nagaland, and Sikkim states.
5 (Dispersed)
Also use English [eng].
Buddhist.
View other languages of India