khg ISO 639

Tibetan, Khams

  • Geography

    CN Qinghai province: Yushu Tibetan autonomous prefecture; Sichuan province: Ganzi (Garzê) Tibetan autonomous prefecture; Xizang Autonomous Region: Changdu (Qamdo) and Naqu (Nagqu) districts; Yunnan province: Diqing (Dechen) Tibetan autonomous prefecture.
  • Language Cloud

A language of China

khg
Kam, Kami, Kang, Khamba, Khampa, Khams, Khams Bhotia, Khams-Yal
1,380,000 in China (1994). 996,000 Eastern, 135,000 Southern, 158,000 Western, 91,000 Northern. Total users in all countries: 1,380,300.
Qinghai province: Yushu Tibetan autonomous prefecture; Sichuan province: Ganzi (Garzê) Tibetan autonomous prefecture; Xizang Autonomous Region: Changdu (Qamdo) and Naqu (Nagqu) districts; Yunnan province: Diqing (Dechen) Tibetan autonomous prefecture.
China, Northern Myanmar
6a (Vigorous). Language of recognized nationality: Tibetan.
Sino-Tibetan, Tibeto-Burman, Western Tibeto-Burman, Bodish, Central Bodish, Khams
Eastern Khams, Southern Khams, Western Khams, Northern Khams. Dialects may be distinct languages; large differences reported. Lexical similarity: 86% with Central Tibetan [bod], 72% with Amdo Tibetan [adx] (Shearer and Sun 2017).
SOV; tonal, 4 tones.
Used by all. Used as L2 by Shuhi [sxg], Western Minyag [wmg].
Modern Literary Tibetan [bod] is the language of literature. Dictionary. Grammar. Texts.
Tibetan script [Tibt].
Different from Western Parbate [kjl], Eastern Parbate [kif], Sheshi Kham [kip], and Gamal Kham [kgj] of Nepal. Buddhist.
OLAC resources in and about Tibetan, Khams
Tibetan, Khams
300 in Myanmar (2010 D. Bradley).
Kachin state: Nomung township, Da On Dam, Dahom Dam, Mading, and San Dam villages.
6a (Vigorous)
Used by all. Also use Burmese [mya].
Buddhist.
View other languages of Myanmar