mjz ISO 639

माझी‎ (Majhi) Autonyms

Majhi

  • Geography

    NP Bagmati province: Kavrepalanchok, Ramechhap, Sindhuli, and Sindhupalchowk districts; Janakpur province: Bara, Dhanusa, Rautahat, and Sarlahi districts; Kosi province: Jhapa, Khotang, Morang, Okhaldhunga, Sunsari, and Udayapur districts. Scattered along waterways in all these locations.
  • Language Cloud

A language of Nepal

mjz
Manjhi
माझी‎ (Majhi)
25,720 in Nepal, all users. L1 users: 24,400 in Nepal (2011 census), decreasing. L2 users: 1,320 (2011 census). Ethnic population: 83,200 (2011 census). Total users in all countries: 25,720 (as L1: 24,400; as L2: 1,320).
Bagmati province: Kavrepalanchok, Ramechhap, Sindhuli, and Sindhupalchowk districts; Janakpur province: Bara, Dhanusa, Rautahat, and Sarlahi districts; Kosi province: Jhapa, Khotang, Morang, Okhaldhunga, Sunsari, and Udayapur districts. Scattered along waterways in all these locations.
Central Nepal, Eastern Nepal
6b* (Threatened). Language of recognized indigenous nationality: Majhi.
Indo-European, Indo-Iranian, Indo-Aryan, Outer Languages, Eastern, Bihari
Sitkha, Rajgaun, Manthali.
SOV; postpositions; noun head final; no noun classes or genders; content q-word in situ; 1 prefix, up to 2 suffixes; clause constituents indicated by case-marking; verbal affixation marks person and number; split ergativity based on nominal hierarchy (the first and second person pronouns do not code ergativity but the third person pronouns do); passives and voice; nontonal; 29 consonant and 6 vowel phonemes.
Being replaced by Nepali [npi] (UNESCO). Religion. All also use Nepali [npi].
Radio.
Devanagari script [Deva].
Distinct from Majhi in Punjabi group or Bote [bmj]. Majhi, Bote, and Kushar all are used by hill peoples. Hindu, Christian.
OLAC resources in and about Majhi
Majhi
No known L1 speakers in India (2016). Last native speaker in India, Thak Bahadur, died in 2016. Ethnic population: 121,000 (2007).
Jharkhand state: Gumla district; Sikkim state: South district, Majhigaon near Jorethang, and East district, Majhitar near Rangpo; possibly Assam and West Bengal states.
9 (Dormant)
Most shifted to Nepali [npi]. Some shifted to Sadri [sck].
Non-indigenous. Distinct from Majhi dialect of Eastern Punjabi [pan] or Bote (Bote-Majhi) [bmj] of Nepal. Hindu.
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