mro ISO 639

Mru Autonyms

Mru

  • Geography

    BD Chittagong division: Bandarban district.
  • Language Cloud

A language of Bangladesh

mro
Maru, Mro, Mrung, Murung
Mru
30,000 in Bangladesh (2007). Total users in all countries: 50,200.
Chittagong division: Bandarban district.
India, Map 4, Southeastern Bangladesh, Western Central Myanmar
5 (Developing).
Sino-Tibetan, Tibeto-Burman, Ngwi-Burmese, Mru
Anok, Dowpreng, Sungma. Lexical similarity: 13% with Mro-Khimi Chin [cmr], 72%–76% with Anu-Khongso Chin [anl]; lexical similarity with Anok, Dowpreng, and Sungma dialects in Bangladesh is high: 91%–98%.
SOV.
Used by all. Most also use Marma [rmz]. Also use Bengali [ben]. Also use Chittagonian [ctg].
Literacy rate in L2: 10%. Literacy materials are being developed using the Krama script. Literature. NT: 1994.
Latin script [Latn]. Mro script [Mroo], developed in the 1980s.
Ethnically related to the Khumi. 5 linguistically distinct groups: Anok (largest and central) and Tshungma in the north, Domrong in the lowlands north of the Matamuri, Dopreng and Rumma in far south and into Arakan (Brauns and Loffler 1990). Traditional religion.
OLAC resources in and about Mru
Mru
200 in India (2011 census). Ethnic population: 2,100.
West Bengal state: Hoogly, Jalpaiguri, and Nadia districts.
5 (Developing)
Non-indigenous. Traditional religion, Buddhist.
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Mru
20,000 in Myanmar (1999 ABWE).
Rakhine state: Buthidaung, Maungdaw, and Ponnagyun townships.
Anok, Dowpreng (Doumrong, Pongmi, Tamsa), Sungma, Launghu.
6a (Vigorous)
Vigorous. All domains. Used by all. Positive attitudes. All also use Rakhine [rki].
Christian.
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