zhb ISO 639

Zhaba

  • Geography

    CN Sichuan province: Ganzi (Garzê) Tibetan autonomous prefecture, Daofu (Dawu) county, Zhaba district; Yajiang (Nyagquka) county, Zhamai district.
  • Language Cloud

A language of China

zhb
Bazi, Bozi, Draba, Zaba, Zha, nDrapa
7,800 (Gengxua and Hu 2008), decreasing. Many young monolingual speakers in Zhaba and Zhamai districts. Ethnic population: 9,000 (Gong 2007).
Sichuan province: Ganzi (Garzê) Tibetan autonomous prefecture, Daofu (Dawu) county, Zhaba district; Yajiang (Nyagquka) county, Zhamai district.
South Central China
6b (Threatened). Language of recognized nationality: Tibetan.
Sino-Tibetan, Tibeto-Burman, Northeastern Tibeto-Burman, Qiangic
Drate (Northern nDrapa), Drame (Southern nDrapa, Zhami). Reportedly similar to Stau (Horpa [ero]) and Queyu [qvy], but no mutual intelligibility. Many loanwords from Tibetan and Chinese varieties.
Verb-final; agglutinating; suffixes and prefixes, case-marking employs postpositions, case system nominative-accusative; tonal.
Most use Chinese or Tibetan varieties even when they speak with other Zhaba people. Personal communication among themselves. Some young people, all adults. Negative attitudes. Regarded as useless; users strongly desire to better learn Chinese varieties.
Literacy rate in L2: Low. Many in elder generation illiterate. Dictionary. Texts.
Unwritten [Qaax].
Different from Queyu [qvy]. Buddhist.
OLAC resources in and about Zhaba