Dhimal — for the village in Nepal see Dhimal, Nepal Dhimal or Dhemal is a little known indigenous community of the Terai. Most of them live in Morang and Jhapa districts of Nepal and Darjeeling district of West Bengal, India. Several scholars both in… … Wikipedia
Dhimal languages — Dhimal Geographic distribution: India, Nepal Linguistic classification: Sino Tibetan (Tibeto Burman) Brahmaputran Dhimal … Wikipedia
Dhimal — ISO 639 3 Code : dhi ISO 639 2/B Code : ISO 639 2/T Code : ISO 639 1 Code : Scope : Individual Language Type : Living … Names of Languages ISO 639-3
DHI — may refer to: DHI Water Environment, a research, consulting and software organisation from Denmark Deutsches Historisches Institut, the German Historical Institutes present in several international cities Dhangarhi Airport (IATA airport code),… … Wikipedia
Tibeto-Burman languages — Infobox Language family name=Tibeto Burman region=East Asia familycolor=Sino Tibetan family = Sino Tibetan (debated) [Cf. Beckwith, Christopher I. 1996. The Morphological Argument for the Existence of Sino Tibetan. Pan Asiatic Linguistics:… … Wikipedia
Kirat — [ Bhotia, Sherpa, Thakali Gurung Kirati, Rai, Limbu Newari Pahari Tamang] Kirat refers to the Kirati group or a Kirata confederation that includes the Rai, Limbu, Yakkha and Sunuwar ethnic groups of Nepal. They were the earliest inhabitants of… … Wikipedia
Sinotibetische Sprachen — Die sinotibetischen Sprachen bilden mit rund 1,3 Milliarden Sprechern die zweitgrößte Sprachfamilie der Erde. Die insgesamt etwa 340 Sprachen werden in China, dem Himalaya Gebiet und Südostasien gesprochen. Sie teilen sich nach Meinung der… … Deutsch Wikipedia
Tibetobirmanische Sprachen — Die tibetobirmanischen Sprachen stellen einen der beiden Hauptzweige der sinotibetischen Sprachfamilie dar, der andere Zweig ist das Sinitische. Die etwa 330 tibetobirmanischen Sprachen werden in Südchina, dem Himalayagebiet und Südostasien von… … Deutsch Wikipedia
Demographics of Nepal — Nepalese and people of Nepali/Nepalese origin … Wikipedia
List of Indian languages by number of native speakers — India is home to several hundred languages. Most languages spoken in India belong either to the Indo European (ca. 74%), the Dravidian (ca. 24%), the Austroasiatic (Munda) (ca. 1.2%), or the Tibeto Burman (ca. 0.6%) families, with some languages… … Wikipedia