Countries
East Asia, European Union, South America
China, Nepal
National Language
East Asia, European Union
Nepal, Tibet
Second Language
Central Europe, East Asia, Eastern Europe, South America
Not spoken in any of the countries
Speaking Continents
Asia, Europe, South America
Asia
Minority Language
Not spoken in any of the countries
China, India, Nepal
Regulated By
Akademio de Esperanto
Committee for the Standardisation of the Tibetan Language
Interesting Facts
- The most widely spoken constructed language in the world is Esperanto.
- Esperanto is an artificial international language.
- Tibetan dialects vary alot, so it's difficult for tibetans to understand each other if they are not from same area.
- Tibetan is tonal with six tones in all: short low, long low, high falling, low falling, short high, long high.
Similar To
Not Available
Not Available
Derived From
Not Available
Not Available
Alphabets in
Esperanto-Alphabets.jpg#200
Tibetan-Alphabets.jpg#200
Scripts
Latin
Tibetan alphabet, Tibetan Braille
Writing Direction
Not Available
Left-To-Right, Horizontal
Hello
Halo
བཀྲ་ཤིས་བདེ་ལེགས། (tashi delek)
Thank You
Dankon
ཐུགས་རྗེ་ཆེ་། (tujay-chay)
How Are You?
Kiel vi sanas?
ཁྱེད་རང་སྐུ་གཇུགས་བདེ་པོ་ཡིན་པས།
(kayrang kusu debo yimbay?)
Good Night
Bonan nokton
གཟིམ་ལཇག་གནང་དགོས་། (sim-jah nahng-go)
Good Evening
Bonan vesperon
དགོང་དྲོ་བདེ་ལེགས།
Good Afternoon
Bonan posttagmezon
ཉིན་གུང་བདེ་ལེགས།
Good Morning
Bonan matenon
སྔ་དྲོ་བདེ་ལེགས། (nga-to delek)
Please
Mi petas
thu-je zig / ku-chee.
Sorry
Mi bedaŭras!
ཀོང་དགས་། (gawn-da)
Bye
Ĝis poste
ག་ལེར་ཕེབས་། (kha-leh phe)
I Love You
Mi amas vin
ང་ཁྱེད་རང་ལ་དགའ་པོ་ཡོད་ (nga kayrâng-la gawpo yö)
Excuse Me
Pardonu!
དགོངས་དག བཟོད་དུ་གསོལ། ཐུགས་རྗེ་གཟིགས།
Dialect 1
Not present
Central Tibetan
Where They Speak
Not present
China, India, Nepal
How Many People Speak
Not Available
Dialect 2
Not present
Khams Tibetan
Where They Speak
Not present
Bhutan, China
How Many People Speak
Not Available
Dialect 3
Not present
Amdo Tibetan
Where They Speak
Not present
China
How Many People Speak
Not Available
Speaking Population
Not Available
Not Available
Second Language Speakers
Not Available
Native Name
Esperanto
བོད་སྐད་ (pö-gay)
Alternative Names
Eo, La Lingvo Internacia
Bhotia, Dbus, Dbusgtsang, Phoke, Tibetan, U, Wei, Weizang, Zang
French Name
espéranto
tibétain
German Name
Esperanto
Tibetisch
Pronunciation
[espeˈranto]
Not Available
Ethnicity
Not Available
tibetan people
Language Family
Indo-European Family
Sino-Tibetan Family
Subgroup
Not Available
Tibeto-Burman
Branch
Not Available
Not Available
Early Forms
Proto-Esperanto
Old Tibetan, Classical Tibetan
Standard Forms
Esperanto
Standard Tibetan
Signed Forms
Signuno
Tibetan Sign Language
Scope
Individual
Not Available
ISO 639 6
Not Available
Not Available
Glottocode
espe1235
tibe1272
Linguasphere
51-AAB-da
No data Available
Language Type
Constructed
Not Available
Language Linguistic Typology
Not Available
Not Available
Language Morphological Typology
Agglutinative
Not Available
Esperanto and Tibetan Greetings
People around the world use different languages to interact with each other. Even if we cannot communicate fluently in any language, it will always be beneficial to know about some of the common greetings or phrases from that language. This is where Esperanto and Tibetan greetings helps you to understand basic phrases in Esperanto and Tibetan language. Esperanto word for "Hello" is Halo or Tibetan word for "Thank You" is ཐུགས་རྗེ་ཆེ་། (tujay-chay). Find more of such common Esperanto Greetings and Tibetan Greetings. These greetings will help you to be more confident when conversing with natives that speak these languages.
Esperanto vs Tibetan Difficulty
The Esperanto vs Tibetan difficulty level basically depends on the number of Esperanto Alphabets and Tibetan Alphabets. Also the number of vowels and consonants in the language plays an important role in deciding the difficulty level of that language. The important points to be considered when we compare Esperanto and Tibetan are the origin, speaking countries, language family, different greetings, speaking population of these languages. Want to know in Esperanto and Tibetan, which language is harder to learn? Time required to learn Esperanto is 6 weeks while to learn Tibetan time required is 24 weeks.