1 Countries
1.1 Countries
China, Nepal
European Union, Poland
1.2 Total No. Of Countries
1.3 National Language
1.4 Second Language
Not spoken in any of the countries
Belarus, Czech Republic, England, Lithuania, Slovakia, Ukraine
1.5 Speaking Continents
1.6 Minority Language
China, India, Nepal
Belarus, Czech Republic, Hungary, Slovakia, Ukraine
1.7 Regulated By
Committee for the Standardisation of the Tibetan Language
Polish Language Council (Rada Języka Polskiego)
1.8 Interesting Facts
- 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.
- Polish Language has many loanwords from Russian, Czech, French, Italian, Hebrew and German Languages.
- The earliest writings found in polish language was list of persons and place names, is dated to 1136.
1.9 Similar To
Not Available
Czech, Slovak, Serbian Languages
1.10 Derived From
Not Available
Not Available
2 Alphabets
2.1 Alphabets in
2.2 Alphabets
2.3 Phonology
2.3.1 How Many Vowels
2.3.2 How Many Consonants
2.4 Scripts
Tibetan alphabet, Tibetan Braille
Latin
2.5 Writing Direction
Left-To-Right, Horizontal
Left-To-Right, Horizontal
2.6 Hard to Learn
2.6.1 Language Levels
2.6.2 Time Taken to Learn
3 Greetings
3.1 Hello
བཀྲ་ཤིས་བདེ་ལེགས། (tashi delek)
cześć
3.2 Thank You
ཐུགས་རྗེ་ཆེ་། (tujay-chay)
dziękuję
3.3 How Are You?
ཁྱེད་རང་སྐུ་གཇུགས་བདེ་པོ་ཡིན་པས།
(kayrang kusu debo yimbay?)
Jak się masz?
3.4 Good Night
གཟིམ་ལཇག་གནང་དགོས་། (sim-jah nahng-go)
dobranoc
3.5 Good Evening
དགོང་དྲོ་བདེ་ལེགས།
dobry wieczór
3.6 Good Afternoon
ཉིན་གུང་བདེ་ལེགས།
dzień dobry
3.7 Good Morning
སྔ་དྲོ་བདེ་ལེགས། (nga-to delek)
Dzień dobry
3.8 Please
thu-je zig / ku-chee.
proszę
3.9 Sorry
ཀོང་དགས་། (gawn-da)
Przepraszam
3.10 Bye
ག་ལེར་ཕེབས་། (kha-leh phe)
do widzenia
3.11 I Love You
ང་ཁྱེད་རང་ལ་དགའ་པོ་ཡོད་ (nga kayrâng-la gawpo yö)
kocham Cię
3.12 Excuse Me
དགོངས་དག བཟོད་དུ་གསོལ། ཐུགས་རྗེ་གཟིགས།
przepraszam
4 Dialects
4.1 Dialect 1
Central Tibetan
Kashubian
4.1.1 Where They Speak
China, India, Nepal
Poland
4.1.2 How Many People Speak
1,200,000.00108,000.00
1.5
960000000
4.2 Dialect 2
4.2.1 Where They Speak
4.2.2 How Many People Speak
1,400,000.00NA
700
80000000
4.3 Dialect 3
4.3.1 Where They Speak
China
Czech Republic, Poland
4.3.2 How Many People Speak
1,800,000.00510,000.00
1400
96000000
4.4 Total No. Of Dialects
5 How Many People Speak
5.1 How Many People Speak?
1.20 million40.00 million
0.13
1200
5.2 Speaking Population
5.3 Native Speakers
1.20 million40.00 million
0.13
873
5.3.1 Second Language Speakers
5.3.2 Native Name
5.3.3 Alternative Names
Bhotia, Dbus, Dbusgtsang, Phoke, Tibetan, U, Wei, Weizang, Zang
Polnisch, Polski
5.3.4 French Name
5.3.5 German Name
5.4 Pronunciation
5.5 Ethnicity
6 History
6.1 Origin
6.2 Language Family
Sino-Tibetan Family
Indo-European Family
6.2.1 Subgroup
6.2.2 Branch
6.3 Language Forms
6.3.1 Early Forms
Old Tibetan, Classical Tibetan
Old Polish and Middle Polish
6.3.2 Standard Forms
6.3.3 Language Position
6.3.4 Signed Forms
Tibetan Sign Language
System Językowo-Migowy (SJM) (Signed Polish)
6.4 Scope
7 Code
7.1 ISO 639 1
7.2 ISO 639 2
7.2.1 ISO 639 2/T
7.2.2 ISO 639 2/B
7.3 ISO 639 3
7.4 ISO 639 6
7.5 Glottocode
7.6 Linguasphere
No data Available
53-AAA-cc
7.7 Types of Language
7.7.1 Language Type
7.7.2 Language Linguistic Typology
Not Available
Subject-Verb-Object
7.7.3 Language Morphological Typology
Not Available
Fusional, Synthetic