Butaanish
Cummey
(Aa-enmyssit ass Dzongkha)
| Butaanish | ||
|---|---|---|
Dzongkha | ||
| Goll er loayrt ayns | Yn Vutaan, yn Injey | |
| Ard | Sikkim | |
| Earroo loayreyderyn | 130 000[1] | |
| Kynney çhengey | Sheenagh-Tibetagh | |
| Corys screeuee | Screeu Tibetagh | |
| Staydys oikoil | ||
| Çhengey oikoil ayns | Yn Vutaan | |
| Fo stiurey ec | ||
| Coadyn çhengey | ||
| ISO 639-1 | dz
| |
| ISO 639-2 | dzo
| |
| ISO 639-3 | dzo
| |
| Nodyn: Foddee vel cowraghyn sheeanagh ASE ayns Unicode er yn duillag shoh. | ||
She çhengey Tibetagh-Burmagh ee Butaanish (Butaanish: Dzongkha), as ish ny çhengey ashoonagh ny Butaan.
Ta'n fillym 2003, "Chang hup the gi tril nung" (ཆང་ཧུབ་ཐེངས་གཅིག་གི་འཁྲུལ་སྣང, "Troailtee as Druaightee") ayns Butaanish as er ny yannoo lane 'sy Vutaan.
Imraaghyn
[reagh | reagh y bun]- ↑ Ethnologue report for language code:dzo (Baarle) (2009). Feddynit er 2009-06-24.
Kianglaghyn çheumooie
[reagh | reagh y bun]- Himalayan Languages Project (2009). Dzongkha : Himalayan languages (Baarle). Feddynit er 2009-06-24.
|
|
She bun ta'n art shoh. Cur rish, son foays y yannoo da Wikipedia. |