Bahing

[também conhecido como Bhojpuri, Khaling, Rai]

Classificação: Sino-Tibetan

·

criticamente em risco

resource

Tharu

Alan Lomax Parlametrics - Tharu recordings sent from SIL Nepal.

Troyer, Lester; William Leal

Association for Cultural Equity

1 de Janeiro de 1970

Lomax, Alan

Nepal

Troyer, Lester; William Leal

Association for Cultural Equity

Association for Cultural Equity

Comentários

  • avatar do usuário

    Hemanta Chitrakar há 4704 dias

    0:58 to1:04, 2:49 to 2:52, and around 9:11 are in Nepali language, not Tharu language.

  • avatar do usuário

    Deepmala Dubey há 4701 dias

    Tharu sounds so much like Bhojpuri. If it indeed is a variation/another dialect of Bhojpuri, the total number of people speaking it would be much higher. Check the Wikipedia article, according to which the total number of speakers are more than 38.5 million. http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Bhojpuri_language

  • avatar do usuário

    Sally Acharya há 4700 dias

    I've followed this project, and it's so fantastic to see it on Google! A couple comments here on this particular sample. First, I'm unclear why Tharu is being listed under "Bahing" as a Sino-Tibetan language with what appears to be 1-9 surviving speakers. (Maybe a glitch in the system? Tharu was just uploaded incorrectly to Bahing? Or did I misread it?) Also, I played this for a Tharu speaker (a non-native speaker, but a speaker from a young age) whose comment was that it seems to be more of a pidgen of Bhojpuri, Tharu and Nepali. (As was pointed out, the Nepali is clear throughout.) Languages do mix and interchange in practice, but this particular mix isn't the Tharu heard West of Chitwan, at least according to my source. I know it says this is "Chitwan Tharu," and maybe Chitwan Tharu is heavily influenced by all the Bhojpuri speakers in the area; however, Tharu is not equivalent to Bhojpuri. I gather you wouldn't get all the Bhojpuri included in a sample from the west/midwest, which is heavily Tharu. I hope someone uploads some Dang Tharu (or another less Bhojpuri variant) and you get comments from knowledgeable Tharu speakers! Great work having this up for comment, wiki-style.