Bawm Chin
[también conocido como Bawm, Banjogi, Bawng]Clasificación: Sino-Tibetan
·susceptible de extinción
Clasificación: Sino-Tibetan
·susceptible de extinción
Bawm, Banjogi, Bawng, Bawn, Bom, Chin (Bawm), Chin, Bawm |
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Sino-Tibetan, Kukish |
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latin scripts |
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ISO 639-3 |
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bgr |
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Como csv |
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La información está incompleta “The Kuki-Chin Communities of Bangladesh: A Sociolinguistic Survey” . Kim, Amy and Roy, Palash and Sangma, Mridul (2011)
The vitality information is associated only with the Bawm in Bangladesh while Bawm Chin is also spoken in Indian and Myanmar.
Bangla; neighboring languages such as Marma and Lushai
In Bangladesh, the Bawm use Bawm Chin among themselves and switch to Bangla, the national language of Bangladesh, or other neighboring languages such as when talking to non-Bawm speakers. Bangla, the official language, is the medium for education. However, there is a Bawm language education program which "is being run by their own efforts and is successful because of community members' cooperation. The result of this language education program is that Bawm children can freely read literature in their own language." (p.29)
The Bawm live in both Rangamati and Bandarban districts, but most are in Bandarban district. (p.11)
La información está incompleta “South Asia and the Middle East” (289-348 ch. 4) . George Van Driem (2007) , Christopher Mosely · London and NewYork: Routledge
Shifting to Assamese
Assamese
La información está incompleta “The World Atlas of Language Structures” . Bernard Comrie and David Gil and Martin Haspelmath and Matthew S. Dryer · Oxford University Press