Informations incomplètes “Red Book on Endangered Languages: Northeast Asia” . Juha Janhunen; Tapani Salminen (2000)
TENDANCES AU NIVEAU DES LOCUTEURS
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TRANSMISSION
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- MORE ON VITALITY
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In many rural areas, children are still learning the language, but not in cities, where Russian is normally spoken even between Buryat-speaking individuals... the Buryat-speaking territory is, nevertheless, continuously shrinking, and there are very few monolingual individuals
- AUTRES LANGUES PARLÉES PAR LA COMMUNAUTÉ
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Russian
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Mongolian
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Chinese
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Japanese
- COMMENTAIRES SUR LE CONTEXTE DE LA LANGUE
In rural areas, knowledge of other languages (Russian, Mongolian, Chinese, and Japanese) seems to be better among adult males than females.
- Caractères, systèmes d'écriture et orthographes
- Cyrillic script
- Orthographe
The language also has a Soviet-period written standard (in Cyrillic script) replacing earlier use of Written Mongolian; the Russian impact is currently being fought back by a purist movement, which aims at reintroducing Written Mongolian as the literary language; Written Mongolian is also going to be reintroduced in Mongolia, and it already serves as the literary language for the Buryat population in China