100 percent certain, based on the evidence available
30,000-40,000
"No reliable survey on the number of Galo speakers (as opposed to Galo tribespeople, who do not always speak Galo) has to date been conducted. The 1981 Census of India put the number of “Adi Gallong” tribespeople at 8,999 (Hussain 1995). However, the 1991 census puts the figure at a bursting 45,616! This increase is clearly not solely due to population growth, but rather reflects the extreme difficulties of demarcating tribal and linguistic categories in North-East India, and the absence of any effective or commonly agreed-upon means for doing so.. The number of Galo speakers may be estimated at around 30,000-40,000 (or more, depending on where lines are drawn)."
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使用者趋势
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更多关于活力的信息
"...the Galo remain overwhelmingly dominant in their area, their language is spoken daily and learned as a first language by a majority of children (though certainly not by all).... However, changes in this comfortable status quo are already apparent. With improvements in communication, economic opportunities, and the reach of regional, national and even international media into Arunachal Pradesh, Galo are increasingly relying on more widely spoken Indo-European languages – usually Hindi and Assamese, but also English – when leaving their immediate home surroundings."
该群体使用的其他语言
Hindi; Assamese; English
信息不完整 “South Asia and the Middle East” (283-348) . George van Driem (2007) , Christopher Moseley · London & New York: Routledge
易危
20 percent certain, based on the evidence available
~40,000
地点
India: Arunchal Pradesh, West Siang
信息不完整 “Atlas of the World’s Languages in Danger” . Christopher Moseley (ed.) (2010) UNESCO Publishing