La información está incompleta “A Grammar of Bao'an Tu: A Mongolic Language of Northwest China” . Robert Wayne Fried (2010)
Con amenaza de extinción
100 percent certain, based on the evidence available
4,000
FECHA DE INFORMACIÓN
2006-2009
DOMINIOS DE USO
TENDENCIAS DE HABLANTES
TRANSMISIÓN
MÁS SOBRE LA VITALIDAD
Many speak Bao’an in their homes and perhaps on the road with others whom they know are Bao’an speakers, but otherwise most of their business and religious life is conducted in Amdo Tibetan.
OTRAS LENGUAS UTILIZADAS POR LA COMUNIDAD
Amdo Tibetan
Mandarin Chinese
COMENTARIOS SOBRE CONTEXTO DE LA LENGUA
The Bao’an speakers living in Tongren County do not have an ethnonym for themselves or their language. Many I spoke with have a vague idea that they have Mongolian heritage, but almost all self-identify as Tibetans—in spite of their official classification as members of the Tu nationality.
Tibetan is viewed by Bao’an Tu speakers as having higher status than Bao’an for many reasons: it has a long literary tradition while Bao’an has no writing system; it is the language of high religion; it has official status with the government (which among other things means jobs as translators); it is the language of educational opportunity; and it is the language of the more powerful majority in the area.
LUGARES
China
DESCRIPCIÓN DE LA UBICACIÓN
Qinghai-Tibetan Plateau in Tongren County, Huangnan Prefecture, Qinghai Province. Spoken in four villages located on fertile farmland in the broad Longwu river valley at an average elevation of 7,865 feet above sea level. Village names: Nianduhu, Guomare, Gasare, Bao'an Xiazhuang
La información está incompleta “Bonan” (325-345) . Wu Hugjiltu (2003) , Juha Janhunen, · London & New York: Routledge
Con amenaza de extinción
100 percent certain, based on the evidence available
6,000
240,000
Ethnic population for the whole Tu nationality* (*Note that the official Tu or "Monguor" nationality also comprises the speakers of Mongghul, Mongghuor, Mangghuer, Wutun, and Shaowa Tibetan - all of which are endangered - as well as large Chinese-speaking sections still classified as "Tu"). Degree of endangerment: still vigorous, but increasingly threatened, imminently endangered
FECHA DE INFORMACIÓN
2008
DOMINIOS DE USO
TENDENCIAS DE HABLANTES
TRANSMISIÓN
MÁS SOBRE LA VITALIDAD
Age structure of speakers: all generations, but decreasing from below
OTRAS LENGUAS UTILIZADAS POR LA COMUNIDAD
Mandarin Chinese
COMENTARIOS SOBRE CONTEXTO DE LA LENGUA
Widespread adult bilingualism in local Amdo Tibetan; Languages of education: Tibetan and Chinese. Reasons of endangerment: small number of speakers, bilingualism, immigration, nearby urbanization
Alfabetos, sistemas de escritura y ortografías
none
LUGARES
China
DESCRIPCIÓN DE LA UBICACIÓN
four villages in the Tongren County of Qinghai Province