Sherpa language
| Sherpa | |
|---|---|
| Native to | Nepal, China, Sikkim |
| Ethnicity | Sherpa |
Native speakers | 170,000 (2001 & 2011 census)[1] |
| Official status | |
Official language in | Sikkim |
| Language codes | |
| ISO 639-3 |
xsr |
| Glottolog |
sher1255[2] |
Sherpa (ཤར་པ།, EWTS: sher-pA, Nepali: शेर्पा भाषा; also Sharpa, Sharpa Bhotia, Xiaerba, Serwa; ISO 639-3: xsr) is a language spoken in Nepal and Sikkim mainly by the Sherpa community. About 200,000 speakers live in Nepal (2001 census), some 20,000 in Sikkim (1997), and some 800 in China (1994).
| English | Sherpa |
|---|---|
| Sunday | Ngi`ma (Ng' is the phoneme / ŋ /.) |
| Monday | Dawa |
| Tuesday | Migmar |
| Wednesday | Lhagpa |
| Thursday | Phurba |
| Friday | Pasang |
| Saturday | Penba |
The above days of the week are derived from the Tibetan language ("Pur-gae").
Sherpa is a SOV language, written using either the Devanagari or Tibetan scripts.
Some grammatical aspects of Sherpa are as follows:
- Nouns are defined by morphology when a bare noun occurs in the genitive and this extends to the noun phrase. Defined by syntactic co-occurrence with the locative clitic, comes first in the noun phrase after demonstratives.
- Demonstratives are defined syntactically by first position in the NP directly before the noun.
- Quantifiers: Number words occur last in the noun phrase with the exception of the definite article.
- Adjectives occur after the noun in the NP and morphologically only take genitive marking when in construct with a noun.
- Verbs may morphologically be distinguished by differing or suppletive roots for the perfective, imperfective, and imperative. They occur last in a clause before the verbal auxiliaries.
- Verbal Auxiliaries occur last in a clause.
- Postpositions occur last in a postpositional NP.
- The language is tonal in nature like rest of the Sino-Tibetan languages [3]
Other typological features: 1. Split Ergativity based on Aspect 2. SO & OV (SOV) 3. N-A 4. N-Num 5. V-Aux 6. N-Post
References
- ↑ Sherpa at Ethnologue (18th ed., 2015)
- ↑ Hammarström, Harald; Forkel, Robert; Haspelmath, Martin; Bank, Sebastian, eds. (2016). "Sherpa". Glottolog 2.7. Jena: Max Planck Institute for the Science of Human History.
- ↑ https://www.ethnologue.com/language/xsr
External links
| Sherpa language test of Wikipedia at Wikimedia Incubator |
- Himali Sherpa:sherpa Culture dictionary
- Sherpa-English and English-Sherpa Dictionary available online
- Sherpa dictionary Print edition
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