मंगोलियन भाषा

Mongolian
मूलभाषा बाटेMongolia, China
क्षेत्रAll of Mongolia and Inner Mongolia; parts of Liaoning, Jilin, Heilongjiang and Gansu provinces in China
मूल बोले वाला
5.2 million (2005)[1]
Mongolic
  • Mongolian
प्रारंभिक रूप
Middle Mongolian
  • Classical Mongolian
    • Mongolian
स्टैंडर्ड रूप
Khalkha (Mongolia)
Chakhar (Inner Mongolia)
बोली सभ
Khalkha
Chakhar
Khorchin
Baarin
Shilin gol[not dialect link]
Ordos Mongolian
Darkhad
Mongolian alphabets:
Traditional Mongolian script
(in Inner Mongolia),
Mongolian Cyrillic alphabet (in Mongolia),
Mongolian Braille
ऑफिशियल स्टेटस
सरकारी भाषा बाटे
 मंगोलिया
 China
  • Inner Mongolia Autonomous Region[2]
नियमित कइल जाले Mongolia:
State Language Council (Mongolia),[3]
Inner Mongolia:
Council for Language and Literature Work[4]
भाषा कोड
ISO 639-1mn
ISO 639-2mon
ISO 639-3moninclusive code
Individual codes:
khk – Khalkha Mongolian
mvf – Peripheral Mongolian (part)
Glottologmong1331[5]
Linguaspherepart of 44-BAA-b
Topographic map showing Asia as centered on modern-day Mongolia and Kazakhstan. An orange line shows the extent of the Mongol Empire. Some places are filled in red. This includes all of Mongolia, most of Inner Mongolia and Kalmykia, three enclaves in Xinjiang, multiple tiny enclaves round Lake Baikal, part of Manchuria, Gansu, Qinghai, and one place that is west of Nanjing and in the south-south-west of Zhengzhou
Geographic distribution of Mongolic peoples (red)
This article contains IPA phonetic symbols. Without proper rendering support, you may see question marks, boxes, or other symbols instead of Unicode characters.

मंगोलियन भाषा प्रमुख रूप से मंगोलिया में बोलल जाए वाली आ इहाँ के सरकारी भाषा बाटे।

संदर्भ

  1. Cite warning: <ref> tag with name ReferenceA cannot be previewed because it is defined outside the current section or not defined at all.
  2. "China". Ethnologue.
  3. "Törijn alban josny helnij tuhaj huul'". MongolianLaws.com. 2003-05-15. Archived from the original on 2009-08-22. Retrieved 2009-03-27. The decisions of the council have to be ratified by the government.
  4. "Mongγul kele bičig-ün aǰil-un ǰöblel". See Sečenbaγatur et al. 2005: 204.
  5. Hammarström, Harald; Forkel, Robert; Haspelmath, Martin, eds. (2017). "Mongolian". Glottolog 3.0. Jena, Germany: Max Planck Institute for the Science of Human History.