Newari is one of four Tibeto-Burman languages with an old written tradition (the other three being Tibetan, Burmese and Manipuri) and the only member of the Himalayan group with such a tradition. The most common name for the language in linguistic literature is Newari or Nevari, but indigenous publications by Newari writers consistently refer to it as Nepali Bhasa. In colloquial terms, the language is simply known as Newa Bhae (the Newa language) by the majority of native speakers
In this paper the authors introduces into the Nar-Phu language, which is spoken by the 800 people of...
The author examines the conducts and relations between the different language families in Nepalese H...
Tuladhar Jyoti. Bal Gopal Shrestha, The Newars of Sikkim: Reinventing Language, Culture and Identity...
Newar is the Tibeto-Burman language native to the Kathmandu Valley of Nepal. The Newars are the sole...
The label "Classical Newari" was first used by the Danish scholar Hans Jorgensen to refer to a colle...
This late fourteenth-century palm-leaf manuscript from Nepal bears witness to close scholarly engage...
The present study seeks to investigate the linguistic behavior of two Newari high castes, called Shr...
"Tibeto-Burman' is now generally accepted as a designation for a group of genetically related langua...
The label "Classic Newari" was first used by the scholar Hans Jorgenson to refer to a collection of ...
North East India is one of the most linguistically diverse regions of the world, with over 100, and ...
The Newars are the 'traditional' inhabitants of the Kathmandu Valley, whose population comprises 1,0...
The North East of India is one of the most rich and diverse cultural-linguistic regions of Asia. How...
Sikkim is a tiny Indian state nestled in the lap of the Himalayas. The population mainly comprises t...
In a paper presented at the 1972 International Congress of Linguists in Bologna, an attempt was made...
Rethinking Tibeto-Burman: Linguistic identities and classifications in the Himalayan peripher
In this paper the authors introduces into the Nar-Phu language, which is spoken by the 800 people of...
The author examines the conducts and relations between the different language families in Nepalese H...
Tuladhar Jyoti. Bal Gopal Shrestha, The Newars of Sikkim: Reinventing Language, Culture and Identity...
Newar is the Tibeto-Burman language native to the Kathmandu Valley of Nepal. The Newars are the sole...
The label "Classical Newari" was first used by the Danish scholar Hans Jorgensen to refer to a colle...
This late fourteenth-century palm-leaf manuscript from Nepal bears witness to close scholarly engage...
The present study seeks to investigate the linguistic behavior of two Newari high castes, called Shr...
"Tibeto-Burman' is now generally accepted as a designation for a group of genetically related langua...
The label "Classic Newari" was first used by the scholar Hans Jorgenson to refer to a collection of ...
North East India is one of the most linguistically diverse regions of the world, with over 100, and ...
The Newars are the 'traditional' inhabitants of the Kathmandu Valley, whose population comprises 1,0...
The North East of India is one of the most rich and diverse cultural-linguistic regions of Asia. How...
Sikkim is a tiny Indian state nestled in the lap of the Himalayas. The population mainly comprises t...
In a paper presented at the 1972 International Congress of Linguists in Bologna, an attempt was made...
Rethinking Tibeto-Burman: Linguistic identities and classifications in the Himalayan peripher
In this paper the authors introduces into the Nar-Phu language, which is spoken by the 800 people of...
The author examines the conducts and relations between the different language families in Nepalese H...
Tuladhar Jyoti. Bal Gopal Shrestha, The Newars of Sikkim: Reinventing Language, Culture and Identity...