This articleshould specify the language of its non-English content using{{lang}} or{{langx}},{{transliteration}} for transliterated languages, and{{IPA}} for phonetic transcriptions, with an appropriateISO 639 code. Wikipedia'smultilingual support templates may also be used - notably ole for Olekha.See why.(October 2024) |
| ʼOle | |
|---|---|
| Black Mountain Monpa | |
| Native to | Bhutan |
| Region | Black Mountains |
| Ethnicity | 100-150 ʼOle |
Native speakers | 1 (2016)[1] L2: 2 (2016) |
| Tibetan script | |
| Language codes | |
| ISO 639-3 | ole |
| Glottolog | olek1239 |
| ELP | Olekha |
ʼOle is classified as Definitely Endangered by theUNESCOAtlas of the World's Languages in Danger | |

ʼOle, also calledʼOlekha orBlack MountainMonpa, is a moribund, possiblySino-Tibetan language spoken natively by 1 person in theBlack Mountains ofWangdue Phodrang andTrongsa Districts in westernBhutan. The term ʼOle refers to a clan of speakers.[2]
According to theEthnologue, ʼOlekha is spoken in the following locations ofBhutan.
Dialects are separated by theBlack Mountains.
ʼOle forms a distinct branch of Sino-Tibetan/Tibeto-Burman. it is not closely related toTshangla language of eastern Bhutan, also called "Monpa" and predating Dzongkha in the region, which belongs to a different branch of the family.[3]
Gerber (2018)[4] notes that Black Mountain Mönpa has had extensive contact withGongduk before the arrival ofEast Bodish languages inBhutan. The following comparative vocabulary table from Gerber (2020) compares Gongduk, Black Mountain Mönpa, and Bjokapakha, which is a divergentTshangla variety.[5]
| Gloss | Gongduk | Black Mountain Mönpa | Bjokapakha |
|---|---|---|---|
| hair (on head) | θɤm | guluŋ | tsham |
| tongue | dəli | líː | lɪ |
| eye | mik | mek ~ mik | miŋ |
| ear | nərəŋ | naktaŋ | nabali |
| tooth | ɤn | áː ~ waː | sha |
| bone | rukɤŋ | ɦɤtphok ~ yöphok | khaŋ |
| blood | winiʔ | kɔk | yi |
| hand/arm | gur | lɤk ~ lok | gadaŋ |
| leg/foot | bidɤʔ | dɤkpɛŋ ~ tɛ̤kɛŋ | bitiŋ |
| faeces | ki | cok | khɨ |
| water | dɤŋli | cö, khe | ri |
| rain | wɤ | ghö | ŋamtsu |
| dog | oki | cüla ~ khula | khu |
| pig | don | pɔk | phakpa |
| fish | kuŋwə | nye̤ | ŋa |
| louse | dɤr | θæːk | shiŋ |
| bear | bekpələ | wɤm ~ wom | omsha |
| son | ledə | bæθaː | za |
| daughter | medə | bæmɛt | zamin |
| name | kət | mön ~ min | mɨŋ |
| house | kiŋ | mhiː̤ ~ mhe̤ː | phai |
| fire | mi | áːmik ~ áːmit | mɨ |
| to hear | lə yu- | goː- | nai tha- |
| to see | tɤŋ- | tuŋ- | thoŋ- |
| to look | məl- ~ mɤt- | mak- | got- |
| to sit | mi- ~ mu- | buŋ- ~ bæŋ- | laŋ- |
| to die | komθ- | θɛː- ~ θɛʔ- | shi- |
| to kill | tɤt- | θüt- ~ θut- ~ θit | she- |
Comparison of numerals:[5]
| Gloss | Gongduk | Black Mountain Mönpa | Bjokapakha |
|---|---|---|---|
| one | ti | tɛk | thur |
| two | niktsə | nhü | ɲiktsiŋ |
| three | towə | sam | sam |
| four | piyə | blö | pshi |
| five | ŋəwə | lɔŋ | ŋa |
| six | kukpə | o̤ːk | khuŋ |
| seven | ðukpə | nyí | zum |
| eight | yitpə | jit [ʤit] | yɪn |
| nine | guwə | doːga | gu |
| ten | deyə | chö | se |
Comparison of pronouns:[5]
| Pronoun | Gongduk | Black Mountain Mönpa | Bjokapakha |
|---|---|---|---|
| 1SG | ðə | kö | jaŋ |
| 2SG | gi | iŋ | nan |
| 3SG | gon | hoʔma (MASC); hoʔmet (FEM) | dan |
| 1PL | ðiŋ | ɔŋdat (INCL); anak (EXCL) | ai |
| 2PL | giŋ | iŋnak | nai |
| 3PL | gonmət | hoʔoŋ | dai |
Black Mountain Monpa is spoken in at least 6 villages. The variety spoken in Rukha village, south-central Wangdi is known as ʼOlekha.[6] Out of a population of 100-150 people (about 15 households) in Rukha village, there is only one elderly female fluent speaker and two semi-fluent speakers of ʼOlekha.[6]
George van Driem (1992)[7] reports a Western dialect (spoken in Rukha and Reti villages) and Eastern dialect (spoken in Cungseng village).
According toTournadre & Suzuki (2023),[8] there are three dialects, spoken by 500 speakers in Tronsa ཀྲོང་སར་ and Wangdi Phodr’a དབང་འདུས་ཕོ་བྲང་ districts..
ʼOle was unknown beyond its immediate area until 1990,[citation needed] and is now highly endangered, and was originally assumed to beEast Bodish.[9]George van Driem described ʼOle as a remnant of the primordial population of the Black Mountains before the southward expansion of the ancient East Bodish tribes.[10]
More recently, Gwendolyn Hyslop (2016),[6] agreeing with van Driem, has suggested that ʼOle is an isolate branch of the Sino-Tibetan family that has been heavily influenced byEast Bodish languages.[3] Because of the small number of cognates with East Bodish languages once loans are identified, Blench and Post provisionally treat ʼOle as alanguage isolate, not just an isolate within Sino-Tibetan.[9]
| Labial | Alveolar | Retroflex | Palatal | Velar | Uvular | Glottal | ||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Plosive | oral | pb | td | (ʈ) (ɖ) | cɟ | kg | ʔ | |
| aspirated | pʰ | tʰ | (ʈʰ) | cʰ | kʰ | |||
| Affricate | oral | ts (dz) | ||||||
| aspirated | (tsʰ) | |||||||
| Fricative | sz,ɬ | ʃʒ,ç | ʁ | h | ||||
| Nasal | m | n | ɲ | ŋ | ||||
| Approximant | w | r,l | j | |||||
| Front | Central | Back | ||
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Unrounded | Rounded | |||
| High | i | y | u | |
| Mid | e | ø | ɤ | o |
| Low | ɛ | a | ɔ | |
Additionally, ʼOle has twotones;[5] high and low.
Hyslop (2016)[6] notes that ʼOlekha has borrowed heavily fromEast Bodish andTibetic languages, but also has a layer of native vocabulary items. Numerals are mostly borrowed from East Bodish languages, while body parts and nature words are borrowed from both Tibetic and East Bodish languages. Hyslop (2016) lists the following ʼOlekha words of clearly indigenous (non-borrowed) origin.
The pronouns and lexical items for all foraged plants are also of indigenous origin. Additionally, thecentral vowel /ɤ/ andvoiced uvular fricative /ʁ/ are only found in non-borrowed words.[6]
Words whose origin is not certain (i.e., may or may not be borrowed) are:[6]
The cardinal numerals are:[5]