Movatterモバイル変換


[0]ホーム

URL:


Jump to content
WikipediaThe Free Encyclopedia
Search

Limbu language

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Yakthung language of eastern Nepal and India
For the Bantoid language of Cameroon, seeLimbum language.
Limbu
ᤕᤠᤰᤌᤢᤱ ᤐᤠᤴYakthuṅ pan
yakthuṅ pan written in Limbu Script
Native toSikkim andEastern Nepal
RegionNepal; significant communities inBhutan;Sikkim andDarjeeling district ofIndia
EthnicityLimbu
Native speakers
410,000 (2011–2021 censuses)[1]
Dialects
  • Phedape
  • Chhathare
  • Panthare
  • Tambarkhole
Limbu script
Roman script
Official status
Official language in
Language codes
ISO 639-3lif
Glottologlimb1266
ELPLimbu
Limbu script. Grey letters are obsolete.
<?>
This article contains uncommonUnicode characters. Without properrendering support, you may seequestion marks, boxes, or other symbols instead of the intended characters.

Limbu (Limbu:ᤕᤠᤰᤌᤢᤱ ᤐᤠᤴ,yakthuṅ pan) is aSino-Tibetan language spoken by theLimbu people ofNepal and NortheasternIndia (particularlyWest Bengal,Sikkim,Assam andNagaland) as well as expatriate communities inBhutan. The Limbu refer to themselves asYakthung and their language asYakthungpan. Yakthungpan has four main dialects: Phedape, Chhathare, Tambarkhole and Panthare dialects.[3]

Among four dialects, the Phedape dialect is widely spoken and well understood by most Yakthungpan speakers. However, as there are some dominant Panthare scholars who have role to create knowledge and control knowledge in theLimbu communities, Panthare dialect is being popularised as a "standard" Limbu language. As Panthare Yakthungs are much more engaged in central political position and administrative positions, they are trying to introduce Panthare dialect as a Standard Yakthungpan.

Yakthungpan (Limbu language) is one of the major languages spoken and written in Nepal, Darjeeling,Kalimpong, Sikkim, and Bhutan. Linguists have reached the conclusion that Yakthungpan resemblesTibetan andLepcha.

Before the introduction of the Sirijanga script amongLimbu, theRóng script was popular in east Nepal, especially in the early Maurong state. The Sirijanga script had almost disappeared for 800 years and it was brought back into use byLimbu scholarTe-ongsi Sirijunga Xin Thebe of Tellok SinamLimbuwan present dayNepal. The Limbu script is called 'Sirijanga' after the Limbu culture- heroTe-ongsi Sirijunga Xin Thebe, who is credited with its invention.[4]

Geographical distribution

[edit]

Limbu is spoken east of theArun River in the followingdistricts of Nepal (Ethnologue).

Official status

[edit]

Nepal

[edit]

TheLanguage Commission of Nepal has recommended Limbu language as official language inKoshi Province.[5]Chulachuli Rural Municipality,[6]Mangsebung Rural Municipality[7] andPhalgunanda Rural Municipality[8] have recognized Limbu language as an official working language.

India

[edit]

In India, the state ofSikkim has recognized Limbu language as an additional official language for the purpose of preservation of culture and tradition in the state.[9] The official weekly publicationSikkim Herald has a Limbu Edition.[10]

Dialects

[edit]

The Limbu languages are divided into four dialects :[3]

  • Phedappe
  • Panthare
  • Chathare
  • Taplejunge or Tamarkhole

Ethnologue lists the following dialects of Limbu.

  • Dialect cluster 1
    • Panthare
    • Chaubise
    • Charkhole
    • Yanggrokke (Yanggruppe)
  • Dialect cluster 2
    • Phedappe
    • Tamorkhole (Taplejunge)
  • Dialect cluster 3
    • Chhatthare (Chatthare, Chhathar)

Yanggrokke, Chaubise, and Charkhole are minor variants of the Panthare dialect. Phedappe and Tamorkhole are similar. Chattare is less well understood by other dialect speakers. The Limbu dialect spoken inSikkim, India is the same as Panthare.

Phonology

[edit]

Vowels and consonants

[edit]
Vowel phonemes[11]
FrontCentralBack
shortlongshortlongshortlong
Closeiu
Close-mid
Midə
Open-midɛɛːʌʌː
Opena

/ʌ,ʌː/ can be heard as rounded [ɔ,ɔː] after labial consonants.

Consonant phonemes[11]
LabialDentalAlveolarRetroflexPost-alv./
Palatal
VelarGlottal
Nasalmn(ɳ)ŋ
Plosive/
Affricate
voicelesspt(ʈ)t͡ɕkʔ
voicelessaspirated(ʈʰ)
voicedb()(ɖ)(d͡ʑ)(ɡ)
voicedaspirated()(ɖʱ)(d͡ʑʱ)(ɡʱ)
Rhoticr
Fricativesɦ
Approximantwlj

Phonemes in parentheses occur in loan words from Nepali.

Grammar

[edit]

Limbu is a postpositional language. Noun arguments take case markers as well as postpositions. Double case markings happen frequently. The following word endings mark for cases in Limbu.

Limbu is anergative-absolutive language, with the agentive argument of atransitive verb will take ergative-le/-re/-lle/-ʔille, and the subject of a intransitive verb and the patient of a transitive verb will be marked by-ʔin.

Limbu verbs, which arepolysynthetic in nature, exhibit double negators and agreements with objects, but lack third person subject agreements and nounincorporation. A typical Limbu verbal morphology can be described in following table:

Limbu verb template
+3+2+1core-1-2-3-4-5-6-7-8-9-10
(kɛ-) 2/(mɛ-) 3/(a-) INCLA/SBJ(n- &mɛ-) NEG/Ø AFFverb stemRR/1>2TNSA/P (DU, PL, 3PL,Ø SG) ##A ##NEGSBJ ##P ##A ##1EXCL/1INCL(-n/-nɛn) NEG

Sirijanga script

[edit]
TheLimbu script. Grey letters are obsolete.

Limbu language is one of the fewSino-Tibetan languages of the centralHimalayas with their own scripts.[12] TheLimbu script or Sirijanga script was devised during the period of Buddhist expansion inSikkim in the early 18th century whenLimbuwan still constituted part of Sikkimese territory.[13] TheLimbu script was probably designed roughly at the same time as theLepcha script (during the reign of the third King ofSikkim, Phyag-dor Nam-gyal (ca. 1700-1717)). However, it is widely believed that theLimbu script (Sirijanga) had been designed by the Limbu King Sirijanga Hang in the 9th century. The Sirijanga script was later redesigned and re-introduced byTe-ongsi Sirijunga Xin Thebe . As Te-ongsi Sirijunga Xin Thebe spent most of his time in the development of Yakthungpan, Yatkhung culture, andLimbu script; he is considered as the reincarnation of the 9th century King Sirijanga.

AsTe-ongsi Sirijunga Xin Thebe was astoundingly influential in spreading theLimbu script, culture, and language, Tasang monks came to fear that he might transform the social, cultural, and linguistic structure of Sikkim. Therefore, Tasang monks captured Sirijunga, bound him to a tree, and shot him to death with poisonous arrows.

Both Limbu andLepcha scripts were ostensibly devised with the intent of furthering the spread ofBuddhism. However, Sirijanga was a Limbu Buddhist who had studied under Sikkimese high Lamas. Sirijanga was given the title 'theDorjeLama of Yangrup'.

The script hasbeen influenced byTibetan andDevanagari. Unlike most other Brahmic scripts, it does not have separate independentvowel characters, instead usinga vowel carrier letter with the appropriate dependent vowel attached.

The Limbu language and literature have been less practiced in Nepal since the last eighteenth century. The cultural identity of any community was taken as a threat to the national unification by ruling elites until the recent years. The use of theLimbu alphabet was banned and the possession of Limbu writings outlawed. There were no specific laws about it, but the Security Act was enforced for such cases under the strong directives of Kathmandu.

Writing

[edit]
Main article:Limbu script

Limbu has its own unique writing system, which is similar to Tibetan and Sikkimese scripts. TheLimbu script or Sirijunga script is unique and scientifically designed by King Sirijanga in the 9th century; it was later re-designed and popularized byTe-ongsi Sirijunga Xin Thebe and his followers in the 18th century. Since teaching of Limbu/Yakthung language and writing was banned by the Khas-Hindus in Nepal after the "Noon Pani Sandhi" between theLimbuwan andGorkha Kingdom (Prithvi Narayan Shah), far more Limbus areliterate inNepali than in Limbu in Nepal. Although many Limbu books were written in Devanagari and Roman (English), now Limbus/Yakthungs have well-developed computerized writing system and many books are published inLimbu script or Sirijunga script.

History of Kirat-Yakthung writing can be divided into the following ways:

  1. Classical Kirat-Yakthung period: King Sirijanga (9th century AD)
  2. The 18th-century Kirat-Yakthunghang period:Te-ongsi Sirijunga Xin Thebe and his cronies movement
  3. The 19th-century Kirat-Yakthung writers and rhetors: Period of Jobhansing Limbu, Chyangresing Phedangba, Ranadwaj, and Jit Mohan (Brian Hudgson procured books and requested them to write histories, stories, narratives, culture, and so on)
  4. The 20th-century Kirat-Yakthung writers and rhetors:
    1. After the establishment of "Yakthunghang Chumlung" (1925); thereafter, several books were published.
    2. Limbu script was much more influenced by Devnagari script at this period.
    3. At the same time, both national and international linguists, researchers, and writers addressed the issued in this period. This period is period of inquiry, communication, discovery, and re/construction.
  5. Late 20th- and 21st-century Kirat-Yakthung writers and rhetors: This period denotes after the restoration of democracy in Nepal in 1990. Introduction of "Anipan" at school; many research and writing such as MA/MPhil theses and research reports; establishment of Limbu organization at the local and global level; period of delinking, relinking, and linking epistemologies.

Publications

[edit]

The Limbu language has many papers and publications in circulation.Tanchoppa (Morning Star), a monthly newspaper/magazine which has been published since 1995. There are many other literary publications.The oldest known Limbu writings were collected from the Darjeeling district in the 1850s. They are the ancestors of the modern Limbu script. The writings are now a part of a collection in the India Library in London.

Teaching

[edit]

InNepal, the Limbu language is taught on private initiative. The Government of Nepal has published "Ani Paan" text books in Limbu for primary education from grades 1 to 12. Kirant Yakthung Chumlung teaches Limbu language and script on its own initiative.

InSikkim, since the late 1970s, Limbu in the Limbu script has been offered in English-medium schools as a vernacular language subject in areas populated by Limbus. Over 4000 students study Limbu for one hour daily taught by some 300 teachers. Course books are available in Limbu from grades 1 to 12. Additionally, the significance of Limbu in Sikkim is that the name of theIndian state itself is a combination of two Limbu words:su, which means "new", andkhyim, which means "palace" or "house".[14]

See also

[edit]

References

[edit]
  1. ^Limbu atEthnologue (27th ed., 2024)Closed access icon
  2. ^"The Sikkim Official Languages Act"(PDF).sikkim.gov.in. Government of Sikkim. Retrieved27 June 2025.
  3. ^abA Grammar of Limbu By George van Driem 1987
  4. ^The Unicode Standard 5.0, Front Cover By Unicode Consortium, Addison-Wesley, 2007- Computers 1417 pages, Page 360
  5. ^"सरकारी कामकाजको भाषाका आधारहरूको निर्धारण तथा भाषासम्बन्धी सिफारिसहरू (पञ्चवर्षीय प्रतिवेदन- साराांश) २०७८"(PDF).Language Commission. Archived fromthe original(PDF) on 6 September 2021. Retrieved28 October 2021.
  6. ^"Limbu official language in Chulachuli rural municipality". Khabarhub. 28 Sep 2018. Retrieved29 October 2021.
  7. ^Chapagain, Bhim (1 Dec 2018)."Limbu language declared official language". My Republica. My Republica. Retrieved29 October 2021.
  8. ^"फाल्गुनन्द गाउँपालिकाको सरकारी कामकाजको भाषा याक्थुङ लिम्बु हुने". Silauti Times. Silauti Times. 25 June 2021. Retrieved30 October 2021.
  9. ^"About Sikkim".Sikkim Tourism. Retrieved1 November 2021.
  10. ^"ᤜᤣᤖᤠᤸᤍ"(PDF).Government of Sikkim. Retrieved4 November 2021.
  11. ^abDriem, George van, 1957- (1987).A grammar of Limbu. Berlin: Mouton de Gruyter.ISBN 0-89925-345-8.OCLC 16352958.{{cite book}}: CS1 maint: multiple names: authors list (link) CS1 maint: numeric names: authors list (link)
  12. ^(Sprigg 1959: 590)
  13. ^(Sprigg 1959: 591-592 & MS: 1-4)
  14. ^Ethnic Groups of South Asia and the Pacific: An Encyclopedia By James Minahan, 2012

Further reading

[edit]

External links

[edit]
Limbu
Western
Central
Eastern
Dhimalish
Arunachal
Pradesh
Sal
Tani
Other
Assam
Indo-Aryan
Sino-Tibetan
Kuki-Chin
Sal
Tani
Zeme
Other
Kra-Dai
Manipur
Kuki-Chin
Northern
Other
Zeme
Other
Meghalaya
Kuki-Chin
Khasic
Other
Mizoram
Nagaland
Sino-
Tibetan
Angami-
Pochuri
Ao
Sal
Zeme
Other
Other
Sikkim
Tripura
Indo-Aryan
Sino-Tibetan
Sino-Tibetan
Bodish
Tibetic
East Bodish
Unclassified
Indo-Aryan
Sign
Official language
Indigenous
languages
Sino-Tibetan
Kiranti
Magaric
Tamangic
Tibetic
Other
Indo-Aryan
Sign language
Other
Retrieved from "https://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=Limbu_language&oldid=1323941368"
Categories:
Hidden categories:

[8]ページ先頭

©2009-2025 Movatter.jp