Yamphu language is a Kirati language spoken by the Kirat Yamphu people, a Kirati people of the Himalayas of Nepal. Tomyang (Chongka) is a recently discovered dialect spoken by only 20 people. Both it and Yamphe are distinct. Southern Yamphu is also considered to be Southern Kirat Lorung language. These varieties are all closely related.
Yamphu | |
---|---|
Region | Nepal |
Ethnicity | Kirat Yamphu |
Native speakers | 9,200 (2011 census)[1] 2,500 Southern Yamphu (2011)[1] |
Sino-Tibetan
| |
Language codes | |
ISO 639-3 | ybi |
Glottolog | yamp1244 |
ELP | Yamphu |
Geographical distribution
editYamphu is spoken in the following locations of Nepal:[1]
- Sankhuwasabha District, Kosi Zone: Hedangna, Num, Seduwa, Peppuwa, Mangsimma, Karmarang, Tungkhaling, Uwa, Ala, Uling, and Walung villages
- Matsya Pokhari VDC, located in the upper Arun River valley in the Eastern hills; extreme north Lorung area, directly southwest of the Jaljale Mountains
- Bhojpur District, Kosi Zone
- Ilam district, Fikkal, Kolbung, Panchakanya, Jitpur, Danabari, Mahamai (VDCs).
- Jhapa district, Morang and Sunsari
- Darijiling, Sikkim, Silong, Meghalaya, Misoram, Barma, Bhutan and Thailand (Officially recorded)
- However, Yamphu are dispersed all over the world including USA, Europe, South America, Africa and other continent of the world.
References
edit- ^ a b c Yamphu at Ethnologue (25th ed., 2022)
Sources
edit- Rutgers, Roland (1998). Yamphu: Grammar, Texts & Lexicon. Leiden: Research School CNWS. – ISBN 90-5789-012-7