Editor - Profile:local/SESSION.Profile.xml2006-09-01https://hdl.handle.net/1839/00-0000-0000-0005-8D14-0clarin.eu:cr1:p_1407745712035DoBeS archive : Chintang and Puma Documentation ProjectResourcehttps://hdl.handle.net/1839/00-0000-0000-000D-F560-CResourcehttps://hdl.handle.net/1839/00-0000-0000-0005-8D15-7Resourcehttps://hdl.handle.net/1839/00-0000-0000-0005-8D16-3LandingPagehttps://archive.mpi.nl/islandora/object/tla%3A1839_00_0000_0000_0005_8D14_0#NAME:imdi2cmdi.xslt DATE:2016-09-09T16:16:18.412+02:00.CLDLCh2R05S01Child2 Recording Cycle05 Session01 Child Language Acquisition2005-01-19This is the 1st session of the 5th recording cycle of child2, Dipkala for the study 'The Day in the Life of'.AsiaNepalEast Nepal
Chintang VDC, Ward No 3, Dhankuta
Chintang and Puma Documentation ProjectDocumentation of Chintang and Puma, two Kiranti languages of Eastern NepalCPDPProf. Dr. Balthasar Bickel
Institut für Linguistik, Beethovenstr. 15, 04107 Leipzig, Germany
bickel@uni-leipzig.deUniversity of LeipzigConversationChild talkUnspecifiedspeechUnspecifiedinteractivespontaneousnon-elicitedFamilyConversationFace to FaceThe speakers speak Chintang language in general.ISO639-3:ctnChintangtrueUnspecifiedUnspecifiedChintang (also spelled Chhintang, as the palatal stop is sometimes transcribed as ch; h indicates aspiration) is one of the languages studied by the Chintang and Puma Documentation Project. It is a Tibeto-Burman language belonging to the Kiranti family. It may be classified along with Athpare, Belhariya (Belhare), and Chiling as one subgroup of the Eastern Rai languages. Chintang is spoken as mother tongue by around 4000 speakers in Chintang VDC, and nowhere else, except in one ward of Ahale VDC. Most speakers are trilingual in Chintang, Nepali and Bantawa. The language is polysynthetic, double-marking (on all levels) and verb final.Dipkala plays with a coin that her mother gave. She walks here and there calling her mother. She asks her mother to suck her breast and her mother breastfeeds her though she is pregrant. Dipaka is the target child, Maya Devi is her mother, Chandrakala is her aunt, Lasu and Shanti are their neighbour. Goma is the collector and the annotator of this session. Speaker/SignerChandrakalaChandrakala RaiCHKRmother's elder sisterTuprihang RaiUnspecifiedFemalenonefalse30Chandrakala Rai
Chintang VDC, Ward No. 3, Dhankuta
Chandrakala Rai is the mother's elder sister of Dipkala. She is unmarried and stays in her parents' home. Most often she takes care of Dipkala.She speaks Chintang, Bantawa and Nepali very fluently.ISO639-3:bapBantawafalsefalseBantawa is a Tibeto-Burman language belonging to the Kiranti family. It is spoken in and around Bhojpur, but also further south of the district and many adjoining areas. Bantawa is the Rai language with the highest number of speakers.ISO639-3:ctnChintangtruetrueChintang (also spelled Chhintang, as the palatal stop is sometimes transcribed as ch; h indicates aspiration) is one of the languages studied by the Chintang and Puma Documentation Project. It is a Tibeto-Burman language belonging to the Kiranti family. It may be classified along with Athpare, Belhariya (Belhare), and Chiling as one subgroup of the Eastern Rai languages. Chintang is spoken as mother tongue by around 4000 speakers in Chintang VDC, and nowhere else, except in one ward of Ahale VDC. Most speakers are trilingual in Chintang, Nepali and Bantawa. The language is polysynthetic, double-marking (on all levels) and verb final.ISO639-3:nepNepalifalsefalseNepali is the national language of Nepal. It is widely used as lingua franca. And it is the major medium of teaching at schools. As Nepali is increasingly used as primary language, it poses the greatest threat to the endangered languages of Nepal.Speaker/SignerMayaMaya Devi RaiMDRmotherChintang RaiUnspecifiedFemalenonefalse25Maya Devi Rai is the mother of Dipkala, the target child in the study, Child Language Acquisition.She speaks Chintang, Bantawa and Nepali fluently.ISO639-3:nepNepalifalsefalseNepali is the national language of Nepal. It is widely used as lingua franca. And it is the major medium of teaching at schools. As Nepali is increasingly used as primary language, it poses the greatest threat to the endangered languages of Nepal.ISO639-3:ctnChintangtruetrueChintang (also spelled Chhintang, as the palatal stop is sometimes transcribed as ch; h indicates aspiration) is one of the languages studied by the Chintang and Puma Documentation Project. It is a Tibeto-Burman language belonging to the Kiranti family. It may be classified along with Athpare, Belhariya (Belhare), and Chiling as one subgroup of the Eastern Rai languages. Chintang is spoken as mother tongue by around 4000 speakers in Chintang VDC, and nowhere else, except in one ward of Ahale VDC. Most speakers are trilingual in Chintang, Nepali and Bantawa. The language is polysynthetic, double-marking (on all levels) and verb final.ISO639-3:bapBantawafalsefalseBantawa is a Tibeto-Burman language belonging to the Kiranti family. It is spoken in and around Bhojpur, but also further south of the district and many adjoining areas. Bantawa is the Kiranti language with the highest number of speakers.Target childDipkalaDipkala RaiDLCh2DaughterChintang2003-09-23Femalenonefalse1327Dipkala is the only one child of her parents.Dipkala speaks a few words from Chintang and Nepali.ISO639-3:ctnChintangtruetrueChintang (also spelled Chhintang, as the palatal stop is sometimes transcribed as ch; h indicates aspiration) is one of the languages studied by the Chintang and Puma Documentation Project. It is a Tibeto-Burman language belonging to the Kiranti family. It may be classified along with Athpare, Belhariya (Belhare), and Chiling as one subgroup of the Eastern Rai languages. Chintang is spoken as mother tongue by around 4000 speakers in Chintang VDC, and nowhere else, except in one ward of Ahale VDC. Most speakers are trilingual in Chintang, Nepali and Bantawa. The language is polysynthetic, double-marking (on all levels) and verb final.ISO639-3:nepNepalifalsefalseNepali is the national language of Nepal. It is widely used as lingua franca. And it is the major medium of teaching at schools. As Nepali is increasingly used as primary language, it poses the greatest threat to the endangered languages of Nepal.CollectorGomaGoma BanjadeGBStudentBrahmin1976-03-12FemaleUniversityfalse28107Goma Banjade
Central Department of Linguistics
gbanjade@yahoo.comTribhuvan UniversityAssistant researcher in Child Language Acquisition and Child Language DevelopmentGoma is Nepali native speaker. She is fluent in Nepali and English. She knows some Danuwar while doing her M.A. Thesis and Chintang from the field work of CPDP project. She understands but does not speak Awadhi and Hindi.ISO639-3:dhwDanuwarfalsefalseISO639-3:hinHindifalsefalseISO639-3:ctnChintangfalsefalseChintang (also spelled Chhintang, as the palatal stop is sometimes transcribed as ch; h indicates aspiration) is one of the languages studied by the Chintang and Puma Documentation Project. It is a Tibeto-Burman language belonging to the Kiranti family. It may be classified along with Athpare, Belhariya (Belhare), and Chiling as one subgroup of the Eastern Rai languages. Chintang is spoken as mother tongue by around 4000 speakers in Chintang VDC, and nowhere else, except in one ward of Ahale VDC. Most speakers are trilingual in Chintang, Nepali and Bantawa. The language is polysynthetic, double-marking (on all levels) and verb final.ISO639-3:engEnglishfalsefalseISO639-3:nepNepalitruetrueNepali is the national language of Nepal. It is widely used as lingua franca. And it is the major medium of teaching at schools. As Nepali is increasingly used as primary language, it poses the greatest threat to the endangered languages of Nepal.ISO639-3:awaAwadhifalsefalseSpeaker/SignerLasuLash Kumari RaiLKneighbourChintang RaiUnspecifiedFemaleCollegefalse20Lash Kumari Rai
Chintang VDC, Ward No. 3, Mulgaun, Dhankuta
Lasu is a neighbour of all our targeted children's families. She is known as Renuka also. She is also called as 'majhaule kanchi' by her family members and some of her neighbours. She occasionallly assists in the recordings of child language in Chintang. She has been working as a research collaborator helping with transcriptions and translations.She speaks Chintang, Bantawa and Nepali fluently. She knows some English by her school and college study.ISO639-3:nepNepalifalsefalseNepali is the national language of Nepal. It is widely used as lingua franca. And it is the major medium of teaching at schools. As Nepali is increasingly used as primary language, it poses the greatest threat to the endangered languages of Nepal.ISO639-3:bapBantawafalsefalseBantawa is a Tibeto-Burman language belonging to the Kiranti family. It is spoken in and around Bhojpur, but also further south of the district and many adjoining areas. Bantawa is the Rai language with the highest number of speakers.ISO639-3:ctnChintangtruetrueChintang (also spelled Chhintang, as the palatal stop is sometimes transcribed as ch; h indicates aspiration) is one of the languages studied by the Chintang and Puma Documentation Project. It is a Tibeto-Burman language belonging to the Kiranti family. It may be classified along with Athpare, Belhariya (Belhare), and Chiling as one subgroup of the Eastern Rai languages. Chintang is spoken as mother tongue by around 4000 speakers in Chintang VDC, and nowhere else, except in one ward of Ahale VDC. Most speakers are trilingual in Chintang, Nepali and Bantawa. The language is polysynthetic, double-marking (on all levels) and verb final.ISO639-3:engEnglishfalsefalseSpeaker/SignerShantiShanti RaiShantineighbourChintang RaiUnspecifiedFemaleSchoolfalse11Shanti is a neighbour of Dipkala's famaily and maternal family. She is a student, she studies in class 4. She lives in the Nangsuba Tol of Chintang VDC, Ward no. 3.She speaks both Chitang and Nepali equally well.ISO639-3:nepNepalifalsefalseNepali is the national language of Nepal. It is widely used as lingua franca. And it is the major medium of teaching at schools. As Nepali is increasingly used as primary language, it poses the greatest threat to the endangered languages of Nepal.ISO639-3:ctnChintangtruetrueChintang (also spelled Chhintang, as the palatal stop is sometimes transcribed as ch; h indicates aspiration) is one of the languages studied by the Chintang and Puma Documentation Project. It is a Tibeto-Burman language belonging to the Kiranti family. It may be classified along with Athpare, Belhariya (Belhare), and Chiling as one subgroup of the Eastern Rai languages. Chintang is spoken as mother tongue by around 4000 speakers in Chintang VDC, and nowhere else, except in one ward of Ahale VDC. Most speakers are trilingual in Chintang, Nepali and Bantawa. The language is polysynthetic, double-marking (on all levels) and verb final.videovideo/x-mpeg1UnspecifiedUnspecifiedUnspecifiedUnspecifiedvideovideo/x-mpeg21100:00:0000:40:37Unspecifiedaudioaudio/x-wav1100:00:0000:40:37UnspecifiedUnspecified