Editor - Profile:SESSION.Profile.xml2008-12-29https://hdl.handle.net/1839/00-0000-0000-000A-2C48-Cclarin.eu:cr1:p_1407745712035DoBeS archive : Chintang and Puma Documentation ProjectResourcehttps://hdl.handle.net/1839/00-0000-0000-000A-2C49-6Resourcehttps://hdl.handle.net/1839/00-0000-0000-000A-2C4A-FResourcehttps://hdl.handle.net/1839/00-0000-0000-000A-2C4B-ELandingPagehttps://archive.mpi.nl/islandora/object/tla%3A1839_00_0000_0000_000A_2C48_C#NAME:imdi2cmdi.xslt DATE:2016-09-09T16:16:14.214+02:00.tangkera_03matters of tangkera2007-02-17The participants were requested by the collector (Novel and Netra) to talk about the trip of Nung Bahadur Rai. Khadak B. Rai asks various questions regarding the journey.
The recording took place during the day time at a home at Tangkera, in Ahale VDC of Dhankuta district. The sound qualitiy of this session is good.AsiaNepalEast Nepal
Ahale VDC, 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 LeipzigConversationinterviewUnspecifiedspeechtalk about tangkerainteractivespontaneousnon-elicitedFamilyDialogueFace to FaceThe whole talk is in the Chintang language. However, there are very few lexical items and from Bantawa.ISO639-3:nepNepalifalseUnspecifiedUnspecifiedNepali is the national language of Nepal having its long written tradition of more than eight hundred years. It belongs to the Indo-Aryan sub-family and has adopted the Devanagari script for long. It is also written in the Roman script during the British-India era and in some British-Gurkha regiments. The speakers are widely spread out in Nepal and north-eastern part of India and Bhutan. It is also one of the national languages of India. It has a rich literature tradition and is taught in the schools and universities in Nepal and India as well. Nearly 50% of the Nepali population has adopted Nepali as their first language and nearly 90% of them speak this language in their day-to-day life. Being the constitutional language of Nepal and India and having its long history of written language and literature, Nepali is a dominant language to other linguistic communities in Nepal. Intercaste and interethnic marriages, migration and schooling in Nepali causes it as the first language of Nepali communities in Nepal on one hand and other indigeneous languages have heavy borrowing from it on the other hand. It is also note worthy that some of the linguists have mentioned Nepali as the "killer-language" in this context. It is the language of bureaucracy, courts and mass media having significant borrowing from Sanscrit and Perso-Arabic as well.ISO639-3:bapBantawafalseUnspecifiedUnspecifiedBantawa is polysynthetic language of the Kirati family of Sino-Tibetan and is spoken by most of the Rais in eastern Nepal. There are nearly 30 different languages spoken by the Rai community. Bantawa is a language of majority among the Rais and in many cases it serves as the lingua franca. Historically it seems the pattern of migration takes place from the west to the east of Nepal and most of the Rais give up their languages and take up Bantawa as they move to the east. Therefore it is widely spoken in the Bhojpur, Dhankutta, Panchthar and Ilam districts of eastern Nepal. It is also spoken in the west Bengal and Sikkim provinces of India and Bhutan. It has no script of its own and has no written tradition. Presently the government of Nepal has introduced Bantawa in the primary schools and text books are available now up to grade four. Radio Nepal also has its program of daily news broadcasting in Bantawa. The government of Sikkim has also introduced this language in the primary schools recently and they have invented a kind of script of their own, but in the case of Nepal, Bantawa is written in Devanagari with some extra diacritics. There is no reliable source to quote the number of speakers but it can be estimated that there are some one houndred thousand speakers in Nepal and approximately 50 thousand in India and Bhutan.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.This text is about the various matters tangkera.Netra is the collector and annotator of this session. Jas, Gyan and Gir Bhakta are the speakers. Among them, Gir Bhakta is the native speaker of Sambugau dialect.speakerKhadakKhadak Bahadur Lohorung RaiKBRFatherLohorung RaiUnspecifiedMaleIlliteratefalse51Jas Bahadur Naika Rai
Ahale VDC, Ward No-6, Dhankuta District, Nepal
N/AN/AJanak Kumari RaiKhadak Bahadur Rai’s clan is Lohorung. He and his family have been living in Tangkera for 5 generation. He speaks Chintang Bantawa and Nepali. In this session, he is putting woolen cap on his headKhadak's first language is Chintang. But he also speaks Bantawa, and Nepali.ISO639-3:bapBantawafalseUnspecifiedISO639-3: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:nepNepalifalseUnspecifiedNepali 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.speakerNungNung Bahadur RaiNBRFatherRaiUnspecifiedMaleIlliteratefalse54Jas Bahadur Naika Rai
Ahale VDC, Ward No-6, Dhankuta District, Nepal
N/AN/AJanak Kumari RaiHe was born and brought up in Ahale. Both he and his parents have Chintang as the first native language. He has never left the area for long time.Nung's first language is Chintang. But he also speaks Bantawa and Nepali.ISO639-3:bapBantawafalseUnspecifiedBantawa is polysynthetic language of the Kirati family of Sino-Tibetan and is spoken by most of the Rais in eastern Nepal. There are nearly 30 different languages spoken by the Rai community. Bantawa is a language of majority among the Rais and in many cases it serves as the lingua franca. Historically it seems the pattern of migration takes place from the west to the east of Nepal and most of the Rais give up their languages and take up Bantawa as they move to the east. Therefore it is widely spoken in the Bhojpur, Dhankutta, Panchthar and Ilam districts of eastern Nepal. It is also spoken in the west Bengal and Sikkim provinces of India and Bhutan. It has no script of its own and has no written tradition. Presently the government of Nepal has introduced Bantawa in the primary schools and text books are available now up to grade four. Radio Nepal also has its program of daily news broadcasting in Bantawa. The government of Sikkim has also introduced this language in the primary schools recently and they have invented a kind of script of their own, but in the case of Nepal, Bantawa is written in Devanagari with some extra diacritics. There is no reliable source to quote the number of speakers but it can be estimated that there are some one houndred thousand speakers in Nepal and approximately 50 thousand in India and Bhutan.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:nepNepalifalseUnspecifiedNepali 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.Collector/annotatorNetraNetra Prasad PaudyalNPStudentBrahmin1974-07-18MaleMaster's in Linguisticsfalse32630Netra Prasad Paudyal
Central Department of Linguistics, Tribhuvan University, Kirtipur, Kathmandu, Nepal.
netrapaudyal@yahoo.comTribhuvan UniversityNetra Prasad PaudyalI completed Masters Degree in Linguistics from Tribhuvan University, and currently working as a Research Assistant in the (DOBES) project. I am in charge of Linguistic works and analysis.Mr. Paudyal is a native speaker of Nepali. But he also speaks some other langauges of Nepal and India (Hindi, Awadhi, Bhojpuri, Darai, Chintang, English, etc)ISO639-3: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:bhoBhojpurifalseUnspecifiedBhojpuri is a vernacular language spoken in the Terai part of Nepal. It belongs to the Indo-Aryan family.ISO639-3:awaAwadhifalseUnspecifiedAwadhi is (alternatively called abadi, abohi, ambodhi, etc) is spoken in the Terai part of Nepal. It belongs to the Indo-Aryan family.ISO639-3:dryDaraifalseUnspecifiedDarai is the language of Darai people. It is spoken in the inner Terai of Nepal. It belongs to the Indo-Aryan family.ISO639-3:engEnglishfalseUnspecifiedEnglish is spoken as an international language in Nepal.ISO639-3:ctnChintangfalseUnspecifiedChintang (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.audioaudio/x-wavUnspecifiedUnspecifiedUnspecifiedUnspecifiedvideovideo/x-mpeg1UnspecifiedUnspecifiedUnspecifiedUnspecifiedUnspecifiedAnnotationUnspecifiedtext/x-toolbox-textAnalysisUnspecifiedUnspecifiedUnspecifiedUnspecifiedUnspecifiedUnspecifiedUnspecified