Sino-Tibetan dialect cluster
Selected ethnic groups of Nepal; Bhotia , Sherpa , Thakali , Gurung , Kirant , Rai , Limbu , Nepal Bhasa , Pahari , Tamang (note that Kulu Rodu (Kulung) territories are mistakenly marked as Tamu/Gurung territories in this map)
Tamang (Devanagari : तामाङ; tāmāng ) is a term used to collectively refer to a Tibeto-Burman dialect cluster spoken mainly in Nepal , Sikkim , West Bengal (Darjeeling ) and North-Eastern India . It comprises Eastern Tamang , Northwestern Tamang , Southwestern Tamang , Eastern Gorkha Tamang , and Western Tamang . Lexical similarity between Eastern Tamang (which is regarded as the most prominent) and other Tamang languages varies between 81% and 63%. For comparison, the lexical similarity between Spanish and Portuguese is estimated at 89%.[ 4]
Dialects
Ethnologue divides Tamang into the following varieties due to mutual unintelligibility.
Eastern Tamang : 759,000 in Nepal (2000 WCD). Population total all countries: 773,000. Sub-dialects are as follows.
Outer-Eastern Tamang (Sailung Tamang)
Central-Eastern Tamang (Temal Tamang)
Southwestern Tamang (Kath-Bhotiya, Lama Bhote, Murmi, Rongba, Sain, Tamang Gyoi, Tamang Gyot, Tamang Lengmo, Tamang Tam)
Western Tamang : 323,000 (2000 WCD). Sub-dialects are as follows.
Trisuli (Nuwakot)
Rasuwa
Northwestern dialect of Western Tamang (Dhading) — was having separate ISO code tmk, merged with tdg in 2023.[ 5] Population 55,000 (1991 census). Spoken in the central mountainous strip of Nuwakot District , Bagmati Province .
Southwestern dialect of Western Tamang
Eastern Gorkha Tamang : 4,000 (2000 WCD). Sub-dialects are as follows.
The Tamang language is the most widely spoken Sino-Tibetan language in Nepal.
Geographical distribution
Ethnologue gives the following location information for the varieties of Tamang.
Eastern Tamang
Bagmati Province : Bhaktapur District , Chitwan District , Dolkha District , Kathmandu District , Kavrepalanchok District , Lalitpur District , Makwanpur District , eastern Nuwakot District , Ramechhap District , Sindhuli District and western Sindhupalchowk District
Province No. 1 : Okhaldhunga District , western Khotang District , and Udayapur District
Southwestern Tamang
Western Tamang
Bagmati Province : western Nuwakot District , Rasuwa District , and Dhading District
central mountainous strip of Nuwakot District , Bagmati Province (Northwestern Tamang )
northeastern Sindhupalchok District , Bagmati Province : Bhote Namlan, and Bhote Chaur, on Trishuli river west bank toward Budhi Gandaki river
northwestern Makwanpur District , Bagmati Province : Phakel, Chakhel, Khulekhani, Markhu, Tistung, and Palung
northern Kathmandu District , Bagmati Province : Jhor, Thoka, and Gagal Phedi
Eastern Tamang
Grammar
Some grammatical features of the Tamang languages include:
Phonetically Tamang languages are tonal .
Phonology
Consonants
Vowels
Nasality only marginally occurs, and is typically transcribed with a [ã] mark.
Tones
Four tones occur as high falling [â] , mid-high level [á] , mid-low level [à] , very low [ȁ] .[ 6]
Writing system
Tamang language is written in prakriti .
References
Bibliography
Perumalsamy, P. 2009 “ Tamang Language ” in Linguistic Survey
of India: Sikkim volume I, New Delhi: Office of Registrar General India, pp: 388-455 https://censusindia.gov.in/census.website/data/LSI
Hwang, Hyunkyung; Lee, Seunghun J.; P. Gerber; S. Grollmann (2019). "Laryngeal contrast and tone in Tamang: an analysis based on a new set of Tamang data". Journal of the Phonetic Society of Japan . 23 (1): 41– 50. doi :10.24467/onseikenkyu.23.0_41 .
External links
Official language Indigenous languages