'Olekha
Abugida
Balochi language
Bhutan
Bodish languages
Brahmic family
Brokkat language
Brokpa language
Bumthang language
Camling language
Central Tibetan languages
Chali language
Chocangacakha
Chukha
Chumbi valley
Classical Tibetan
Dakpa language
Dhakana
Dranjongke
Dzala language
Dzong
Dzongkha
Dzongkha Development Commission
East Bodish languages
English language
Gasa District
George van Driem
Gongduk language
Gurung language
Haa
ISO 639
ISO 639-1
ISO 639-2
ISO 639-3
India
Indo-Aryan languages
International Standard Book Number
Kalimpong
Khams Tibetan language
Kheng language
Kirant
Kurtöp language
Lakha
Language family
Languages of Bhutan
Leiden University
Lepcha language
Lhokpu language
Limbu language
Lingua franca
Linguasphere Observatory
List of language regulators
Liturgy
Main Page
Nepal Bhasa
Nepali language
Ngalop
Nyenkha
Paro District
Punakha
Romanized
Shabdrung Ngawang Namgyal
Sikkim
Sikkimese language
Sino-Tibetan languages
Tamang language
Thimphu
Tibetan language
Tibetan languages
Tibetan script
Tibeto-Burman languages
Tibeto-Kanauri languages
Travellers and Magicians
Tshangla language
Ucan script
Wangdue Phodrang
West Bengal
Wikipedia
Writing system
Wylie transliteration
Abugida
Balochi language
Bhutan
Bodish languages
Brahmic family
Brokkat language
Brokpa language
Bumthang language
Camling language
Central Tibetan languages
Chali language
Chocangacakha
Chukha
Chumbi valley
Classical Tibetan
Dakpa language
Dhakana
Dranjongke
Dzala language
Dzong
Dzongkha
Dzongkha Development Commission
East Bodish languages
English language
Gasa District
George van Driem
Gongduk language
Gurung language
Haa
ISO 639
ISO 639-1
ISO 639-2
ISO 639-3
India
Indo-Aryan languages
International Standard Book Number
Kalimpong
Khams Tibetan language
Kheng language
Kirant
Kurtöp language
Lakha
Language family
Languages of Bhutan
Leiden University
Lepcha language
Lhokpu language
Limbu language
Lingua franca
Linguasphere Observatory
List of language regulators
Liturgy
Main Page
Nepal Bhasa
Nepali language
Ngalop
Nyenkha
Paro District
Punakha
Romanized
Shabdrung Ngawang Namgyal
Sikkim
Sikkimese language
Sino-Tibetan languages
Tamang language
Thimphu
Tibetan language
Tibetan languages
Tibetan script
Tibeto-Burman languages
Tibeto-Kanauri languages
Travellers and Magicians
Tshangla language
Ucan script
Wangdue Phodrang
West Bengal
Wikipedia
Writing system
Wylie transliteration
Dzongkha
Spoken in
Bhutan , Sikkim (India)
Total speakers
First language: 171,000
Second language ~470,000
Language family
Sino-Tibetan
(Tibeto-Burman)
Tibeto-Kanauri
Bodish
Tibetan
Central Tibetan
Southern
Dzongkha
Writing system
Tibetan script
Official status
Official language in
Bhutan
Regulated by
Dzongkha Development Commission
Language codes
ISO 639-1
dz
ISO 639-2
dzo
ISO 639-3
dzo
Linguasphere
–
This page contains Indic text. Without rendering support you may see irregular vowel positioning and a lack of conjuncts. More...
Dzongkha (རྫོང་ཁ་ Wylie: rdzong-kha, Jong-kă), occasionally Ngalopkha, is the national language of Bhutan.1 The word "dzongkha" means the language (kha) spoken in the dzong, – dzong being the fortress-like monasteries established throughout Bhutan by Shabdrung Ngawang Namgyal in the 17th century.
Labels delayed
Importers plea for rule to be be implemented starting with new stock Pre-packaged Food Items 11 February, 2011 - With shops yet to finish their old stock, the sale of imported pre-packaged food items, with labels in either English or Dzongkha, is likely to take longer.
the Ministry of Information and Communications Dzongkha Linux is created with the sole aim of providing complete Dzongkha computing capability free of cost Dzongkha Linux a Debian based distribution with support for the language of Bhutan was launched last week
http://distrowatch.serve-you.net/weekly.php?issue=20060605
Wikipedia
འཕྲོ་མཐུད་འགྱོ་: འཛུལ་འགྱོ་, འཚོལ་ཞིབ།. Welcome to Dzongkha Wikipedia! ... If you speak Dzongkha and think it would be cool to have your own Encyclopedia ...
"Bhutani" is not another name for Dzongkha, but the name of a Balochi language. The two are sometimes confused, even in some published ISO 639 codelists.
Contents
1 Classification and related languages
2 Usage
3 Writing
4 See also
5 References
6 Bibliography
7 External links
Classification and related languages
Linguistically, Dzongkha is a South Tibetan language. It is closely related to and partially intelligible with Sikkimese (Wylie: 'Bras-ljongs-skad), the national language of the erstwhile kingdom of Sikkim; and to some other Bhutanese languages such as Cho-cha-na-ca (khyod ca nga ca kha), Brokpa (me rag sag steng 'brog skad), Brokkat (dur gyi 'brog skad), and Lakha (la ka).
Dzongkha bears a close linguistic relationship to J'umowa spoken in the Chumbi valley of Southern Tibet and to the Dranjongke language of Sikkim.2 It has a much more distant relationship to standard modern Central Tibetan. Although spoken Dzongkha and Tibetan are largely mutually unintelligible, the literary forms of both are both highly influenced by the liturgical (clerical) Classical Tibetan language, known in Bhutan as Chöke, which has been used for centuries by Buddhist monks. Chöke was used as the language of education in Bhutan until the early 1960s when it was replaced by Dzongkha in public schools.3
Usage
Districts of Bhutan where the Dzongkha language is spoken natively.
Arts students top class 12 exams
BHSEC Examinations 28 January, 2011 - Arts students have topped the 2010 Bhutan Higher Secondary Education Certificate (BHSEC) Class XII examinations.
A new Dzongkha braille translation software has brought smiles to visually impaired students Trashigang Starting this year teaching and learning of Dzongkha for the visually impaired at the National Institute for Disabled NID Khaling will become easier with the launching of the
http://www.bhutanobserver.bt/2008/bhutan-news/01/a-software-to-answer-the-prayers.htmlhttp://www.bhutanobserver.bt/2008/bhutan-news/01/a-software-to-answer-the-prayers.html
Dzongkha and its dialects are the native tongue of eight southern districts of Bhutan (viz. Phodrang, Punakha, Thimphu, Gasa, Paro, Ha, Dhakana, and Chukha).4 There are also some speakers found near the Indian town of Kalimpong, once part of Bhutan but now in West Bengal. Dzongkha study is mandatory in all schools in Bhutan, and the language is the lingua franca in the districts to the south and east where it is not the mother tongue. The 2003 Bhutanese film, Travellers and Magicians is entirely in Dzongkha.
Dzongkha is rarely heard outside Bhutan and environs.
Writing
Dzongkha is usually written in Bhutanese forms of the Tibetan script known as Joyi (mgyogs yig) and Joshum (mgyogs tshugs ma). Dzongkha books are typically printed using Ucan fonts like those to print the Tibetan abugida.
See also
Languages of Bhutan
q:Bhutanese proverbs for a list of proverbs given in both romanized Dzongkha and English.
References
^ "Constitution of the Kingdom of Bhutan. Art. 1, § 8" (PDF). Government of Bhutan. 2008-07-18. http://www.constitution.bt/TsaThrim%20Eng%20(A5).pdf. Retrieved 2011-01-01.
^ van Driem, George (2007). "Endangered Languages of Bhutan and Sikkim: South Bodish Languages". In Moseley, Christopher. Encyclopedia of the World's Endangered Languages. Routledge. p. 294. ISBN 070071197X
^ George, Van Driem; Tshering of Gaselô, Karma (1998). Languages of the Greater Himalayan Region. I. Leiden, The Netherlands: Research CNWS, School of Asian, African, and Amerindian Studies, Leiden University. pp. 7–8. ISBN 90-5789-002-X.
^ George, Van Driem; Tshering of Gaselô, Karma (1998). Languages of the Greater Himalayan Region. I. Leiden, The Netherlands: Research CNWS, School of Asian, African, and Amerindian Studies, Leiden University. p. 3. ISBN 90-5789-002-X.
Bibliography
van Driem, George (2007). "Endangered Languages of Bhutan and Sikkim: South Bodish Languages". In Moseley, Christopher. Encyclopedia of the World's Endangered Languages. Routledge. pp. 294–295. ISBN 070071197X.
van Driem, George L (1993). "Language policy in Bhutan". SOAS, London. http://repository.forcedmigration.org/pdf/?pid=fmo:3003.
van Driem, George L; Karma Tshering of Gaselô (collab) (1998). Dzongkha. Languages of the Greater Himalayan Region. Leiden: Research School CNWS, School of Asian, African, and Amerindian Studies. ISBN 905789002X. - A language textbook with three audio compact disks.
van Driem, George (1992). The Grammar of Dzongkha. Thimphu, Bhutan: RGoB, Dzongkha Development Commission (DDC).
van Driem, George (1991). Guide to Official Dzongkha Romanization. Thimphu, Bhutan: Dzongkha Development Commission (DDC).
van Driem, George (n.d.). The First Linguistic Survey of Bhutan. Thimphu, Bhutan: Dzongkha Development Commission (DDC).
Dzongkha Development Commission (2009). Rigpai Lodap: An Intermediate Dzongkha-English Dictionary (འབྲིང་རིམ་རྫོང་ཁ་ཨིང་ལིཤ་ཚིག་མཛོད་རིག་པའི་ལོ་འདབ།). Thimphu: Dzongkha Development Commission. ISBN 9993676539. http://www.dzongkha.gov.bt/publications/PDF-publications/Lodap_Rigpai%20Lodap.pdf.
Dzongkha Development Commission (2009). Kartshok Threngwa: A Book on Dzongkha Synonyms & Antonyms (རྫོང་ཁའི་མིང་ཚིག་རྣམ་གྲངས་དང་འགལ་མིང་སྐར་ཚོགས་ཕྲེང་བ།). Thimphu: Dzongkha Development Commission. ISBN 99936663136. http://www.dzongkha.gov.bt/publications/PDF-publications/Thesaurus.pdf.
Dzongkha Development Commission (1999). The New Dzongkha Grammar (rdzong kha'i brda gzhung gsar pa). Thimphu: Dzongkha Development Commission.
Dzongkha Development Commission (1990). Dzongkha Rabsel Lamzang (rdzong kha rab gsal lam bzang). Thimphu: Dzongkha Development Commission.
Dzongkha Development Authority (2005). English-Dzongkha Dictionary (ཨིང་ལིཤ་རྫོང་ཁ་ཤན་སྦྱར་ཚིག་མཛོད།). Thimphu: Dzongkha Development Authority, Ministry of Education.
Imaeda, Yoshiro (1990). Manual of Spoken Dzongkha in Roman Transcription. Thimphu: Japan Overseas Cooperation Volunteers (JOCV), Bhutan Coordinator Office.
Mazaudon, Martine. 1985. “Dzongkha Number Systems.” S. Ratanakul, D. Thomas & S. Premsirat (eds.). Southeast Asian Linguistic Studies presented to André-G. Haudricourt. Bangkok: Mahidol University. 124-57
Mazaudon, Martine & Boyd Michailovsky. 1988. “Lost syllables and tone contour in Dzongkha (Bhutan).” David Bradley, Eugénie J.A. Henderson & Martine Mazaudon (eds.). Prosodic analysis and Asian linguistics: to honour R.K. Sprigg. (Pacific Linguistics, Series C-104). 115-36
Mazaudon, Martine & Boyd Michailovsky. 1989. “Syllabicity and suprasegmentals: the Dzongkha monosyllabic noun.” D. Bradley et al. (eds.). Prosodic analysis and Asian linguistics: to honour R.K. Sprigg. Canberra. (Pacific Linguistics). 115-36
Michailovsky, Boyd. 1989. “Notes on Dzongkha orthography.” D. Bradley et al. (eds.). Prosodic analysis and Asian linguistics: to honour R.K. Sprigg. Canberra. (Pacific Linguistics). 297-301
Tournadre, Nicolas. 1996. “Comparaison des systèmes médiatifs de quatre dialectes tibétains (tibétain central, ladakhi, dzongkha et amdo).” Z. Guentchéva (ed.). L’énonciation médiatisée. Louvain_Paris: Peeters (Bibliothèque de l’Information Grammaticale, 34). 195-214
Watters, Stephen A. 1996. A preliminary study of prosody in Dzongkha. Arlington: UT at Arlington, Masters Thesis
External links
Dzongkha edition of Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Dzongkha Development Commission Thimphu, Bhutan
Ethnologue entry on Dzongkha
Dzongkha-English Dictionary - རྫོང་ཁ་ཨིང་ལིཤ་ཤན་སྦྱར་ཚིག་མཛོད།
Dzongkha podcast
Dzongkha Romanization for Geographical Names
v · d · eLanguages of Bhutan
Tibeto-Burman
Bodish
Tibetan
Dzongkha · Brokkat · Brokpa · Chocangacakha · Khampa Tibetan · Lakha
East Bodish
Bumthang · Chali · Dakpa · Dzala · Kheng · Kurtöp · 'Olekha (Mönpa) · Nyenkha
Gongduk · Gurung · Kiranti (including Camling and Limbu) · Lepcha · Lhokpu · Nepal Bhasa · Tamang · Tshangla (Sharchop)
Indo-Aryan
Nepali
BSCE results declared
11 February, 2011 - Diwas Puri from Gelephu higher secondary school, Sarpang has topped the Bhutan certificate of secondary education (BCSE) 2010 with 94.60 percent.
DzongkhaLinux :: index
This website is best viewed at screen resolution 1024 x 768 / ཝེབ་ས་ཁོངས་འདི་ གསལ་གཞི་ཧུམ་ཆ་ ༡༠༢༤ x ༧༦༨ ནང་ལུ་ལེགས་ཤོམ་འབད་བལྟ་ཚུགས། ...
Top of the arts
Worst performance in Economics 29 January, 2011 - Three students of Motithang higher secondary school topped the class XII Bhutan Higher Secondary Education Certificate (BHSEC) examinations held last December.
Dzongkha language - encyclopedia article - Citizendium
Dzongkha (Jong-kă) is the national language of the Kingdom of Bhutan. ... Dzongkha bears a linguistic relationship to modern Tibetan as that between Spanish and Portuguese. ...
The feedback is feeble
Curriculum Reform 16 February, 2011 - While the education sector is currently engaged in reforming its curriculum, a critical aspect of monitoring how a reformed subject performs once implemented is not adequate, says the department of curriculum research and development.
Dzongkha - Bhutannica
Dzongkha is the national language of the Kingdom of Bhutan. ... Dzongkha and its dialects are the native tongue of eight western districts of Bhutan (viz. ...
A new note for an old one
28 January, 2011 - Torn or mutilated Bhutanese currency notes can be exchanged for new ones but the value of exchange will depend on the extent of damage.
Tibetan Fonts: South Asian Language Resource Center
This font's cursive appearance is perhaps best suited for Dzongkha use. ... Dzongkha Keyboard Layout: This layout was designed by the Dzongkha Development ...
Learning by travelling
The students performs at the closing ceremony 29 January, 2011 - When Tshering Wangchuk saw a view of Thimphu city from what is called the popular Buddha Point, the 13-year old couldnt believe his eyes.
Wikipedia:Dzongkha - Global Warming Art
The following article is a local copy of the Wikipedia article at Dzongkha. ... The word "dzongkha" means the language (kha) spoken in the dzong, – dzong being the ...
Many questions still
Q&A 31 January, 2011 - Understanding and redefining culture, particularly in the context of a societys changing priorities and values, the importance of a national language of communication and promoting job dignity are some of the many issues confronting Bhutan today.
Dzongkha - Wiktionary
Galician: dzongkha gl(gl), zoncá gl(gl) Japanese: ゾンカ語 ja(ja) (Zonka-go) Korean: 종카어 ko ... Retrieved from "http://en.wiktionary.org
Two constituencies made the difference
Polling officers wait for voters in Bangtsho demkhong in Dewathang Thromde election 22 January, 2011 - It came as a big blow to him. He was already lagging behind and the loss from his own constituency just made it worse.
Replace Dzongkha by English
Propagation of Dzongkha took place in a closed society under absolute monarchy. ... Besides Dzongkha, the only language spoken in Bhutan having written ...
So what was new?
Yearender 6 February, 2011 - A lot. You could get yourself checked for a fee after 4 pm at the Thimphu referral hospital. You could also check the class 10 and 12 board examination results on the mobile phone.



















