Atayal Language Dialects - Search results - Wiki Atayal Language Dialects
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Aboriginal languages. Atayal dialects can be classified under two dialects groups: Squliq and C’uli’ (Ts’ole’). There are 7 Atayal dialects according to... |
Yilan Creole Japanese (redirect from Hanhsi Atayal) to be part of the Japonic language family. The superstratum and substratum languages of the creole are Japanese and Atayal, respectively. It has possibly... |
The Atayal (Chinese: 泰雅; pinyin: Tàiyǎ), also known as the Tayal and the Tayan, are a Taiwanese indigenous people. The Atayal people number around 90... |
(1981) and Li (1982) classify the Atayalic languages and dialects as follows: Atayalic Atayal Squliq Atayal Squliq Maspaziʔ Pyanan Lmuan Habun Bazinuq... |
750 speakers. The language area of Saisiyat is small, situated in the northwest of the country between the Hakka Chinese and Atayal regions in the mountains... |
indigenous Mindanaoan languages and to the lesser extent, Ilocano). Some dialects of Cebuano have different names for the language. Cebuano speakers from... |
principal dialects of Kutai Malay language; all three have little mutual intelligibility with each other due to the geographical proximity of these dialects. The... |
first language is lower than 10,000. Amis has appeared in some mainstream popular music. Other significant indigenous languages include Atayal, Paiwan... |
Favorlang dialect of the Formosan language. Batavia: printed at Parapattan. Li, Paul Jen-kuei (2004). "Basic Vocabulary for Formosan Languages and Dialects."... |
register can only be found in the Sundanese Priangan dialect, while other dialects such as Bantenese Language, generally do not recognize this register. For... |
standard Malay that they may prove to be dialects. There are also several Malay trade and creole languages (e.g. Ambonese Malay) based on a lingua franca... |
Formosan Saisiyat language: Taai and Tungho dialects Pazeh language and Kulun Atayalic Atayal language Seediq language a.k.a. Truku/Taroko East Formosan (based... |
has several regional dialects and a number of clearly distinct status styles. Its closest relatives are the neighboring languages such as Sundanese, Madurese... |
The Sinicized Papora and Hoanya dialects constituted a Formosan language of Taiwan. They were spoken across the middle western side of the island, around... |
The Subanen languages (also Subanon and Subanun) are a group of closely related Austronesian languages belonging to the Greater Central Philippine subgroup... |
The Austronesian languages of Asia and Madagascar. London: Routledge. pp. 1–42., page 16. Zorc, David Paul (1977). The Bisayan Dialects of the Philippines:... |
(Rizal-Laguna), and Tayabas (Quezon) as dialects of Tagalog; however, there appear to be four main dialects, of which the aforementioned are a part:... |
The Indi language or Mag-indi (or Mag-Indi Ayta) is a Sambalic language with around 5,000 speakers. It is spoken within Philippine Aeta communities in... |
seventy-one languages spoken in the Solomon Islands. It is estimated that at least seven dialects of ꞌAreꞌare exist. Some of the known dialects are Are,... |
The Bolinao language or Binubolinao is a Central Luzon language spoken primarily in the municipalities of Bolinao and Anda, Pangasinan in the Philippines... |