Chōng-gí
Guā-māu
Chōng-gí | |
---|---|
ལྷ་སའི་སྐད་ | |
Goân-chū kok-ka | Lhasa |
Sú-iōng tē-khu | Tibet Autonomous Region, U-Tsang |
bú-gí sú-iōng-chiá | (1.2 million cited 1990 census)[1] |
Gí-hē | |
Chá-kî hêng-sek | |
Bûn-jī hē-thóng | |
Koaⁿ-hong tē-ūi | |
Koaⁿ-hong gí-giân | |
Koán-lí ki-kò͘ | Tomi e cigan[bô chhut-chhù] |
Gí-giân tāi-bé | |
ISO 639-1 |
bo |
ISO 639-2 |
tib (B) bod (T) |
ISO 639-3 |
bod |
Glottolog |
tibe1272 |
Linguasphere |
70-AAA-ac |
Chōng-gí sī chōng-cho̍k ê gí-giân, sú-ēng jîn-kháu iak-lia̍k ū 615 bān. I sio̍k tī Hàn-chōng-gí-hē. Iōng chōng-bûn jī-bó su-siá.
Goā-pō͘ liân-kiat
[siu-kái | kái goân-sí-bé]- ↑ Chōng-gí at Ethnologue (18th ed., 2015)