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  1. Khmer. Language codes. ISO 639-3. tpu. Glottolog. tamp1251. Tampuan is the language of Tampuan people indigenous to the mountainous regions of Ratanakiri Province in Cambodia. As of the 2008 census there were 31,000 speakers, which amounts to 21% of the province's population. [3] It is closely related to Bahnar and Alak, the three of which form ...

  2. Tampuan (ទំពួន) Tampuan is a member of the Bahnaric branch of the Mon-Khmer language family. It is spoken in parts of Ratanakiri Province in the north east of Cambobia by about 57,000 people. It is closely related to Bahnar and Alak.

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  4. Animism. The Tampuan (also spelled Tompuan or Tampuon, Tumpoun, Tumpuon, Khmer: ទំពួន) are an indigenous ethnic group living in northeast Cambodia. Numbering about 31,000, the Tampuan people live in the mountainous Southern and Western portions of the Cambodian province of Ratanakiri. They have their own language of the Mon–Khmer ...

  5. The Tampuan language is spoken by 30,000 people living in Ratanakiri province, Cambodia. This is the first attempt to make a Tampuan-English dictionary available online. At present there are just over 2,000 entries. We hope to update this regularly as more entries are checked.

  6. The Tampuan live in the northeastern province of Cambodia, Ratanakiri. Combined with the six other indigenous groups who live there, they form the majority of the ethnic make up of the population. Many Tampuan live in villages close to Ratanakiri's provincial capital, Ban Lung, in an area around a large volcanic crater lake, Yeak Laom, formed ...

  7. The Tampuan (also spelled Tompuan or Tampuon) are an indigenous peoples living in northeast Cambodia. Numbering about 25,000, the Tampuan people live in the mountainous Southern and Western portions of the Cambodian province of Ratanakiri. They have their own language of the Mon–Khmer language family.

  8. sealang.net › sala › archivesSEAlang

    Tampuan has been classified as a language in the Central Bahnaric subgroup, most closely associated with Alak and Bahnar (Thomas 1979:183). There are three dialects of Tampuan, with the northern (Kachon) dialect showing the greatest degree of phonological and lexical difference, at least partially under Lao influence. But a

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