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  1. The Boro-Garo languages have been further divided into four subgroups by Burling. Koch languages: Atong, Koch, Ruga, Rabha; Garo languages: Garo, Megam; Bodo languages: Bodo, Dimasa, Barman, Tiwa, Kokborok (Tripuri), Kachari, Moran; Deori language; Old Hajong may have been a Bodo–Garo language. Barman is a recently discovered Bodo–Garo ...

    • Koch Languages

      The Koch languages are a small group of Boro-Garo languages...

    • Garo language

      Garo. Garo, also referred to by its endonym A·chikku, is a...

    • Sal languages

      The Bodo–Garo languages, including the Bodo and Koch...

  2. Boro [2] (बरʼ or बड़ो [bɔɽo] ), also rendered Bodo, [3] is a Sino-Tibetan language spoken primarily by the Boros of Northeast India and the neighboring nations of Nepal and Bangladesh. It is an official language of the Indian state of Assam, predominantly spoken in the Bodoland Territorial Region. [4] [5] It is also one of the ...

    • 1.4 million (2011 census)
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  4. en.wikipedia.org › wiki › Boro_peopleBoro people - Wikipedia

    In the cognate language Kokborok, Borok means man ('k' being a suffix for nouns) and so logically, Boro would mean man even in the Boro language. Generally, the word Boro means a man, in the wider sense Boro means a human being (but not specific to a female member of the family) in the languages used by the Bodo-Kachari peoples. Language

    • 1.41 million (2011)
  5. The Boroic languages (also simply Boro languages in a wider sense [1]) are a group within the Boro-Garo languages which are spoken in and around the Brahmaputra basin, Barak valley and Tripura of present-day northeast India. They are: The Barman language is a recently discovered Boroic language spoken by the Barman Kacharis .

    • India
  6. Boro language (India) Bodo (बर') or Boro is a Sino-Tibetan language spoken primarily by the Bodo people of Northeast India. It is official language of the Bodoland autonomous region and co-official language of the state of Assam in India. [2] It is also one of twenty two languages listed in the Eighth Schedule of the Constitution of India. [3]

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