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  1. The Newaric languages are a proposed group of Sino-Tibetan languages. George van Driem (2003) and Mark Turin (2004) argue that Newar and Baram–Thangmi (consisting of the two closely related languages Baram and Thangmi) share many features with each other, and thus group with each other.

    • Nepal
  2. ISBN 978-3-030-36617-9. It [Albanian] is the official language of Albania, the co-official language of Kosovo, and the co-official language of many western municipalities of the Republic of Macedonia. Albanian is also spoken widely in some areas in Greece, southern Montenegro, southern Serbia, and in some towns in southern Italy and Sicily.

    • 6.1 to 7.5 million (2017)
    • d͡z
    • t͡s
    • t͡ʃ
  3. en.wikipedia.org › wiki › Newar_peopleNewar people - Wikipedia

    Dhammalok Mahasthavir (1890–1966), who worked to revive Nepali Theravada Buddhism in the 1930s and 1940s. Shukra Raj Shastri (1894–1941), Freedom fighter and martyr. Dharmachari Guruma (1898–1978), Founder of the first nunnery in Nepal. Pragyananda Mahasthavir (1900–1993), First Patriarch of Theravada Order in Nepal.

    • 166,000 (2006)
    • 1,341,363 (4.6% of Nepal's population) (2021)
  4. The Naish languages are: Naish. Naxi. Na (Narua, Mosuo) Laze. In turn, Naish together with Namuyi and Shixing constitutes the Naic subgroup within Sino-Tibetan. Arguments for relatedness include irregular morphotonology: tone patterns of numeral-plus-classifier phrases that constitute shared structural properties.

  5. The following languages are official ( de jure or de facto) in three or more sovereign states. In some cases, a language may be defined as different languages in different countries. Examples are Hindi and Urdu, Malay and Indonesian, Serbian and Croatian, Persian and Tajik. English: 58 UN states and 31 dependencies.

  6. Beginning. Dialects. References. Other websites. Albanian language. Counting from one to 10 in Albanian. The Albanian language ( Shqip) is an Indo-European language. It is spoken mostly in Albania (3,500,000), Kosovo and (500,000) Republic of North Macedonia . Dialects. Ghegs, Tosks, Arbëresh, Arvanites, Arbanasi. References.

  7. The Illyrian language ( / ɪˈlɪriən /) was an Indo-European language or group of languages spoken by the Illyrians in Southeast Europe during antiquity. The language is unattested with the exception of personal names and placenames. Just enough information can be drawn from these to allow the conclusion that it belonged to the Indo-European ...

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