Khams Tibetan ( Tibetan : ཁམས་སྐད , Wylie : Khams skad , THL : Khamké ) is the Tibetic language used by the majority of the people in Kham . Khams is one of the three branches of the traditional classification of Tibetic languages (the other two being Amdo Tibetan and Ü-Tsang ). In terms of mutual intelligibility , Khams could communicate at a basic level with the Ü-Tsang branch (including Lhasa Tibetan ).
6-580: KHG may refer to: Khams Tibetan (ISO 639 language code: khg) a Tibetic language used in Kham Kashgar Airport (IATA airport code: KHG; ICAO airport code: ZWSH) Kashi, Xinjiang, China Khushal Garh railway station (rail code: KHG) in Pakistan Kommunistische Hochschulgruppe (KHG; University Communist Society; literally Communist High School Group ),
12-516: A division of the Communist League of West Germany See also [ edit ] [REDACTED] Search for "khg" on Misplaced Pages. All pages with titles containing KHG or KHGs All pages with titles beginning with KHG Topics referred to by the same term [REDACTED] This disambiguation page lists articles associated with the title KHG . If an internal link led you here, you may wish to change
18-731: A single language. Khamba and Tseku are more divergent, but classified with Khams by Tournadre . Several other languages are spoken by Tibetans in the Khams region: Dongwang Tibetan language and the Rgyalrong languages . The phonologies and vocabularies of the Bodgrong, Dartsendo, dGudzong, Khyungpo (Khromtshang), Lhagang Rangakha, Sangdam, Sogpho, sKobsteng, sPomtserag, Tsharethong, and Yangthang dialects of Kham Tibetan have been documented by Hiroyuki Suzuki. Other Khams Tibetan varieties include: Deng (2020) documents 1,707 words in
24-418: The link to point directly to the intended article. Retrieved from " https://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=KHG&oldid=1042557085 " Category : Disambiguation pages Hidden categories: Short description is different from Wikidata All article disambiguation pages All disambiguation pages Khams Tibetan Both Khams Tibetan and Lhasa Tibetan evolve to not preserve
30-414: The southern part of Qinghai, the western part of Sichuan , and the northwestern part of Yunnan , China. Khampa Tibetan is also spoken by about 1,000 people in two enclaves in eastern Bhutan , the descendants of pastoral yak-herding communities. There are five dialects of Khams Tibetan proper: These have relatively low mutual intelligibility , but are close enough that they are usually considered
36-473: The word-initial consonant clusters , which makes them very far from Classical Tibetan , especially when compared to the more conservative Amdo Tibetan . Also, Kham and Lhasa Tibetan evolved to be tonal , which Classical Tibetan was not. Khams Tibetan has 80% lexical similarity with Central Tibetan. Kham Tibetan is spoken in Kham , which is now divided between the eastern part of Tibet Autonomous Region ,
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