Kurukh-ngṳ̄
Kurukh-ngṳ̄ | |
---|---|
कुंड़ुख़, কুড়ুখ, କୁଡ଼ୁଖ | |
Huák-nguòng guók |
Éng-dô Bangladesh |
mū-ngṳ̄ sāi-ê̤ṳng-ciā | 228 uâng (2002–2011)[1][2][3] |
ngṳ̄-hiê | |
Guăng-huŏng dê-ôi | |
guăng-huŏng ngṳ̄-ngiòng | Éng-dô |
ngṳ̄-ngiòng dâi-mā | |
ISO 639-2 |
kru |
ISO 639-3 |
kru – bău-guák dâi-māIndividual code: xis – Kisan |
Glottolog |
kuru1301 |
ELP | Nepali Kurux |
Kurukh-ngṳ̄ sê diŏh Éng-dô gâe̤ng Mâing-gă-lăk buô-hông dê-kṳ̆ tŭng-hèng gì siŏh cṳ̄ng ngṳ̄-ngiòng, iâ sê Dravida-ngṳ̄-hiê Báe̤k-buô Ngṳ̄-cŭk (
Chăng-kō̤
[Siŭ-gāi | Gāi nguòng-mā]- ↑ Statement 1: Abstract of speakers' strength of languages and mother tongues - 2011. www.censusindia.gov.in. Office of the Registrar General & Census Commissioner, India.
- ↑ Kurux. Ethnologue (
英文 ).已 經 忽 略 未知 參 數 |access-date=
(幫助) - ↑ Kurux, Nepali. Ethnologue (
英文 ). - ↑ Bhadriraju Krishnamurti, The Dravidian Languages,
劍 橋 大學 出版 社 , 2003. ISBN 978-0-521-77111-5
Ngiê-dāu lièng-ciék
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