Shan bhasa
Wikipedia se
| Shan | ||||
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Spoken in | Burma, Thailand, China | Date founded | 2001 | |
| Region | Asia | |||
| Total speakers | 3.3 million | |||
| Language family |
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| Language codes | ||||
| ISO 639-2 | shn | |||
| ISO 639-3 | shn | |||
| Note: This page contains IPA phonetic symbols in Unicode. | ||||
Template:Contains Burmese text
[badlo] References
- The Major Languages of East and South-East Asia. Bernard Comrie (London, 1990).
- A Guide to the World's Languages. Merritt Ruhlen (Stanford, 1991).
- Shan for English Speakers. Irving I. Glick & Sao Tern Moeng (Dunwoody Press, Wheaton, 1991).
- Shan - English Dictionary. Sao Tern Moeng (Dunwoody Press, Kensington, 1995).
- An English and Shan Dictionary. H. W. Mix (American Baptist Mission Press, Rangoon, 1920; Revised edition by S.H.A.N., Chiang Mai, 2001).
- Grammar of the Shan Language. J. N. Cushing (American Baptist Mission Press, Rangoon, 1887).
[badlo] Further reading
- Sai Kam Mong. The History and Development of the Shan Scripts. Chiang Mai, Thailand: Silkworm Books, 2004. ISBN 9749575504
[badlo] External links
- Ethnologue entry
- Shan-language Swadesh vocabulary list of basic words (from Wiktionary's Swadesh-list appendix)
- Shan Alphabet
- The New Testament written in Shan
- SIL Padauk Font (Shan Unicode)
- SEAlang Library Shan Dictionary
Shan bhasa ek bhasa hae.