Yezhoù kasek : diforc'h etre ar stummoù

Endalc’h diverket Danvez ouzhpennet
Neal (kaozeal | degasadennoù)
lañs
 
Neal (kaozeal | degasadennoù)
achu
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{{Peurunvan}}
 
Ur skourr eus ar [[Yezhoù aostrez-aziatek|yezhoù aostrez-aziatek]] eo ar '''yezhoù kasek''' (''khasi''') komzet gant tro-dro da 865.000 e [[Meghalaya]] en [[Asam]] ([[India]]) dreist-holl met ivez war ar vevenn gant [[Bangladech]].
{{LabourAChom}}
 
Gwechall e veze skrivet gant ur [[doare-skrivañ|skritur]] ispisial, met abaoe pell ez eo bet implijet pe ar [[skritur banglaek]] (''benagli'') pe mui-ouzh-mui hiziv al [[lizherenneg latinek]].
{{language|name=Khasi
|nativename=Khasi
|familycolor=lightcoral
|states=[[India]], [[Bangladesh]]
|region=[[South Asia]]
|speakers=865,000 mainly in [[Meghalaya]], [[India]] (1997)
|rank=''not in top 100''
|family=[[Austroasiatic languages|Austroasiatic]]<br>
&nbsp;[[Mon-Khmer languages|Mon-Khmer]]<br>
&nbsp;&nbsp;[[Northern Mon-Khmer languages|Northern Mon-Khmer]]<br>
&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;[[Khasian languages]]<br>
&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;'''Khasian'''
|nation=''none''
|agency=''none''
|iso1=|iso2=kha|sil=kha}}
 
== Gwelet ivez ==
'''Khasi''' is an [[Austro-Asiatic languages|Austro-Asiatic language]] spoken primarily in [[Meghalaya]] state in [[India]]. Khasi is part of the [[Mon-Khmer]] group of languages, and distantly related to the [[Munda languages|Munda]] branch of the Austroasiatic family, which is found in east-central India.
* [[Yezhoù aostrez-aziatek]]
* [[Yezhoù monek-kmerek]]
 
== Liammoù diavaez ==
Although most of the 865,000 Khasi speakers are found in Meghalaya state, the language is also spoken by a number of people in the hill districts of [[Assam]] bordering with Meghalaya and by a sizable population of people living in [[Bangladesh]], close to the Indian border.
 
Khasi is rich in folklore and folktale, and behind most of the names of hills, mountains, rivers, waterfalls, birds, flowers, and animals there is a story.
 
==Script==
In the past, the Khasi language had no scripts of its own. [[William Carey]] attempted to write the language with [[Bengali]] scripts between [[1813]] and [[1838]]. A large number of books of the Khasis was written in the Bangla script including the famous book ''Ka Niyiom Jong Ka Khasi'' or ''The Rule of the Khasis'', which is an important manuscript of the [[Seng Khasi]] religion. The [[Wales|Welsh]] [[missionary]], [[Thomas Jones]], in [[1841]] wrote the language in Roman scripts. As a result, the orthography of the language in Roman script is quite similar to that of [[Welsh language|Welsh]]. Being a simpler script to learn than the Bangla script, Roman script was adopted.
 
== External Links ==
*[http://www.khasinet.org Khasi Net]