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- Q35833 subject Q7142873.
- Q35833 subject Q7486598.
- Q35833 subject Q8303936.
- Q35833 subject Q8582805.
- Q35833 subject Q8582902.
- Q35833 abstract "The Ladakhi language (Tibetan: ལ་དྭགས་སྐད་, Wylie: La-dwags skad), also called Bhoti, is the predominant language in the Leh district of Ladakh, India. Ladakhi is a Tibetic language, but is not mutually intelligible with Standard Tibetan.Ladakhi has approximately 100,000 speakers in India, and perhaps 12,000 speakers in the Tibet Autonomous Region of China, mostly in the Qiangtang region. Ladakhi has several dialects, Ladakhi proper (also called Lehskat after the capital of Ladakh, Leh, where it is spoken); Shamskat, spoken to the northwest of Leh; Stotskat, spoken to the southeast in the Indus valley; and Nubra, spoken in the north. The varieties spoken in Upper Ladakh and Zangskar have many features of Ladakhi and many other features of western dialects of Central Tibetan.Most dialects of Ladakhi lack tone, but Stotskat and Upper Ladakhi are tonal like Central Tibetan.".
- Q35833 languageFamily Q1641150.
- Q35833 languageFamily Q1814078.
- Q35833 languageFamily Q3309428.
- Q35833 spokenIn Q148.
- Q35833 spokenIn Q668.
- Q35833 spokenIn Q805804.
- Q35833 spokenIn Q843.
- Q35833 wikiPageExternalLink Francke-1901-Ladakhi-Sketch-Grammar.
- Q35833 wikiPageWikiLink Q1062139.
- Q35833 wikiPageWikiLink Q1366583.
- Q35833 wikiPageWikiLink Q147011.
- Q35833 wikiPageWikiLink Q148.
- Q35833 wikiPageWikiLink Q1568.
- Q35833 wikiPageWikiLink Q1617.
- Q35833 wikiPageWikiLink Q1641150.
- Q35833 wikiPageWikiLink Q1650798.
- Q35833 wikiPageWikiLink Q17269.
- Q35833 wikiPageWikiLink Q18110909.
- Q35833 wikiPageWikiLink Q1814078.
- Q35833 wikiPageWikiLink Q1860.
- Q35833 wikiPageWikiLink Q1921210.
- Q35833 wikiPageWikiLink Q200667.
- Q35833 wikiPageWikiLink Q230818.
- Q35833 wikiPageWikiLink Q2692082.
- Q35833 wikiPageWikiLink Q320433.
- Q35833 wikiPageWikiLink Q33086.
- Q35833 wikiPageWikiLink Q3309428.
- Q35833 wikiPageWikiLink Q3347350.
- Q35833 wikiPageWikiLink Q34271.
- Q35833 wikiPageWikiLink Q46861.
- Q35833 wikiPageWikiLink Q5061915.
- Q35833 wikiPageWikiLink Q5128314.
- Q35833 wikiPageWikiLink Q56509.
- Q35833 wikiPageWikiLink Q56601.
- Q35833 wikiPageWikiLink Q567905.
- Q35833 wikiPageWikiLink Q6148026.
- Q35833 wikiPageWikiLink Q6473510.
- Q35833 wikiPageWikiLink Q668.
- Q35833 wikiPageWikiLink Q6807178.
- Q35833 wikiPageWikiLink Q7142873.
- Q35833 wikiPageWikiLink Q7486598.
- Q35833 wikiPageWikiLink Q771203.
- Q35833 wikiPageWikiLink Q805804.
- Q35833 wikiPageWikiLink Q829257.
- Q35833 wikiPageWikiLink Q8303936.
- Q35833 wikiPageWikiLink Q843.
- Q35833 wikiPageWikiLink Q844833.
- Q35833 wikiPageWikiLink Q8582805.
- Q35833 wikiPageWikiLink Q8582902.
- Q35833 fam Q1641150.
- Q35833 fam Q1814078.
- Q35833 fam Q3309428.
- Q35833 name "Ladakhi".
- Q35833 nativename "Ladaks Skat".
- Q35833 region Q1921210.
- Q35833 region Q805804.
- Q35833 states Q148.
- Q35833 states Q668.
- Q35833 states Q843.
- Q35833 type Language.
- Q35833 type Language.
- Q35833 type Thing.
- Q35833 type Q315.
- Q35833 type Q34770.
- Q35833 comment "The Ladakhi language (Tibetan: ལ་དྭགས་སྐད་, Wylie: La-dwags skad), also called Bhoti, is the predominant language in the Leh district of Ladakh, India. Ladakhi is a Tibetic language, but is not mutually intelligible with Standard Tibetan.Ladakhi has approximately 100,000 speakers in India, and perhaps 12,000 speakers in the Tibet Autonomous Region of China, mostly in the Qiangtang region.".
- Q35833 label "Ladakhi language".
- Q35833 name "Ladakhi".
- Q35833 name "Ladaks Skat".