Syl-gí
Giân-gú / From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Syl-gí sī tī Ìn-tō͘ Assam-séng kap Bengal ê, Ìn-Au gí-hē Ìn-tō͘ I-lóng gí-chi--ê gí-giân.
Quick Facts Hoat-im, Goân-chū kok-ka ...
Syl-gí | |
---|---|
Silôṭi | |
| |
The word "Silôṭi" in Sylheti Nāgarī script | |
Hoat-im | syl |
Goân-chū kok-ka | Bangladesh and India |
Sú-iōng tē-khu | Sylhet Division and Barak Valley[1] |
Bîn-cho̍k | Sylhetis[2][3][4] |
bú-gí sú-iōng-chiá |
L1: 10 million (2003–2020[5]) L2: 1.5 million (no date) |
Gí-hē |
Indo-European[5]
|
Chá-kî hêng-sek |
Prakrit
|
Bûn-jī hē-thóng |
Sylheti Nāgarī script Bengali–Assamese script |
Gí-giân tāi-bé | |
ISO 639-3 |
syl |
Linguist List |
syl |
Glottolog |
sylh1242 |
Linguasphere |
59-AAF-ui |
Che bûn-chiong pau-hâm IPA hû-hō. Nā-sī bô siong-koan ê jī-hêng chi-oān, lí khó-lêng ē khoàⁿ tio̍h būn-hō, hng-kheng ia̍h-sī khî-thaⁿ hû-hō, bô-hoat-tō͘ chèng-siông hián-sī Unicode jī-goân. Chhiáⁿ lí khoàⁿ Help:IPA. |
Close