Dzongkha (; ) is a
Sino-Tibetan language that is the official and national language of
Bhutan.
It is written using the
Tibetan script.
The word means "the language of the fortress", from ' "fortress" and ' "language". , Dzongkha had 171,080 native speakers and about 640,000 total speakers.
Dzongkha is considered a
South Tibetic language. It is closely related to and partially intelligible with
Sikkimese, and to some other Bhutanese languages such as
Chocha Ngacha,
Brokpa
The Brokpa (), sometimes referred to as Minaro, are a small ethnic group mostly found in the union territory of Ladakh, India around the villages of Dha and Hanu. Some of the community are also located across the Line of Control in Baltista ...
,
Brokkat and
Lakha. It has a more distant relationship to
Standard Tibetan
Lhasa Tibetan (), or Standard Tibetan, is the Tibetan dialect spoken by educated people of Lhasa, the capital of the Tibetan Autonomous Region of China. It is an official language of the Tibet Autonomous Region.
In the traditional "three-branch ...
. Spoken Dzongkha and Tibetan are around 50 to 80 percent
mutually intelligible
In linguistics, mutual intelligibility is a relationship between languages or dialects in which speakers of different but related varieties can readily understand each other without prior familiarity or special effort. It is sometimes used as an ...
.
Usage
Dzongkha and its dialects are the native tongue of eight western districts of Bhutan (''
viz.''
Wangdue Phodrang, ,
Thimphu,
Gasa,
Paro,
Ha,
Dagana and
Chukha
Chukha District ( Dzongkha: ཆུ་ཁ་རྫོང་ཁག་; Wylie: ''Chu-kha rdzong-khag''; also spelled "Chhukha") is one of the 20 dzongkhag (districts) comprising Bhutan. The major town is Phuentsholing which is the gateway ci ...
). There are also some native speakers near the Indian town of
Kalimpong
Kalimpong (Hindi: कलिम्पोंग) is a town and the headquarters of an eponymous district in the Indian state of West Bengal. It is located at an average elevation of . The town is the headquarters of the Kalimpong district. The re ...
, once part of Bhutan but now in
North Bengal
North Bengal ( bn, উত্তরবঙ্গ/উত্তর বাংলা) is a term used for the north-western part of Bangladesh and northern part of West Bengal. The Bangladesh part denotes the Rajshahi Division and Rangpur Division. Gen ...
and in
Sikkim.
Dzongkha was declared the national language of Bhutan in 1971.
Dzongkha study is mandatory in all schools, and the language is the ''
lingua franca
A lingua franca (; ; for plurals see ), also known as a bridge language, common language, trade language, auxiliary language, vehicular language, or link language, is a language systematically used to make communication possible between groups ...
'' in the districts to the south and east where it is not the mother tongue. The Bhutanese films ''
Travellers and Magicians'' (2003) and ''
Lunana: A Yak in the Classroom'' (2019) are in Dzongkha.
Writing system
The
Tibetan script used to write Dzongkha has thirty basic
letters, sometimes known as "radicals", for
consonants. Dzongkha is usually written in Bhutanese forms of the
Uchen script, forms of the Tibetan script known as ''Jôyi'' "cursive longhand" and ''Jôtshum'' "formal longhand". The print form is known simply as ''Tshûm''.
Romanization
There are various systems of romanization and transliteration for Dzongkha, but none accurately represents its phonetic sound. The Bhutanese government adopted a transcription system known as Roman Dzongkha, devised by the linguist
George van Driem, as its standard in 1991.
Phonology
Tones
Dzongkha is a
tonal language and has two level tones (high and low), and two
contour tone distinctions, totaling four tones. The tone of a
syllable
A syllable is a unit of organization for a sequence of speech sounds typically made up of a syllable nucleus (most often a vowel) with optional initial and final margins (typically, consonants). Syllables are often considered the phonological "bu ...
determines the
allophone of the onset and the
phonation
The term phonation has slightly different meanings depending on the subfield of phonetics. Among some phoneticians, ''phonation'' is the process by which the vocal folds produce certain sounds through quasi-periodic vibration. This is the defini ...
type of the nuclear
vowel.
Consonants
All consonants may begin a syllable. In the onsets of low-tone syllables, consonants are
voiced.
Aspirated consonants (indicated by the superscript ''h''), , and are not found in low-tone syllables. The rhotic is usually a trill or a fricative trill , and is voiceless in the onsets of high-tone syllables.
are
dental. Descriptions of the
palatal affricates and
fricatives vary from
alveolo-palatal to plain palatal.
Only a few consonants are found in syllable-final positions. Most common among them are . Syllable-final is often
elided and results in the preceding vowel
nasalized and prolonged, especially word-finally. Syllable-final is most often omitted when word-final as well, unless in formal speech. In literary pronunciation,
liquids and may also end a syllable. Though rare, is also found in syllable-final positions. No other consonants are found in syllable-final positions.
Vowels
* When in low tone, vowels are produced with
breathy voice.
* In closed syllables, varies between and , the latter being more common.
* varies between and .
* varies between close-mid and open-mid , the latter being common in closed syllables. is close-mid . may not be longer than at all, and differs from more often in quality than in length.
* Descriptions of vary between close-mid and open-mid .
* is close-mid , but may approach open-mid especially in closed syllables. is close-mid .
* is slightly lower than open-mid, i.e. .
* may approach , especially in closed syllables.
* When nasalized or followed by , vowels are always long.
Phonotactics
Many words in Dzongkha are
monosyllabic. Syllables usually take the form of CVC, CV, or VC. Syllables with complex onsets are also found, but such an onset must be a combination of an unaspirated bilabial stop and a palatal affricate. The bilabial stops in complex onsets are often omitted in colloquial speech.
Classification and related languages
Dzongkha is considered a
South Tibetic language. It is closely related to and partially intelligible with
Sikkimese, and to some other Bhutanese languages such as
Chocha Ngacha,
Brokpa
The Brokpa (), sometimes referred to as Minaro, are a small ethnic group mostly found in the union territory of Ladakh, India around the villages of Dha and Hanu. Some of the community are also located across the Line of Control in Baltista ...
,
Brokkat and
Lakha.
Dzongkha bears a close linguistic relationship to J'umowa, which is spoken in the
Chumbi Valley of Southern
Tibet.
It has a much more distant relationship to
Standard Tibetan
Lhasa Tibetan (), or Standard Tibetan, is the Tibetan dialect spoken by educated people of Lhasa, the capital of the Tibetan Autonomous Region of China. It is an official language of the Tibet Autonomous Region.
In the traditional "three-branch ...
. Spoken Dzongkha and Tibetan are around 50% to 80% mutually intelligible, with the literary forms of both highly influenced by the
liturgical (clerical)
Classical Tibetan language, known in Bhutan as ''Chöke,'' which has been used for centuries by
Buddhist monks. Chöke was used as the language of education in Bhutan until the early 1960s when it was replaced by Dzongkha in public schools.
Although descended from Classical Tibetan, Dzongkha shows a great many irregularities in sound changes that make the official spelling and standard pronunciation more distant from each other than is the case with Standard Tibetan. "Traditional orthography and modern phonology are two distinct systems operating by a distinct set of rules."
Sample text
The following is a sample text in Dzongkha of Article 1 of the
Universal Declaration of Human Rights:
See also
*
Dzongkha Braille
*
Dzongkha numerals
Dzongkha, the national language of Bhutan, has two numeral systems
A numeral system (or system of numeration) is a writing system for expressing numbers; that is, a mathematical notation for representing numbers of a given set, using digi ...
*
Languages of Bhutan
References
Bibliography
*
*
*
*
*
*
*
*
* Mazaudon, Martine. 1985. “Dzongkha Number Systems.” S. Ratanakul, D. Thomas & S. Premsirat (eds.). Southeast Asian Linguistic Studies presented to André-G. Haudricourt. Bangkok: Mahidol University. 124–57
*
*
*
*
*
*
*
*
*
*
*
*
* - A language textbook with three audio compact disks.
*
External links
Bhutanese literatures Thimphu, Bhutan
Dzongkha podcastpublished by the
Dzongkha Development CommissionBhutan National Policy and Strategy for Development and Promotion of Dzongkha – site ''
The National Library of Bhutan
The National Library of Bhutan (NLB) (Dzongkha: ''Druk Gyelyong Pedzö'' འབྲུག་རྒྱལ་ཡོངས་དཔེ་མཛོད།), Thimphu, Bhutan was established in 1967 for the purpose of "preservation and promotion of the ric ...
'' (en
dz)
Vocabulary
Online searchable dictionary (Dz-En, En-Dz, Dz-Dz)o
Online Dzongkha-English Dictionary – site ''
Dzongkha Development Commission''
endz
Dzongkha Computer Termssmall>(pdf)
English-Dzongkha Pocket Dictionarysmall>(pdf)
Rigpai Lodap: An Intermediate Dzongkha-English Dictionarysmall>(pdf)
Kartshok Threngwa: A Book on Dzongkha Synonyms & Antonymssmall>(pdf)
Names of Countries and Capitals in Dzongkhasmall>(pdf)
A Guide to Dzongkha-Translationsmall>(pdf)
Grammar
A colloquial grammar of the Bhutanese language. by Byrne, St. Quintin. Allahabad: Pioneer Press, 1909 – site ''
National Library of Bhutan
The National Library of Bhutan (NLB) (Dzongkha: ''Druk Gyelyong Pedzö'' འབྲུག་རྒྱལ་ཡོངས་དཔེ་མཛོད།), Thimphu, Bhutan was established in 1967 for the purpose of "preservation and promotion of the ric ...
'' (en
dz)
– site ''Dzongkha Linux''
Dzongkha language, alphabet and pronunciation* Dzongkha in Wikipedia:
Русский,
Français
French ( or ) is a Romance language of the Indo-European family. It descended from the Vulgar Latin of the Roman Empire, as did all Romance languages. French evolved from Gallo-Romance, the Latin spoken in Gaul, and more specifically in Nor ...
,
日本語,
Eesti,
English
Pioneering Dzongkha Text To Speech Synthesis(pdf)
– site ''
The Dzongkha Development Commission
The Dzongkha Development Commission (), also called the DDC, is the pre-eminent body on matters pertaining to the Dzongkha language. The DDC was officially established in 1986 by Jigme Singye Wangchuck, the fourth king of Bhutan, to preserve and ...
'' (en
dz
Коряков Ю.Б. Практическая транскрипция для языка дзонг-кэClassical Tibetan-Dzongkha Dictionarysmall>(pdf)
{{Languages of Bhutan
Languages of Bhutan
Languages written in Tibetan script