Zhaba is a poorly attested Qiangic language of Tibet spoken by 8,000 people in the Zhamai district of Yajiang County.
There is a description of the language written in Chinese: Huang Bufan 1991.[3]
References
- ^ Zhaba at Ethnologue (18th ed., 2015)
- ^ Nordhoff, Sebastian; Hammarström, Harald; Forkel, Robert; Haspelmath, Martin, eds. (2013). "Zhaba". Glottolog. Leipzig: Max Planck Institute for Evolutionary Anthropology.
- ^ Huang Bufan (黄布凡), 1991: 扎坝语 [Zhaba language]. In Dai Qingxia, Huang Bufan, Fu Ailan, Renzeng-Wangmu, and Liu Juhuang (戴庆厦、黄布凡、傅爱 兰、仁增旺姆、刘菊黄) Zangmianyu Shiwu-zhong (藏缅语十五种: Fifteen Tibeto-Burman languages). Beijing: Beijing Yanshan Chubanshe, pp. 64-97.
|
|
Official |
|
|
Regional |
|
|
Indigenous |
|
|
Minority |
|
|
Varieties of Chinese |
|
|
Creole |
|
|
Sign |
|
|
- GX = Guangxi
- HK = Hong Kong
- MC = Macau
- NM = Inner Mongolia
- XJ = Xinjiang
- XZ = Tibet
|
|