Languages of Nepal

Languages of Nepal
Official languages Nepali (Gorkhali)[1]
Regional languages   Rajbanshi
Sign languages Nepali Sign Language
Jhankot Sign Language, Jumla Sign Language, Ghandruk Sign Language

The languages of Nepal are languages, predominately of the Indo-Aryan and Tibeto-Burman language families, spoken as mother tongue language by Nepalese people. The 2011 national census lists 123 languages spoken as a mother tongue (first language) in Nepal. [2]

The largest spoken Nepalese language is Nepali, the official language of Nepal formerly called Khaskura then Gorkhali. According to the 2011 national census, the percentage of people with Nepali as the mother tongue is about 44.6%. Other regional Nepalese languages includes Maithili, Limbu, Nepal Bhasa (Newari), Awadhi, Angika , Nepalese English Tharu, Gurung, Tamang, Magar, Sherpa , Kiranti, Sunuwar , Bhojpuri , Rajbanshi, Nepali Sign Language, Jhankot Sign Language, Jumla Sign Language and Ghandruk Sign Language[3]

Classification

Three quarters of the hundred or so languages native to Nepal belong to the Tibeto-Burman branch of the Sino-Tibetan language family; this includes Nepal Bhasa (Newar) (the original language of Kathmandu), the Tamang, Magar and various Rai and Limbu languages.

However, the official and numerically most important language, Nepali, belongs to the Indo-Aryan (Indic) branch of the Indo-European family, so that Indic languages constitute 79% of the population to Tibeto-Burman's 18%, even though most languages of both families are spoken by small numbers of people.

The Dravidian languages are represented by Kurux, and the Munda languages of the Austroasiatic family by Santali and Mundari.

The indigenous languages of Nepal that predated the influx of Indic, Tibeto-Burman, and other families barely survive in the Kusunda language, which is nearly extinct today.

Nepal also has at several indigenous village sign languages, Jhankot Sign Language, Jumla Sign Language, and Ghandruk Sign Language, in addition to the Nepali Sign Language designed for national use.

Constitution

Part 1 of the Constitution of Nepal 2015 (2072 B.S.) has some provisions about the languages of Nepal:[4]
Article 6: All native languages spoken in Nepal are National language of Nepal
Article 7a: Nepali language in Devanagari script is used for Nepal government work
Article 7b: Beside Nepali language, any Provinces can choose one or more other languages spoken by majority population of that province for government work

Language in Nepal

Language Count Percentage
Nepali language 11,826,953 44.63926934
Maithili language 3,092,530 11.67234533
Bhojpuri language 1,584,958 5.982214274
Tharu language 1,529,875 5.774310778
Tamang language 1,353,311 5.10789332
Nepal Bhasa 846,557 3.195217393
Bajjika 793,416 2.994643719
Magar language 788,530 2.976202159
Dotyali language 787,827 2.973548778
Urdu language 691,546 2.610148882
Aabadhi language 501,752 1.89379654
Limbu language 343,603 1.296884063
Gurung language 325,622 1.229017158
Baitadeli language 272,524 1.028605782
Rai language 159,114 0.600554741
Aachami language 142,787 0.53893064
Bantaba language 132,583 0.500416992
Rajbanshi language 122,214 0.461280574
Sherpa language 114,830 0.433410642
Hindi language 77,569 0.292773928
Chamling language 76,800 0.289871439
Baghangi language 67,581 0.255075543
Santhali language 49,858 0.188182425
Chepang language 48,476 0.182966248
Language Not Known 47,718 0.180105278
Danuwar language 45,821 0.172945302
Sunuwar language 37,898 0.143040987
Magahi language 35,614 0.134420331
Uraue language 33,651 0.127011247
Kulung language 33,170 0.125195776
Kham language 27,113 0.102334431
Rajasthani language 25,394 0.095846293
Maghi language 24,422 0.092177608
Thami language 23,151 0.087380387
Bhujel language 21,715 0.081960395
Other language 21,173 0.079914687
Bengali language 21,061 0.079491958
Thulung language 20,659 0.077974662
Yakhka language 19,558 0.073819083
Dhimal language 19,300 0.072845297
Tajpuriya language 18,811 0.070999631
Angika language 18,555 0.070033393
Sangpang language 18,270 0.068957698
Khaling language 14,467 0.054603777
Bambule language 13,470 0.050840733
Kumal language 12,222 0.046130322
Darau language 11,677 0.044073292
Bahing language 11,658 0.044001579
Bajureli language 10,704 0.040400832
Hyomlo language 10,176 0.038407966
Nachiring language 10,041 0.037898426
Thmpu language 9,208 0.034754378
Bote language 8,766 0.033086107
Ghale language 8,092 0.030542183
Dumi language 7,638 0.02882862
Lepcha language 7,499 0.028303983
Puma language 6,686 0.025235422
Dumangli language 6,260 0.023627542
Darchuleli language 5,928 0.022374452
AathPahariya language 5,530 0.020872253
Thakali language 5,242 0.019785235
Jireli language 4,829 0.018226422
Mobahang language 4,650 0.01755081
Sanketik language 4,476 0.01689407
Tibbati language 4,445 0.016777064
Meche language 4,375 0.016512859
Chantyal language 4,283 0.016165617
Raji language 3,758 0.014184074
Lohorung language 3,716 0.01402555
Chintal language 3,712 0.014010453
गन्गाइ भाषा 3,612 0.013633016
Pahari language 3,458 0.013051763
Dailekhi language 3,102 0.011708089
Lhopaa language 3,029 0.01143256
Dura language 2,156 0.008137537
Koche language 2,080 0.007850685
Chiling language 2,046 0.007722356
English language 2,032 0.007669515
Jerojerung language 1,763 0.00665421
Khas language 1,747 0.00659382
Sanskrit language 1,669 0.00629942
Total 26,494,504 100

Nepali is spoken as a lingua franca.

English is taking over as the lingua franca of the educated population as English is sole language of higher education in all the technical, medical, scientific studies and some of the economics and trade. There is a significant rise in the number of English-medium schools throughout the nation and a decline in Nepali-medium schools. Except for the government-funded schools, there are very few Nepali-medium schools.

References

  1. According to Interim Constitution, Nepali is only the official language (article 5, point 2). Other languages spoken as the mother tongue in Nepal are national languages (article 5, point 1). According to article 5, point 3, all languages are accepted as official languages at the regional level. This part of the article is about native names and not about official language.Nepal_Interim_Constitution2007
  2. Official Summary of Census (2011), Central Bureau of Statistics, Nepal
  3. "Major highlights of Nepalese languages" (PDF). Central Bureau of Statistics. 2013. p. 4. Retrieved 12 September 2013.
  4. Nepali Constitution 2015
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