Balti | |
---|---|
Balti Bhotia | |
སྦལ་ཏི་སྐད། | |
Native to | Pakistan, India |
Region | Baltistan and small pockets in Ladakh, Karachi, Rawalpindi/Islamabad and Lahore |
Ethnicity | Baltipa |
Native speakers | c.484,000 in Pakistan (2018)[1][2] |
Sino-Tibetan
| |
Tibetan script, Nastaliq script | |
Language codes | |
ISO 639-2 | sit |
ISO 639-3 | bft |
ELP | Balti |
Balti (སྦལ་ཏི་སྐད།) or Bhotia is Tibetic language spoken in the Baltistan region of Gilgit Baltistan northeastern Pakistan and a few neighboring villages of the disputed territory of Indian-administered Kashmir.[3] The language is an archaic dialect of the Tibetan language, but many of the consonants of Classical Tibetan that are silent in most modern Tibetan dialects are pronounced in Balti.[4]
Greeks used the word Byaltae instead of Bal-ti, which in Tibetan means water gorge. The historian Ptolemy who was also a general in the army of Alexander the Great had named the region (Byaltae) in his book. Baltistan is the Persian translation of the native term Baltiyul meaning “The Homeland of Balti”. The people belonging to Balti nationality are settled on both banks of the river Indus from Turtuk (in the east) to Haramosh (in the west) and from Karakoram range (in the north) to Deosai plains (in the south). Majority of Balti language speakers are of Tibetan origin. However people from Indus Plains (Monpa's) and Central Asia (Horpa's) migrated to this area in different periods of ancient times, on account of different reasons and after merging in the prevailing Tibetan society, they also speak the Balti language, which is a branch of the ancient Tibetan language.[5] Small pockets of Brokskat, Purgi, Changthang and Ladakhi also exist in Baltistan.
The Balti people are a very forbearing, cheerful,brave and hospitable people. They ruled the area of Ladakh and Western Tibet under the Makpon reign (from 12th century to 1840 A.D.).
There are several Balti communities in Pakistan's urban areas farther south, that is in Lahore, Islamabad, in Karachi and other places.
The Balti language has kept many honorific words like all other Tibetan dialects and many other languages. Below are a few examples:
Ordinary Balti | Honorific | Ladakhi | Meaning |
---|---|---|---|
Ata | Baba | Aba | Father |
Ano/Amo | Zizi | Ama | Mother |
Kaka | Kacho | Acho | Brother (elder) |
Bustring | Zung | Nama | Wife |
Momo | Jangmocho | Ajang | Maternal uncle |
Nene | Nenecho | Ane | Aunt |
Bu | Bucho | Tugu | Son |
Fru | Nono | Boy | |
Apo | Apocho | Meme | Grandfather |
Api | Apicho | Abi | Grandmother |
Ashe | Ashcho | Singmo | Sister (elder) |
Zo | bjes | Zo | Eat |
Thung | bjes | Thung | Drink |
Ong | Shokhs | Yong | Come |
Zer | Kasal-byung | Zer | Speak/Say |
Ngid tong | gZim tong | Ngid tong | Sleep (go to) |
Lagpa | Phyaq-laq/g | Lagpa | Hand/Arm |
Khyang | Yang/Yari-phyaqpo | Khyorang | You |
Kanma | gzok-po | Leg |
Official languages | |
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Other languages (by administrative unit) | |
Related topics |