Jirel language

Jirel is a Southern Tibetic language of Nepal. It is spoken in Jiri, Tshetrapa village, Jungu village, Cheppu village of Dolakha District and Sindhupalchok and different parts of Nepal.

Jirel
Native toNepal
EthnicityJirel
Native speakers
4,800 (2011 census)[1]
Language codes
ISO 639-3jul
Glottologjire4202
ELPJirel[2]

Long been in discussion that the Jirels are the Kirats as other Tibeto-Burmans. But further research is must to prove that they come from Kirats. Very weak literature without evidence is presented by some authors until now claiming that they are the Kirats. They have claimed that they are animists so they are Kirats. They adopted some cultural and religious practice from Sunuwars and Sherpas when they began to live and share with them. The language they use is the most powerful evidence that tells that, that no doubt, they come from a Tibetan ethnic tribe do.Besides, their physical appearance clearly depicts it. As their family name suggests that they are originally of Tibetan origin.

They mainly practice Buddhism. Lamas are their priests. They also have Shamans who are called Phombo, which is derived from the word, Boo, the Tibetan Tantric philosophy.

Jirel Uchen, which is also called Sambhota Script is their script or calligraphy. This can be found at religious monuments like chautaras, chortens, monasteries. Jirel Lamas use this script. The script is shown below:

ཀ ka [ká] ཁ kha [kʰá] ག ga [ɡà/kʰːà] ང nga [ŋà] ཅ ca [tɕá] ཆ cha [tɕʰá] ཇ ja [dʑà/tɕʰːà] ཉ nya [ɲà] ཏ ta [tá] ཐ tha [tʰá] ད da [dà/tʰːà] ན na [nà] པ pa [pá] ཕ pha [pʰá] བ ba [bà/pʰːà] མ ma [mà] ཙ tsa [tsá] ཚ tsha [tsʰá] ཛ dza [dzà/tsʰːà] ཝ wa [wà] ཞ zha [ʑà] ཟ za [zà] འ 'a [ʔà] ཡ ya [jà] ར ra [rà] ལ la [là] ཤ sha [ɕá] ས sa [sá] ཧ ha [há] ཨ a [ʔá

The similarity of Jirel language that with the language used in Buddhist holy books is the powerful evidence to claim and believe that they come from Tibetan Origin. It is believed that more than 80 percent of Jirel dictions go with Tibetan language where only 35-40 percent of diction is found to be close to pure tibetan diction.

References

Relevant literature

  • Strahm, Esther and Anita Maibaum. 1999. Verb pair in Jirel. Notes on Tibeto-Burman 4:1-24.
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