Mongolic languages
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The Mongolic languages include Khalkha, Buryat, Kalmyk, Ordos, Dagur, Yugur, Monguor, and a number of other languages.
Status
name | Language | ISO 639 | formalism | state | stems | coverage | location | primary authors | |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
-2 | -3 | ||||||||
apertium-khk
|
Khalkha | (mn)
|
khk
|
HFST (lexc+twol) | development | 441 | ~50.6% | apertium-khk (incubator) | Jonathan |
apertium-bua
|
Buryat |
|
bua
|
HFST (lexc+twol) | prototype | 217 | ~34.8% | apertium-bua (incubator) | Jonathan |
Vulnerability
This table summarizes the vulnerability of various Mongolic languages. Data is derived from the ‘Atlas of the World’s Languages in Danger, © UNESCO, http://www.unesco.org/culture/languages-atlas’.
Language | ISO639-3 | Areas | Vulnerability |
---|---|---|---|
Moghol | mhj
|
Afghanistan | 4 - Critically endangered |
Dagur (Amur) | dta
|
China | 4 - Critically endangered |
Shira Yugur | yuy
|
China | 3 - Severely endangered |
Huzhu Monguor | mjg
|
China | 3 - Severely endangered |
Kangjia | kxs
|
China | 3 - Severely endangered |
Kalmyk | xal
|
Russian Federation | 2 - Definitely endangered |
Bonan | peh
|
China | 2 - Definitely endangered |
Santa | sce
|
China | 1 - Vulnerable |