Pagkakaiba sa mga pagbabago kan "Paragamit:ShiminUfesoj/kartong-baybay"

Content deleted Content added
No edit summary
No edit summary
Linya 184:
1,000,000 milion, saka milion
 
{{short description|Austronesian language spoken in Indonesia}}{{distinguish|Tataramon na Bima (Bantu)}}{{Infobox language|name=Bima|script=[[alpabetong Latin|Latin]], [[script na Mbojo|Mbojo]]|glotto=bima1247|iso3=bhp|dia5=Mbojo|dia4=Bima|dia3=Toloweri|dia2=Sangar (Sanggar)|dia1=Kolo|fam3=[[Mga tataramon na Sentral–Subangang Malayo-Polinesyo|Sentral–Subangan MP]]|nativename=''Nggahi Mbojo''|fam2=[[Mga tataramon na Malayo-Polinesyo|Malayo-Polinesyo]] (MP)|familycolor=Austronesyo|ref=e18|date=1989|speakers=500,000|region=[[Sumbawa]]|states=[[Indonesya]]|glottorefname=Bima}}An '''tataramon na Bima''', o '''Bimanes''' (Bima: ''Nggahi Mbojo'', [[Tataramon na Malay|Malay]]: ''Bahasa Bima''), sarong tataramon na Austronesyo na ipinagtataraman sa kabangabg subangan kan Isla nin [[Sumbawa]], [[Indonesia]], na kung sain nagheheras ini sa mga parataram nin [[tataramon na Sumbawa]]. BimaKaiba territorysa includesmga theteritoryo kan Bima an [[SanggarRawis Peninsulanin Sanggar]], wherena thekung extinctsain Papuanan languagepuho' nang tataramon na Papuano na [[TamboraTataramon languagena Tambora|Tambora]] wasna onceminsan spokenipigtataram. "Bima"Sarong isexonym an exonym"Bima"; thean autochthonous namena forpangaran thepara territorysa isteritoryo iyo an "Mbojo" andasin theminatukoy languagepara issa referredtataramon toiyo an as "Nggahi Mbojo." ThereIgwang arelagpas overkabangang halfmilyon a millionna Bimaparataram speakersnin Bima. NeitherNi thean mga tawo nin Bima noro thean Sumbawa, peopleigwa havenin alphabetsalpabeto ofpara theirsa ownsaindang forsadiring theymga usealpabeto thepara alphabetsgamiton ofninda thean alpabeto kan [[BugisTataramon languagena Bugis|Bugis]] andasin thean [[MalayTataramon languagena Malay]] indifferentlyna msgkaiba.<ref>{{cite book|title=Researches into the Physical History of Mankind Volume 5: Containing Researches Into the History of the Oceanic and of the American Nations|author=James Cowles Prichard|publisher=Sherwood, Gilbert, and Piper|year=1874|asin=B0041T3N9G}}</ref>
 
Long thought to be closely related to the [[Sumba languages|languages of Sumba]] Island to the southeast, this assumption has been refuted by Blust (2008), which makes Bima a primary branch within the [[Central–Eastern Malayo-Polynesian languages|Central–Eastern Malayo-Polynesian]] subgroup.<ref>Blust, R. (2008). [https://www.jstor.org/stable/20172340 Is There a Bima-Sumba Subgroup?] ''Oceanic Linguistics'', 47(1), 45-113.</ref>