misplaced vowels or missing conjuncts instead of Tibetan characters. Dzongkha (རྫོང་ཁ་; [d͡zòŋkʰɑ́]) is a Tibeto-Burman language that is the official...
29 KB (2,225 words) - 04:05, 24 July 2024
Roman Dzongkha is the official romanization of Dzongkha, the national language of Bhutan. It was developed by the Dzongkha Development Commission in 1991...
14 KB (384 words) - 02:54, 30 June 2024
Dzongkha Braille or Bhutanese Braille, is the braille alphabet for writing Dzongkha, the national language of Bhutan. It is based on English braille,...
8 KB (211 words) - 16:18, 30 August 2023
The Dzongkha keyboard layout scheme is designed as a simple means for inputting Dzongkha (རྫོང་ཁ) and classical Tibetan (ཆོས་སྐད) text on computers. This...
3 KB (190 words) - 12:00, 18 February 2024
Dzongkha Bumthang Kurtöp Dzala Khampa Tibetan Lakha Nyen 'Olekha (Monpa) Brokkat Chocangacakha Chali Dakpa Brokpa Nepali Nepali Nepali Lepcha Lhokpu Kheng...
16 KB (1,400 words) - 15:36, 7 August 2024
Dzongkha, the national language of Bhutan, has two numeral systems, one vigesimal (base 20), and a modern decimal system. The vigesimal system remains...
4 KB (254 words) - 16:28, 29 April 2024
Dzongkha grammar describes the morphology and syntax of Dzongkha, a Sino-Tibetan language spoken in Bhutan. This article uses Roman Dzongkha to indicate...
8 KB (448 words) - 09:52, 2 August 2024
Tibetan script (category Dzongkha language)
script, and used to write certain Tibetic languages, including Tibetan, Dzongkha, Sikkimese, Ladakhi, Jirel and Balti. It was originally developed c.620...
43 KB (2,866 words) - 23:40, 9 August 2024
King of Bhutan (category Articles containing Dzongkha-language text)
'Dragon King') is the head of state of the Kingdom of Bhutan. In the Dzongkha language, Bhutan is known as Drukyul which translates as "The Land of the...
16 KB (1,273 words) - 14:14, 26 July 2024
Jigme Khesar Namgyel Wangchuck (category Articles containing Dzongkha-language text)
Wangchuck (Dzongkha: འཇིགས་མེད་གེ་སར་རྣམ་རྒྱལ་དབང་ཕྱུག་, Wylie: jigs med ge sar rnam rgyal dbang phyug; born 21 February 1980) is the Druk Gyalpo (Dzongkha: Dragon...
37 KB (3,363 words) - 14:50, 15 July 2024
Bible translations into Dzongkha is about the translations of the Bible into Dzongkha and other languages of Bhutan, the independent country at the foot...
2 KB (170 words) - 07:14, 4 March 2024
Jetsun Pema (category Articles containing Dzongkha-language text)
Jetsun Pema (Dzongkha: རྗེ་བཙུན་པདྨ་; Wylie: rje btsun padma, born on 4 June 1990) is the Druk Gyaltsuen (Dzongkha: Dragon Queen) of Bhutan, as the wife...
19 KB (1,635 words) - 06:24, 10 August 2024
Bhutan (category Articles containing Dzongkha-language text)
misplaced vowels or missing conjuncts instead of Tibetan characters. Bhutan (Dzongkha: འབྲུག་རྒྱལ་ཁབ), officially the Kingdom of Bhutan, is a landlocked country...
197 KB (18,209 words) - 12:26, 6 August 2024
Gangkhar Puensum (category Articles containing Dzongkha-language text)
Gangkhar Puensum (Dzongkha: གངས་དཀར་སྤུན་གསུམ་, romanized: Kangkar Punsum, alternatively, Gangkar Punsum or Gankar Punzum) is the highest mountain in Bhutan...
7 KB (593 words) - 15:16, 10 June 2024
dialects (Nubchok Rongpä Tö-kä) Kongpo Lhokha Southern section (7 groups): Dzongkha Lhoke Choča-ngača (also called Tsamang-Tsakhaling) Brokpa (Mera Sakteng...
43 KB (3,723 words) - 14:32, 29 July 2024
Bhutanese ngultrum (category Articles containing Dzongkha-language text)
missing conjuncts instead of Tibetan characters. The ngultrum (/əŋˈɡʌltrəm/; Dzongkha: དངུལ་ཀྲམ [ŋýˈʈúm], symbol: Nu., code: BTN) is the currency of the Kingdom...
18 KB (951 words) - 22:33, 11 June 2024
Ema datshi (category Articles containing Dzongkha-language text)
Ema datshi (Dzongkha: ཨེ་མ་དར་ཚིལ་; Wylie: e-ma dar-tshil) is a spicy Bhutanese stew made from hot chili peppers and cheese. It is among the most famous...
11 KB (1,250 words) - 10:29, 26 May 2024
རྫོང་ཁ་ཨིང་ལིཤ་ཤན་སྦྱར་ཚིག་མཛོད། ༼ཨ༽" [Dzongkha-English Dictionary: "A"]. Dzongkha-English Online Dictionary. Dzongkha Development Commission, Government...
6 KB (575 words) - 11:02, 10 July 2024
characters. The Dzongkha Development Commission (རྫོང་ཁ་གོང་འཕེལ་ལྷན་ཚོགས; DDC) is the pre-eminent body on matters pertaining to the Dzongkha language. The...
3 KB (210 words) - 06:30, 23 June 2024
and Dzongkha; weekly Business Bhutan — English and Dzongkha; weekly Druk Neytshul — Dzongkha Druk Yoedzer — Dzongkha Gyalchi Sarshog — Dzongkha The Journalist...
2 KB (128 words) - 12:46, 27 September 2023
Flag of Bhutan (category Articles containing Dzongkha-language text)
flag of Bhutan (Dzongkha: འབྲུག་ཡུལ་རྒྱལ་དར) is one of the national symbols of Bhutan. The flag features a Chinese dragon (druk in Dzongkha, the Bhutanese...
21 KB (2,299 words) - 07:24, 22 June 2024
(United Kingdom) Disputed (1) Kashmir Languages Official languages: Bengali Dzongkha English Hindi Maldivian Nepali Sinhala Tamil Urdu Time zones List: Bangladesh...
40 KB (4,154 words) - 12:04, 6 August 2024
Keyboard layout (section Dzongkha (Bhutan))
Tibetan-Otani. The Bhutanese Standard for a Dzongkha keyboard layout standardizes the layout for typing Dzongkha, and other languages using the Tibetan script...
140 KB (15,749 words) - 18:25, 9 August 2024
Tartan (category Articles containing Dzongkha-language text)
Tartan (Scottish Gaelic: breacan [ˈpɾʲɛxkən]) is a patterned cloth with crossing horizontal and vertical bands in multiple colours, forming simple or complex...
542 KB (59,733 words) - 20:59, 6 August 2024
Tatar Croatian Czech Danish Dari Dhivehi Dinka Dombe Dogri Dutch Dyula Dzongkha English Esperanto Estonian Ewe Faroese Fijian Filipino Finnish Fon French...
123 KB (9,593 words) - 09:19, 7 August 2024
Druk Tsenden (category Articles containing Dzongkha-language text)
missing conjuncts instead of Tibetan characters. "Druk Tsenden" (Dzongkha: འབྲུག་ཙན་དན, Dzongkha pronunciation: [ɖ(ʐ)ṳ̀e̯ t͡sén.d̥è̤n]; "The Thunder Dragon...
10 KB (783 words) - 08:12, 20 July 2024
popularity of Bhutanese films in his own country with the release of his Dzongkha film Sem Gawai Tasha in 2011. Dorji is well known for his own film stunts...
8 KB (587 words) - 13:17, 12 June 2024
The Lhop or Doya people (Dzongkha: ལྷོབ་ ་ཡང་ན་ དྲོ་ཡ) are a little-known tribe of southwest Bhutan. The Bhutanese believe them to be the aboriginal inhabitants...
2 KB (151 words) - 13:38, 11 July 2024
Bhutanese passport (category CS1 Dzongkha-language sources (dz))
which constitutes a part of modern-day Bhutan, feudal passbooks or dzeng (Dzongkha: ཛེང) were issued to court messengers in order to travel from kingdom to...
6 KB (511 words) - 10:29, 28 July 2024
Ngalop people (category Articles containing Dzongkha-language text)
The Ngalop (Dzongkha: སྔ་ལོང་པ་ Wylie: snga long pa; "earliest risen people" or "first converted people" according to folk etymology) are people of Tibetan...
7 KB (742 words) - 17:00, 19 June 2024