Mugom dialect explained

Mugom
Familycolor:Sino-Tibetan
Ethnicity:Mugali
Speakers:7,500
Date:2011 census
Ref:e26
Fam2:Tibeto-Burman
Fam3:Tibeto-Kanauri
Fam4:Bodish
Fam5:Tibetic
Iso3:muk
Glotto:mugo1238
Glottorefname:Mugom
Fam6:Central Tibetan
Coordinates:29.588920, 82.447829
Fam7:Mugom-Karmarong
States:Nepal

Mugom language, also known as Mugom-ket, is the Sino-Tibetan language of the Mugali people of Mugu district in Nepal (ISO 639-3: muk, GlottoCode: mugo1238).[1] [2]

Language name

Mugom speakers self-identify as “Moa,” and are referred to as “Mugali” by non-Tibetan peoples of the area. Mugom speakers simply refer to their language as “mugu jillako bhote bhasa,” lit. ‘the Tibetan language of Mugu district.’

Speakers

Mugom is spoken by roughly 500 people originating from the village of Mugugau along the Mugu Karnali River in Mugum Karmarong Rural Municipality.[3] [4] The language is specifically associated with Mugali people. A small diaspora community of Mugali exists in Bouddha, in the northeast part of Kathmandu.

Language vitality

In 2002, a sociolinguistic study found that Mugom speakers in diaspora consistently used their own language with each other, and that the language was being transmitted to children. The Ethnologue has assigned EGIDS level 6a “vigorous” to the Mugom-Karmarong (ISO 639-3: muk). This level denotes oral use of Mugom is stable, and that the speaker population is not decreasing.[5]

Resources

Notes

There have been attempts to create health-education materials aimed at the Mugali and Karani that take into account their culture and levels of literacy specifically.

External links

Notes and References

  1. Web site: Mugom . 2022-07-01 . Ethnologue . en.
  2. Web site: Glottolog 4.6 - Mugom . 2022-07-01 . glottolog.org.
  3. Japola, Mari-Sisco. (2002). Mugom Survey. United Mission to Nepal, Mugu Education Project internal report: unpublished.
  4. Central Bureau of Statistics. (2014). National population and housing census 2011. Kathmandu: Government of Nepal.
  5. Lewis, M. Paul, and Gary F. Simons. (2016). Sustaining language use: Perspectives on community based language development. Dallas, TX: SIL International.