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Languages in Bhutan
There are dozens of languages in Bhutan, all followers of the Tibeto-Burman language family except for the Nepali language, which is an Indo-Aryan language. Dzongkha is the national language, and the only word with a fundamental literary belief in Bhutan, however Lepcha and Nepali languages are literary languages in countries other than Bhutan. Other non-Bhutanese few languages are also verbal along country’s borders and amongst the mainly Nepali-speaking Lhotshampa public in South and East of Bhutan.
Official Language of Bhutan
Dzongkha is the official language of Bhutan. Dzongkha, or Bhutanese, is a Sino-Tibetan language which is spoken by more than half a million individuals in Bhutan country; it is the only official and national language of the Nation of Bhutan. Dzongkha or Bhutanese is a Sino-Tibetan language which is spoken by more than half a million people in Bhutan; it is the national language of Bhutan.
Central Bodish Languages
The Central Bodish languages are a collection of linked Tibetic languages go downhill from Old Tibetan. Most Bhutanese diversities of Bodish languages are of the Southern subcategory. At least six of the twenty expressions and idioms, Bhutan has Central Bodish languages.
Facts About Dzongkha
Dzongkha is a Dominant Bodish language with almost 160,000 speakers as of 2007. It is the leading language in Wes of Bhutan and has been the language of management and training in Bhutan since 1971. The Chocangaca tongue, a "sister language" to Dzongkha, is verbal in the Kurichu Valley of East of Bhutan by about 30,000 people.