བརྒྱ
Sikkimese
Etymology
From Proto-Sino-Tibetan *pV-rja(k).
Numeral
བརྒྱ (brgya)
References
- Norden Tshering; Pema Rinzin Takchungdarpo (2001), ལྙོ་དབྱིན་ ཤན་སྦྱར་གྱི་ ཆིག་མཇོ་ད།། [Lho dbyin shan sbyar gyi chig mjo da., Bhutia-English Dictionary][1] (overall work in English and Sikkimese), Gangtok, Sikkim: Kwality Stores, page 44
Tibetan
| ← 90 | ← 99 | ༡༠༠ 100 |
1,000 → | 100,000 → |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| 10 | ||||
| Cardinal: བརྒྱ (brgya) Ordinal: བརྒྱ་པ (brgya pa) | ||||
Etymology
From Proto-Sino-Tibetan *pV-rja(k). Compare བརྒྱད (brgyad, “eight”).
Pronunciation
- Old Tibetan: /*brɡʲa/
- Lhasa: /ca˩˨/
- Batang: /d͡ʑa˥˧/
- Dêgê: /d͡ʑa˥˧/
- Zêkog: /wɟja/
- Bla-Brang: /hd͡ʑa/
- Old Tibetan:
- IPA(key): /*brɡʲa/ (reconstructed)
- Ü-Tsang
- Tibetan pinyin: gyav
- (Lhasa) IPA(key): /ca˩˨/
- Khams
- Amdo
Numeral
བརྒྱ • (brgya)