(best viewed at 800 x 600)


http://www.shambles.net
 
  Tibetan


An exhibition of Tibetan Calligraphy
http://www.asianart.com/exhibitions/calligraphy/
An exhibition of Tibetan Calligraphy
Forty-six works written in ink on paper by P. N. Dhumkhang
Down arrowUp arrow
grey line
Tibetan Language Institute
http://www.tibetanlanguage.org/
Tibetan Language Institute
Down arrowUp arrow
grey line
Tibetan Studies WWW Virtual Library
http://www.ciolek.com/WWWVL-TibetanStudies.html
Tibetan Studies WWW Virtual Library
This document keeps track of leading information facilities in the field of Tibetan studies. It is a part of the Asian Studies WWW Virtual Library and of its specialist subsection, the East Asia WWW Virtual Library.
Down arrowUp arrow
grey line
Sino-Tibetan languages
https://www.infoplease.com/ce6/society/A0845365.html
Sino-Tibetan languages
Sino-Tibetan languages, family of languages spoken by over a billion people in central and SE Asia. This linguistic family is second only to the Indo-European stock in the number of its speakers. It is usually said to have three subfamilies: Tibeto-Burman, Chinese, and Tai, or Thai. One school of thought, however, assigns the Tai and Chinese languages to a single subfamily called Sino-Siamese or Sinitic.
Down arrowUp arrow
grey line
Tibetan Buddhist Internet Radio
http://www.lamrim.com/
Tibetan Buddhist Internet Radio
Down arrowUp arrow
grey line
Tibetan-English-Dictionary
https://www.diamondway-buddhism.org/
Tibetan-English-Dictionary
The Dharma Dictionary is an ongoing project involved in compiling Buddhist terminology and translation terms to bridge the Tibetan and English languages. Begun in 1979, it has slowly grown to a database of approx 5 megabytes with 65,000 entries.
Comparatively, the Tibetan-English Dictionary of Sarat Chandra Das has approximately 27,000 entries.
The project is supported by Rangjung Yeshe Translations and Publications, located in the Kathmandu valley of Nepal.
Down arrowUp arrow
grey line
Tibetan language on Wikipedia
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Tibetan_language
Tibetan language on Wikipedia
The Tibetan language is spoken primarily by the Tibetan people who live across a wide area of eastern Central Asia bordering South Asia, as well as by overseas Tibetan communities all over the world.
Several forms of Tibetan are also spoken by various peoples of northern Pakistan and India in areas like Baltistan and Ladakh, which are both in or around Kashmir.
Its classical written form is a major regional literary language; particularly its use in Buddhist literature.
Down arrowUp arrow
grey line



use this box to search more on Shambles (powered by Google) : safe filtering is ON
Google  
Custom Search
Use this form to submit links to add to the list above (the webmaster will check the link before publication)
 Heading:
 Address:
 Please copy
 Security Code
    
 Description:
grey line
webkeeper: Chris Smith csmith@csmith.info Shambles RSS Feed :
( 7 entries) | Click here to report broken links or problems |
grey line
Custom Search


webpage with others

Take a guided tour of the Shambles website

Web 2.0 in Teaching and Learning on the Shambles website

The Shambles 'Forest of Theme Blogs'

Podcasts and Podcasting on Shambles

Shambles newsletter

Workshops offered by Chris Smith

Chris Smith's Personal Learning Network

chat live online

Second Life ... 3D online virtual world

International Schools Island in Second Life

Shamblesguru on YouTube ... video online

ShamblesPAD (built on Etherpad) .. Collaborate on documents in really real-time


Follow me on Twitter : Shamblesguru


share this page on facebook
Share

 
© copyright
The Education Project Asia
Support Shambles with a donation (through PayPal) if you feel suitable ...  many thanks if you do  .... Chris

QR Code Shambles mobile


QR Code leading to a Shambles mobile web page

| Shambles Home | Brunei Schools : bn | Burma/Myanmar Schools : mm | Cambodia Schools : kh | China Schools : cn | Hong Kong Schools : hk | India Schools : in | Indonesia Schools : id | Japan Schools : jp | Laos Schools : la | Macau Schools : mo | Malaysia Schools : my | Philippines Schools : ph | Singapore Schools : sg | South Korea Schools : kr | Taiwan Schools : tw | Thailand Schools : th | Vietnam Schools : vn | email webmaster (Chris Smith) |

Pause
Resume