Burushaski Language
The Burushaski language, also spelled Burushaki or Burushki, language spoken the Burusho Peoples .It is estimated to have some 90,000 speakers. Burushaski is a linguistic isolate, a language whose genetic relationship to other languages is not yet clear. In this respect it is like Basque, a language spoken in the western Pyrenees of Spain and France.
Burushaki Other names
Other names for the language are Biltum, Khajuna, Kunjut, Brushaski, Burucaki, Burucaski, Burushaki, Burushki, Brugaski, Brushas, Werchikwar and Miśa:ski
Who are Bursho Peoples ?
Bursho people live in the Hunza valley , Nagar ,Chitral and in valleys of Gilgit Baltistan in Pakistan ,as well as in Hari parbat , Jummu and Kashmir India. Their population is estimated to be around 90,000 to100,000.
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Smiling face on burusho people shows The huge hospitality |
Writing Burushaki:
Burushaski is spoken rather than written language. Occasionally the Urdu alphabet is used, and there are some specific characters in unicode, but no fixed orthography exists[citation needed. Adu Wazir Shafi wrote a book Burushaski Razon using a Latin script.
Tibetan sources record a Bru-śa language of the Gilgit valley, which appears to have been Burushaski, whose script was one of five scripts used to write the extinct Zhang-Zhung language. Although Burushaski may once have been a significant literary language, no Bru-śa manuscripts are known to have survived.
Gallery Burushaki:
Map of Bursho lands.
Hunza valley ,Gilgit-baltistan pakistan
Yasin, Gilgit-baltistan Pakistan
Nagar, Gilgit-baltistan Pakistan
Hari parbat, Srinagar india