buryat-mongolian

  • 11Mongolian Languages*, Table — ▪ Table Table 39: Mongolian Languages*   approximate number of speakers Western group      Oyrat (Oirat; Mongolia 205,000, China 140,0001)              345,000       Kalmyk (Kalmuck; Russia)             150,000  Eastern group      Mongol… …

    Universalium

  • 12Buryat — n. Mongol person from south east Russia; Mongolian language of the Buryat people …

    English contemporary dictionary

  • 13Buryat — [ bʊəjat] noun (plural same or Buryats) 1》 a member of a people living in southern Siberia, Mongolia, and northern China. 2》 the language of the Buryat, related to Mongolian …

    English new terms dictionary

  • 14Traditional Mongolian alphabet — Mongolian alphabet ᠮᠣᠩᠭᠣᠯ ᠪᠢᠴᠢᠭ …

    Wikipedia

  • 15Outer Mongolian Revolution of 1921 — History of Mongolia This article is part of a series Ancient History …

    Wikipedia

  • 16Middle Mongolian language — Middle Mongolian Spoken in Mongolia, China, Russia Extinct developed into Classical Mongolian by the 17th century Language family Mongolic Middle Mongo …

    Wikipedia

  • 17Deel (clothing) — Buryat Mongolian dress deel (see the square opening edges on the chest area) for a man (left) and an earlier dress deel for a woman (right) showing more elaborate design including taller hat. A deel (Mongolian: дээл [teːɮ]) is the traditional… …

    Wikipedia

  • 18Galdanova, Galina R. —    Buryat ethnologist of Buryat, Mongolian, and Siberian shamanisms. She is senior researcher and Mongolian finds keeper at the Institute of Oriental, Mongolian, and Tibetan Studies of the Siberian Branch of the Russian Academy of Sciences …

    Historical dictionary of shamanism

  • 19Cyrillic alphabets — Distribution of the Cyrillic script worldwide. The dark green shows the countries that use Cyrillic as the one main script; the lighter green those that use Cyrillic alongside another official script. This is a list of national variants of the… …

    Wikipedia

  • 20Buddhism in Russia — TOC Historically, Buddhism was incorporated into Russian lands as early as the late 16th century, when Russian explorers travelled to and settled in Siberia and what is now the Russian Far East. It is also believed that Indian King Ashoka had… …

    Wikipedia