Mintil | |
---|---|
Mayah, Tanɨm | |
Native to | Malaysia |
Region | Lipis District, Pahang |
Native speakers | 400 (2020) [1] |
Language codes | |
ISO 639-3 |
mzt |
Glottolog |
mint1239 |
ELP | Mintil |
Mintil (alternatively Batek Tanum, Tanɨm, or Mayah) is an Aslian language of Malaysia. It is considered to be a variety of the Batek language.
This section needs expansion. You can help by
adding to it. (February 2021) |
In the late 1960s, Geoffrey Benjamin had come across speakers of Mintil among patients of an Orang Asli hospital at Ulu Gombak, just outside Kuala Lumpur. [2]
The people are commonly referred to as Batek. There are 400 speakers of Mintil in Lipis District, Pahang who call themselves Batɛik ‘in-group people’, Batɛik Tɔm Tanɨm ‘people of the Tanum River’, and Batɛik Mayah [ba'tɛik may'ãh]. Their villages are: [1]
Mintil | |
---|---|
Mayah, Tanɨm | |
Native to | Malaysia |
Region | Lipis District, Pahang |
Native speakers | 400 (2020) [1] |
Language codes | |
ISO 639-3 |
mzt |
Glottolog |
mint1239 |
ELP | Mintil |
Mintil (alternatively Batek Tanum, Tanɨm, or Mayah) is an Aslian language of Malaysia. It is considered to be a variety of the Batek language.
This section needs expansion. You can help by
adding to it. (February 2021) |
In the late 1960s, Geoffrey Benjamin had come across speakers of Mintil among patients of an Orang Asli hospital at Ulu Gombak, just outside Kuala Lumpur. [2]
The people are commonly referred to as Batek. There are 400 speakers of Mintil in Lipis District, Pahang who call themselves Batɛik ‘in-group people’, Batɛik Tɔm Tanɨm ‘people of the Tanum River’, and Batɛik Mayah [ba'tɛik may'ãh]. Their villages are: [1]