See also: ལི and ལོ
U+0F63, ལ
TIBETAN LETTER LA

[U+0F62]
Tibetan
[U+0F64]

Translingual edit

Letter edit

  1. Tibetan letter la

Balti edit

Pronunciation edit

Letter edit

(la)

  1. The thirty-third letter of the Balti alphabet, written in the Tibetan script

Dzongkha edit

Etymology 1 edit

Pronunciation edit

Letter edit

(la)

  1. The twenty-sixth letter of the Dzongkha letter

Etymology 2 edit

From Old Tibetan , from Proto-Sino-Tibetan *la (wilderness).

Pronunciation edit

Noun edit

(la)

  1. mountain pass

Kurtöp edit

Pronunciation edit

Etymology 1 edit

From Proto-Sino-Tibetan *la. Cognates include Dzongkha (la) and Tibetan (la).

Noun edit

(la) (locative ལ་ན)

  1. mountain
Derived terms edit

Etymology 2 edit

(This etymology is missing or incomplete. Please add to it, or discuss it at the Etymology scriptorium.)

Noun edit

(la)

  1. spider

References edit

  • G. Hyslop, K. Tshering, K. Lhendrup, P. Chhophyel (2016) Kurtöp-English-Dzongkha dictionary (draft), page 206

Ladakhi edit

Pronunciation edit

Letter edit

(la)

  1. The twenty-sixth letter of the Ladakhi alphabet

Sherpa edit

Pronunciation edit

Letter edit

(la)

  1. The twenty-ninth letter of the Sherpa alphabet, written in the Tibetan script

Sikkimese edit

Pronunciation edit

Letter edit

(la)

  1. The twenty-ninth letter of the Sikkimese alphabet

Tibetan edit

Etymology 1 edit

Pronunciation edit


Letter edit

(la)

  1. The twenty-sixth letter of the Tibetan alphabet

Etymology 2 edit

Perhaps from Sino-Tibetan *la (area far from settlements; wilderness); compare Chinese (OC *laːʔ, *ɦljaʔ, “countryside; field”).

Pronunciation edit


Noun edit

(la)

  1. hillside, mountain pass
Derived terms edit

Etymology 3 edit

Schuessler (2007) connects it to Old Chinese particle (OC *laːlʔ), which is possibly of Sino-Tibetan origin.[1]

Pronunciation edit


Postposition edit

(la)

  1. Marks oblique locatives.
  2. Marks the dative (a recipient in a trivalent construction).
    1. Marks the possessor in have-constructions which use a copular verb.
  3. Marks the subject of verbs such as "like" and "need".
  4. Marks the direct object of verbs which involve contact but no change of state.
Usage notes edit

When the preceding syllable ends in a vowel, la becomes r and goes in the coda of the preceding syllable. For example, "in Lhasa" is ལྷ་སར (lha sar).

References edit

  1. ^ Schuessler, Axel. (2007). An Etymological Dictionary of Old Chinese. University of Hawaii Press. p. 561