TitleTypeProviderYear
Tampuan Bible គម្ពីរ​ភាសា​ទំពួនBible2020
The Birth of JesusResourcebible-for-children
The Miracles of JesusResourcebible-for-children
The First EasterResourcebible-for-children
Heaven Gods Beautiful HomeResourcebible-for-children
Good NewsAudiogrn
Meeting the Creator GodAudiogrn
LukeFilmslumo-project
Tampuan BibleResourcescripture-app-builder
The HopeFilmsthe-hope-film

Tampuan is the language of Tampuan people indigenous to the mountainous regions of Ratanakiri Province in Cambodia. As of the 2008 census there were 31,000 speakers, which amounts to 21% of the province's population. It is closely related to Bahnar and Alak, the three of which form the Central Bahnaric language grouping within the Mon-Khmer language family according to traditional classification. Sidwell's more recent classification groups Tampuan on an equal level with Bahnar and the South Bahnaric languages in a larger Central Bahnar group. The Tampuan language has no native writing. EMU International began linguistic research in 1995 and produced an alphabet using Khmer letters. The alphabet was further refined by linguists from International Cooperation for Cambodia (ICC) and the Ministry of Education, Youth, and Sport (MOEYS). The modified Khmer script was approved by MOEYS in 2003 for use in bilingual education programs for Tampuan implemented by ICC, UNESCO, and CARE.

TítuloTipoProveedorAño
Tampuan Bible គម្ពីរ​ភាសា​ទំពួនBiblia2020
The Birth of JesusRecursobible-for-children
The Miracles of JesusRecursobible-for-children
The First EasterRecursobible-for-children
Heaven Gods Beautiful HomeRecursobible-for-children
Good NewsAudiogrn
Meeting the Creator GodAudiogrn
LukePelículaslumo-project
Tampuan BibleRecursoscripture-app-builder
The HopePelículasthe-hope-film

Tampuan is the language of Tampuan people indigenous to the mountainous regions of Ratanakiri Province in Cambodia. As of the 2008 census there were 31,000 speakers, which amounts to 21% of the province's population. It is closely related to Bahnar and Alak, the three of which form the Central Bahnaric language grouping within the Mon-Khmer language family according to traditional classification. Sidwell's more recent classification groups Tampuan on an equal level with Bahnar and the South Bahnaric languages in a larger Central Bahnar group. The Tampuan language has no native writing. EMU International began linguistic research in 1995 and produced an alphabet using Khmer letters. The alphabet was further refined by linguists from International Cooperation for Cambodia (ICC) and the Ministry of Education, Youth, and Sport (MOEYS). The modified Khmer script was approved by MOEYS in 2003 for use in bilingual education programs for Tampuan implemented by ICC, UNESCO, and CARE.

TítuloTipoProvedorAno
Tampuan Bible គម្ពីរ​ភាសា​ទំពួនBíblia2020
The Birth of JesusRecursobible-for-children
The Miracles of JesusRecursobible-for-children
The First EasterRecursobible-for-children
Heaven Gods Beautiful HomeRecursobible-for-children
Good NewsÁudiogrn
Meeting the Creator GodÁudiogrn
LukeFilmeslumo-project
Tampuan BibleRecursoscripture-app-builder
The HopeFilmesthe-hope-film

Tampuan is the language of Tampuan people indigenous to the mountainous regions of Ratanakiri Province in Cambodia. As of the 2008 census there were 31,000 speakers, which amounts to 21% of the province's population. It is closely related to Bahnar and Alak, the three of which form the Central Bahnaric language grouping within the Mon-Khmer language family according to traditional classification. Sidwell's more recent classification groups Tampuan on an equal level with Bahnar and the South Bahnaric languages in a larger Central Bahnar group. The Tampuan language has no native writing. EMU International began linguistic research in 1995 and produced an alphabet using Khmer letters. The alphabet was further refined by linguists from International Cooperation for Cambodia (ICC) and the Ministry of Education, Youth, and Sport (MOEYS). The modified Khmer script was approved by MOEYS in 2003 for use in bilingual education programs for Tampuan implemented by ICC, UNESCO, and CARE.

TitreTypeFournisseurAnnée
Tampuan Bible គម្ពីរ​ភាសា​ទំពួនBible2020
The Birth of JesusRessourcebible-for-children
The Miracles of JesusRessourcebible-for-children
The First EasterRessourcebible-for-children
Heaven Gods Beautiful HomeRessourcebible-for-children
Good NewsAudiogrn
Meeting the Creator GodAudiogrn
LukeFilmslumo-project
Tampuan BibleRessourcescripture-app-builder
The HopeFilmsthe-hope-film

Tampuan is the language of Tampuan people indigenous to the mountainous regions of Ratanakiri Province in Cambodia. As of the 2008 census there were 31,000 speakers, which amounts to 21% of the province's population. It is closely related to Bahnar and Alak, the three of which form the Central Bahnaric language grouping within the Mon-Khmer language family according to traditional classification. Sidwell's more recent classification groups Tampuan on an equal level with Bahnar and the South Bahnaric languages in a larger Central Bahnar group. The Tampuan language has no native writing. EMU International began linguistic research in 1995 and produced an alphabet using Khmer letters. The alphabet was further refined by linguists from International Cooperation for Cambodia (ICC) and the Ministry of Education, Youth, and Sport (MOEYS). The modified Khmer script was approved by MOEYS in 2003 for use in bilingual education programs for Tampuan implemented by ICC, UNESCO, and CARE.

शीर्षकप्रकारप्रदातावर्ष
Tampuan Bible គម្ពីរ​ភាសា​ទំពួនबाइबल2020
The Birth of Jesusसंसाधनbible-for-children
The Miracles of Jesusसंसाधनbible-for-children
The First Easterसंसाधनbible-for-children
Heaven Gods Beautiful Homeसंसाधनbible-for-children
Good Newsऑडियोgrn
Meeting the Creator Godऑडियोgrn
Lukeफ़िल्मेंlumo-project
Tampuan Bibleसंसाधनscripture-app-builder
The Hopeफ़िल्मेंthe-hope-film

Tampuan is the language of Tampuan people indigenous to the mountainous regions of Ratanakiri Province in Cambodia. As of the 2008 census there were 31,000 speakers, which amounts to 21% of the province's population. It is closely related to Bahnar and Alak, the three of which form the Central Bahnaric language grouping within the Mon-Khmer language family according to traditional classification. Sidwell's more recent classification groups Tampuan on an equal level with Bahnar and the South Bahnaric languages in a larger Central Bahnar group. The Tampuan language has no native writing. EMU International began linguistic research in 1995 and produced an alphabet using Khmer letters. The alphabet was further refined by linguists from International Cooperation for Cambodia (ICC) and the Ministry of Education, Youth, and Sport (MOEYS). The modified Khmer script was approved by MOEYS in 2003 for use in bilingual education programs for Tampuan implemented by ICC, UNESCO, and CARE.

العنوانالنوعالمزودالسنة
Tampuan Bible គម្ពីរ​ភាសា​ទំពួនكتاب مقدس2020
The Birth of Jesusالموردbible-for-children
The Miracles of Jesusالموردbible-for-children
The First Easterالموردbible-for-children
Heaven Gods Beautiful Homeالموردbible-for-children
Good Newsصوتياتgrn
Meeting the Creator Godصوتياتgrn
Lukeالأفلامlumo-project
Tampuan Bibleالموردscripture-app-builder
The Hopeالأفلامthe-hope-film

Tampuan is the language of Tampuan people indigenous to the mountainous regions of Ratanakiri Province in Cambodia. As of the 2008 census there were 31,000 speakers, which amounts to 21% of the province's population. It is closely related to Bahnar and Alak, the three of which form the Central Bahnaric language grouping within the Mon-Khmer language family according to traditional classification. Sidwell's more recent classification groups Tampuan on an equal level with Bahnar and the South Bahnaric languages in a larger Central Bahnar group. The Tampuan language has no native writing. EMU International began linguistic research in 1995 and produced an alphabet using Khmer letters. The alphabet was further refined by linguists from International Cooperation for Cambodia (ICC) and the Ministry of Education, Youth, and Sport (MOEYS). The modified Khmer script was approved by MOEYS in 2003 for use in bilingual education programs for Tampuan implemented by ICC, UNESCO, and CARE.

タイトル種類提供元
Tampuan Bible គម្ពីរ​ភាសា​ទំពួន聖書2020
The Birth of Jesusリソースbible-for-children
The Miracles of Jesusリソースbible-for-children
The First Easterリソースbible-for-children
Heaven Gods Beautiful Homeリソースbible-for-children
Good News音声grn
Meeting the Creator God音声grn
Luke映像lumo-project
Tampuan Bibleリソースscripture-app-builder
The Hope映像the-hope-film

Tampuan is the language of Tampuan people indigenous to the mountainous regions of Ratanakiri Province in Cambodia. As of the 2008 census there were 31,000 speakers, which amounts to 21% of the province's population. It is closely related to Bahnar and Alak, the three of which form the Central Bahnaric language grouping within the Mon-Khmer language family according to traditional classification. Sidwell's more recent classification groups Tampuan on an equal level with Bahnar and the South Bahnaric languages in a larger Central Bahnar group. The Tampuan language has no native writing. EMU International began linguistic research in 1995 and produced an alphabet using Khmer letters. The alphabet was further refined by linguists from International Cooperation for Cambodia (ICC) and the Ministry of Education, Youth, and Sport (MOEYS). The modified Khmer script was approved by MOEYS in 2003 for use in bilingual education programs for Tampuan implemented by ICC, UNESCO, and CARE.

제목유형제공자연도
Tampuan Bible គម្ពីរ​ភាសា​ទំពួន성경2020
The Birth of Jesus자료bible-for-children
The Miracles of Jesus자료bible-for-children
The First Easter자료bible-for-children
Heaven Gods Beautiful Home자료bible-for-children
Good News오디오grn
Meeting the Creator God오디오grn
Luke영상lumo-project
Tampuan Bible자료scripture-app-builder
The Hope영상the-hope-film

Tampuan is the language of Tampuan people indigenous to the mountainous regions of Ratanakiri Province in Cambodia. As of the 2008 census there were 31,000 speakers, which amounts to 21% of the province's population. It is closely related to Bahnar and Alak, the three of which form the Central Bahnaric language grouping within the Mon-Khmer language family according to traditional classification. Sidwell's more recent classification groups Tampuan on an equal level with Bahnar and the South Bahnaric languages in a larger Central Bahnar group. The Tampuan language has no native writing. EMU International began linguistic research in 1995 and produced an alphabet using Khmer letters. The alphabet was further refined by linguists from International Cooperation for Cambodia (ICC) and the Ministry of Education, Youth, and Sport (MOEYS). The modified Khmer script was approved by MOEYS in 2003 for use in bilingual education programs for Tampuan implemented by ICC, UNESCO, and CARE.

标题类型提供方年份
Tampuan Bible គម្ពីរ​ភាសា​ទំពួន圣经2020
The Birth of Jesus资源bible-for-children
The Miracles of Jesus资源bible-for-children
The First Easter资源bible-for-children
Heaven Gods Beautiful Home资源bible-for-children
Good News音频grn
Meeting the Creator God音频grn
Luke影片lumo-project
Tampuan Bible资源scripture-app-builder
The Hope影片the-hope-film

Tampuan is the language of Tampuan people indigenous to the mountainous regions of Ratanakiri Province in Cambodia. As of the 2008 census there were 31,000 speakers, which amounts to 21% of the province's population. It is closely related to Bahnar and Alak, the three of which form the Central Bahnaric language grouping within the Mon-Khmer language family according to traditional classification. Sidwell's more recent classification groups Tampuan on an equal level with Bahnar and the South Bahnaric languages in a larger Central Bahnar group. The Tampuan language has no native writing. EMU International began linguistic research in 1995 and produced an alphabet using Khmer letters. The alphabet was further refined by linguists from International Cooperation for Cambodia (ICC) and the Ministry of Education, Youth, and Sport (MOEYS). The modified Khmer script was approved by MOEYS in 2003 for use in bilingual education programs for Tampuan implemented by ICC, UNESCO, and CARE.