Market-woman steering her boat on the Hậu Giang ri…
The junk called June Hong Chian Lee
Sala Thai on the pool
Nāga at the steps to the temple building
Wat Phu in Champasak, Laos
Young vegetable vendors in Xam Neua
Mekong early in the morning
Xining Station Plaza
TV team in Rastafari look
Buddha Statue in Saturday pose
Icefall on the Mount Chyangresi
Scene at the floating market Cái Răng on the Hậu G…
A camels side portrait
Landscape on the way to Zhongdian
Inside the Phúc Kiến Community Hall
The pagoda of Phra Phuttha Maha Suwan Patimakon at…
Bhuta-Kala
Pura Batu Balong temple
Portrait of a Legong dancing girl
Ko Chang, Thailand
Budhanilkantha Lying Vishnu Nepal
The Holy Kailash in Tibet
Two young Bhutanese ladies
Mayor's office of Ulaanbaatar city
Princess Sita at the Kecak dance
Playing kiddies on the city roads
Young girl rowing her fishing boat
Toroi Bandi, Robin Hood of Mongolia
Nomads livestock breeding
Oglogchiin Herem wall
Jökulsárlón
Passenger in a regional train, Thailand
Sunset at the Andaman Sea, Burma
Reynisdrangar by Vik
Songzanlin Monastery
Songzanlin Monastery
Saulieu - Basilique Saint Andoche
Estrella de los Arcabuceros - podenco andaluz
Ciganos no Algarve
Stupa of Phra Maha That, Chaiya, Surat Thani
Thai barge bows Anantanakkharat ขบวนเสด็จพยุหยาตรา
Happy kids in Yatna
Sangkhlaburi the city of the Mon people
Overnight camp in Deraphuk
Boten is China on Laotian territory
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Patan Nepal
Beautiful typical dressed Newa girl in front of Mul Chowk buidling.
The Newa (Nepal Bhasa:नेवाः Newa or Newah, Old Nepal Bhasa:नेवार Newar, नेवाल Newal) are the indigenous people of Nepal's Kathmandu Valley. Newars are a linguistic community with multiple ethnicity/race and faith, bound together by a common language. The term Newar applies roughly to the descendants of citizens of Medieval Nepal (consisting of Kathmandu valley as the capital and the territory ever changing with farest extent being Gandaki river to west and Koshi river to the east, Tibet to north and Terai in south). Their common language being Nepal Bhasa ("Newari" according to Statistics Nepal) or the languages progenitor of Nepal Bhasa. According to Nepal’s 2001 census, the 1,245,232 Newar in the country are the nation's sixth largest ethnic group, representing 5.48% of the population. Nepal Bhasa is of Tibeto-Burman origin (but heavily influenced by Indo-Aryan languages like Sanskrit, Pali, Bengali and Maithili). Nepal Bhasa also contains Austro-Asiatic words and phrases. In 2001 the language is spoken by 825,458 Nepalese as their mother tongue.
The Newa (Nepal Bhasa:नेवाः Newa or Newah, Old Nepal Bhasa:नेवार Newar, नेवाल Newal) are the indigenous people of Nepal's Kathmandu Valley. Newars are a linguistic community with multiple ethnicity/race and faith, bound together by a common language. The term Newar applies roughly to the descendants of citizens of Medieval Nepal (consisting of Kathmandu valley as the capital and the territory ever changing with farest extent being Gandaki river to west and Koshi river to the east, Tibet to north and Terai in south). Their common language being Nepal Bhasa ("Newari" according to Statistics Nepal) or the languages progenitor of Nepal Bhasa. According to Nepal’s 2001 census, the 1,245,232 Newar in the country are the nation's sixth largest ethnic group, representing 5.48% of the population. Nepal Bhasa is of Tibeto-Burman origin (but heavily influenced by Indo-Aryan languages like Sanskrit, Pali, Bengali and Maithili). Nepal Bhasa also contains Austro-Asiatic words and phrases. In 2001 the language is spoken by 825,458 Nepalese as their mother tongue.
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