i’m actually leaning a bit more towards phillipines on second thought based on overall sound, definitely not tagalog or cebuano, but like it might be a smaller mountain language or something like that.
There’s a lot of “-ok/-uk” word endings, which could mean that it’s Kokborok or something similar (solely based on the name). I think Kokborok is Sino-Tibetan, and this language has a vaguely Tibetan-ish feel.
The mystery language is Rabha (Rabha khurang), a member of the Sal branch of the Tibeto-Burman language family spoken in Assam, West Bengal & Maghalaya in northeastern India.
This must be the shortest recording ever in an omniglot language quiz (10 secs only)!
Could be Austronesian (‘saya’ at 00:02). But I’m not too sure about that.
I think it is a language from the area of Indonesia from the tone of voice, some of the sounds and almost no stress on any syllable.
yeah i agree with the indonesian, but doesn’t really sound like bahasa indonesia from what i’ve heard of it. maybe javanese, balinese?
i’m actually leaning a bit more towards phillipines on second thought based on overall sound, definitely not tagalog or cebuano, but like it might be a smaller mountain language or something like that.
According to Simon’s clue the language is spoken in Northeast India. Hopefully there are some experts on the languages over there among you …
There’s a lot of “-ok/-uk” word endings, which could mean that it’s Kokborok or something similar (solely based on the name). I think Kokborok is Sino-Tibetan, and this language has a vaguely Tibetan-ish feel.
The mystery language is Rabha (Rabha khurang), a member of the Sal branch of the Tibeto-Burman language family spoken in Assam, West Bengal & Maghalaya in northeastern India.