Brahvis - Wikipedia Etymology The origin of the word "Brahvi" or "Brahui" is uncertain [2] Academic Mikhail Andronov hypothesised a derivation from Dravidian (lit Northern hillmen)
Brahui language, alphabet and pronunciation - Omniglot Brahui is a Dravidian language spoken by about 2 2 million people mainly in the Balochistan region of Pakistan There are also speakers in Afghanistan, Iran, Iraq, Qatar, Turkmenistan and the UAE
Brahui | Dravidian Language, Balochistan Pakistan | Britannica Brahui, tribal confederacy of Balochistān, in western Pakistan Its members are mostly nomadic goat herdsmen, distributed from the Bolān Pass through the Brāhui Hills to Cape Muarī on the Arabian Sea
BRAHUI: HISTORY, CULTURE, LIFE AND UNUSUAL LANGUAGE Brahui, also known as the Brahvi or Brohi, speak a non-Indo-European language that belongs to the Dravidian family of languages which are spoken mostly in southern India and is different from the other languages spoken in Pakistan by the Pashtuns, Punjabis, Baloch and Sindhis
Brahui - culturesherpa. org The Brahui people are an ethnic group primarily found in the Balochistan region of Pakistan, with smaller populations in Afghanistan and Iran They are known for their distinct Dravidian language and cultural practices
Brahui people - Wikiwand The Brahui, Brahvi, or Brohi are an ethnolinguistic group of pastoralists principally found in the Balochistan region of Pakistan, and to a smaller extent in Afghanistan and Iran They speak Brahui, which belongs to the Dravidian language family
Introduction - BRAHUI Research Institute Introduction Brahui (Original: Bra-hu-i=Northern Mountainers) is a Proto Dravidian word Non-Brahuis also call them: Brohi, this word is Arabic origin
Brahui - Introduction, Location, Language, Folklore, Religion, Major . . . The Brahui tribes inhabit some of the harshest, most-isolated, and least-productive environments in Pakistan This is reflected in the relative inefficiency of traditional economic systems and the generally low standards of living of the community
BRAHUI - Encyclopaedia Iranica The Brahui “cultural capital” is now at Quetta The linguistic situation in most Brahui tribes is perhaps unparalleled elsewhere: Most Brahui speakers (ca two-thirds, or 275,000) are bilaterally bilingual in Brahui and Baluchi, the latter being a genetically unrelated Iranian language