Longjia language
Longjia | |
---|---|
Songnibao | |
Native to | China |
Region | Guizhou |
Ethnicity | Longjia |
Native speakers | extinct? (2011)[1] |
Language codes | |
ISO 639-3 |
None (mis ) |
Glottolog |
long1417 [2] |
Longjia (autonym: suŋ˥ni˥mpau˨˩) is a Sino-Tibetan language of China that appears to be related to Bai, but has been difficult to classify. Longjia may already be extinct (Zhao 2011).
The Longjia people now speak Southwestern Mandarin, though they used to speak their own language, and have had a long presence in western Guizhou. According to the Guizhou Ethnic Gazetteer (2002),[3] the Longjia language was spoken in Dafang County, Qianxi County (Zhongping District ä¸åªåŒº; Xinfacun æ–°å‘æ‘ of Pojiao District å¡è„šåŒº), and Puding County (Jiangyizhai 讲义寨 of Baiyan Township 白岩乡). It is reportedly most similar to Caijia,[3] and has many Old Chinese loanwords.[4]
The Puding County Almanac (1999) reports that the Longjia language (autonym: Songnibao æ¾æ³¥ä¿) has 38 onsets and 22 rimes (8 simple, 14 complex). The Bijie County Almanac (1996:143) reports that there are many prenasalized onsets. In Dafang County, the autonym is Songlibao æ¾ç«‹ä¿.[4]
See also
- Macro-Bai comparative vocabulary list (Wiktionary)
References
- ↑ Zhao 2011
- ↑ Nordhoff, Sebastian; Hammarström, Harald; Forkel, Robert; Haspelmath, Martin, eds. (2013). "Longjia". Glottolog. Leipzig: Max Planck Institute for Evolutionary Anthropology.
- 1 2 Guizhou Province Gazetteer: Ethnic Gazetteer [贵州çœå¿—. æ°‘æ—å¿—] (2002). Guiyang: Guizhou Ethnic Publishing House [è²´å·žæ°‘æ—出版社].
- 1 2 Dafang County Almanac (1996:150-152)
Further reading
- Guizhou provincial ethnic classification commission, linguistic division [贵州çœæ°‘æ—识别工作队è¯è¨€ç»„]. 1982. The language of the Caijia [Caijia de yuyan 蔡家的è¯è¨€]. m.s.
- Guizhou provincial ethnic classification commission [贵州çœæ°‘æ—识别工作队]. 1984. Report on ethnic classification issues of the Nanlong people (Nanjing-Longjia) [å—龙人(å—京-龙家)æ—别问题调查报告]. m.s.
- Hsiu, Andrew. 2013. "New endangered Tibeto-Burman languages of southwestern China: Mondzish, Longjia, Pherbu, and others". Presentation given at ICSTLL 46, Dartmouth College.
- Zhao Weifeng [èµµå«å³°]. 2011. History of the Bai people of Guizhou [贵州白æ—å²ç•¥]. Yinchuan, China: Ningxia People's Press [å®å¤äººæ°‘出版社]. ISBN 978-7-227-04678-3