Mienic languages
Mienic | |
---|---|
Yao | |
Ethnicity: | some of the Yao peoples |
Geographic distribution: | China, Vietnam, Laos, Thailand, United States. |
Linguistic classification: |
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Glottolog: | mien1242[1] |
Mienic languages are in green |
The Mienic or Yao languages are spoken by the Yao people of China, Vietnam, Laos, and Thailand.
Some of the Yao peoples speak Hmongic languages (Miao); these are called Bunu. A small population of Yao people in Jinxiu Yao Autonomous County (金秀瑶族自治县) in eastern Guangxi speak a Tai-Kadai language called Lakkia.
Classification
Mienic is one of the primary branches of the Hmong–Mien language family, with the other being Hmongic.
Ratliff (2010)
Martha Ratliff (2010:3) proposed the following classification:[2]
- Mienic
Strecker (1987)
Strecker 1987,[3] followed (with the addition of Moxi) by Matisoff 2001, proposed the following, with some of the more divergent varieties as additional languages:
- Mienic (Yao)
Mao (2004)
Mao Zongwu (2004) classifies the following Mienic languages and dialects of China as such. Data points studied in Mao (2004) are also listed for each dialect.
- Mien 勉: 550,000 speakers
- Guangdian 广滇 dialect: 400,000 speakers
- Dapingjiang, Jianxin village, Jiangdi township, Longsheng Various Nationalities Autonomous County
- Shinongjiao village, Daxiaohe township, Guanyang County
- Xianjiacao, Liuding village, Sanjiao township, Jinxiu Yao Autonomous County
- Fengle village, Panshi township, Rongjiang County
- Miaozhu village, Gongkeng township, Ruyuan Yao Autonomous County
- Shuizi'ao village, Liangchahe township, Jianghua Yao Autonomous County
- Yanbian village, Shilixiang township, Jinping County
- Xiangnan 湘南 dialect: 130,000 speakers
- Miaoziyuan village, Xiangjiang township, Jianghua Yao Autonomous County
- Ganziyuan village, Mianhuaping township, Ningyuan County
- Luoxiang 罗香 (Ao Biao 坳标) dialect: 3000 speakers
- Luoxiang township, Jinxiu Yao Autonomous County
- Changping 长坪 (Biao Man 标曼) dialect: 20,000 speakers in the counties of Mengshan, Pingdong, Zhaoping, and Lipu
- Dongpingdong village, Changping township, Mengshan County
- Guangdian 广滇 dialect: 400,000 speakers
- Jinmen 金门: 220,000 speakers
- Diangui 滇桂 dialect: 166,000 speakers
- Xinzhai village, Liangzi township, Hekou Yao Autonomous County[4]
- Nacai village, Dulong township, Malipo County
- Suoshanjiao village, Yaoqu township, Mengla County[5]
- Lanjin township, Lingyun County
- Xintun, Jiajiang village, Sanjiao township,Jinxiu Yao Autonomous County
- Fanghai 防海 dialect: 60,000 speakers
- Tansan township, Fangcheng County
- Xin'an village, Daping township, Qiongzhong Li and Miao Autonomous County
- Diangui 滇桂 dialect: 166,000 speakers
- Biao Min 标敏: 40,000 speakers
- Dongshan 东山 dialect: 35,000 speakers
- Shuanglong, Huanglong village, Dongshan township, Quanzhou County
- Shikou 石口 dialect: 8000 speakers
- Shikou village, Sanjiang township, Gongcheng Yao Autonomous County
- Niuweizhai 牛尾寨 dialect: 2000 speakers
- Niuwei village, Sanjiang township, Gongcheng Yao Autonomous County
- Dongshan 东山 dialect: 35,000 speakers
- Dzao Min 藻敏: 60,000 speakers
- Daping township, Liannan Yao Autonomous County
The comparative vocabulary chart in Mao Zongwu (2004) consists of the following languages.
- Guangdian Mien (Jiangdi); autonym: mjen31
- Diangui Kim Mun (Liangzi); autonym: kjeːm33 mun33
- Dongshan Biao Min; autonym: bjau31 min31
- Daping Dzao Min; autonym: dzau53 min53
- Xiangnan Mien (Miaoziyuan); autonym: mjəŋ31
- Changping Mien ( = Biao Mon); autonym: bjau31 moːn31
- Luoxiang Mien; autonym: bjau31 mwan31
- Fanghai Kim Mun (Tansan); autonym: kiːm33 mun33
- Shikou Biao Min ( = Chao Kong Meng); autonym: mɔu31 jɔu55
- Niuweizhai Biao Min ( = Moxi); autonym: mɔ433 ɕi53
Aumann & Sidwell (2004)
Using Mao's (2004) new data, Aumann & Sidwell (2004) propose the following classification of the Mienic languages, based on innovations in rhotic consonants.[6] This classification presents a bipartite division of the Mienic into a subgroup consisting of Iu Mien and Biao Min, and another subgroup consisting of Kim Mun and Dzao Min. Luoxiang is grouped with Kim Mun, while Changping is grouped with Dzao Min.
- Proto-Mien
Aumann & Sidwell (2004) consider the following classification by Wang & Mao to be unlikely, which is based on the voicing of voiceless sonorants, a common areal feature.
- Proto-Mien
Mixed languages
Some languages may be mixed Chinese and Mienic (Yao) languages, such as:
- The Maojia dialect (Aoka) of Chengbu Miao Autonomous County, Hunan and Ziyun, Longsheng Various Nationalities Autonomous County, Guangxi
- Shaozhou Tuhua, the language of the nüshu script, is an unclassified variety of Chinese spoken by ethnic Yao. Its origin is obscure, but it may have started out as a Sinicized Mienic language.[7]
Numerals
Language | One | Two | Three | Four | Five | Six | Seven | Eight | Nine | Ten |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Proto-Hmong-Mien | *ʔɨ | *ʔu̯i | *pjɔu | *plei | *prja | *kruk | *dzjuŋH | *jat | *N-ɟuə | *gju̯əp |
Iu Mien | jet12 | i33 | pwo33 | pjei33 | pia33 | tɕu55 | sje13 | ɕet12 | dwo31 | tsjop12 |
Ao Biao (Luoxiang) | jit43 | vi33 | pu33 | pje33 | pla33 | kwo43 | ȵi11 | jat32 | du31 | ɕep32 |
Biao Mon (Changping) | no35 | i33 | pu33 | plei33 | pla33 | kju53 | ŋi22 | jaːt21 | du21 | sjəp21 |
Kim Mun | a33 | i35 | ˀpɔ35 | pjei35 | pja35 | kjo35 | ȵi42 | jet55 | du33 | ʃap42 |
Biao Min | i33 | wəi33 | pau33 | pləi33 | pla33 | klɔ53 | ni42 | hjɛn42 | iu31 | ȶʰan42 |
Chao Kong Meng (Shikou) | ji35 | vi33 | bɔu33 | pli33 | pla53 | klɔ35 | ŋi13 | jæ22 | tɕu55 | tɕæ22 |
Moxi (Niuweizhai) | i33 | wei33 | pəu33 | pɣɯi33 | pɤa33 | kɤɔ55 | ɕi31 | hjɯ53 | du53 | tɕʰwa53 |
Dzao Min | a44 | vi42 | bu42 | pɛi42 | pjɛ42 | tɔu44 | ȵi22 | dzat22 | ku53 | sjɛp22 |
References
- ↑ Nordhoff, Sebastian; Hammarström, Harald; Forkel, Robert; Haspelmath, Martin, eds. (2013). "Mienic". Glottolog. Leipzig: Max Planck Institute for Evolutionary Anthropology.
- ↑ Ratliff, Martha. 2010. Hmong–Mien language history. Canberra, Australia: Pacific Linguistics.
- ↑ Strecker, David. 1987. "The Hmong-Mien Languages." In Linguistics of the Tibeto-Burman Area, 10 , no. 2: 1-11.
- ↑ http://www.ynszxc.gov.cn/villagePage/vIndex.aspx?departmentid=153644
- ↑ http://www.ynszxc.gov.cn/villagePage/vIndex.aspx?departmentid=215068
- ↑ http://sealang.net/sala/archives/pdf8/aumann2004subgrouping.pdf
- ↑ Cited in Chiang (1995) We two know the script, we have become good friends, p. 28, footnote 43.
- ↑ http://lingweb.eva.mpg.de/numeral/Miao-Yao.htm
- 毛宗武 / Mao Zongwu. 2004. 瑤族勉语方言研究 / Yao zu Mian yu fang yan yan jiu [A Study of Mien Dialects]. Beijing: 民族出版社 / Min zu chu ban she.
- Duan Shanshu [段善述]; Mei Yuzhu [梅玉诸]; Pan Meihua [盘美花] (ed). 2013. Yao languages of Vietnam [越南瑶语]. Beijing: Ethnic Publishing House [民族出版社]. ISBN 9787105128228
- Phan Hữu Dât. 1998. Một số vấn đề về dân tộc học Việt Nam. Hà Nội: Nhà xuất bản đại học quốc gia Hà Nội. [Dao word list from p.524-545]
Further reading
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