fbpx
Wikipedia

Austro-Tai languages

The Austro-Tai languages, sometimes also Austro-Thai languages, are a proposed language family that comprises the Austronesian languages and the Kra–Dai languages.

Austro-Tai
(proposed)
Geographic
distribution
Southeast Asia, East Asia
Linguistic classificationproposed language family
Subdivisions
GlottologNone

Related proposals include Austric (Wilhelm Schmidt in 1906) and Sino-Austronesian (Laurent Sagart in 1990, 2005).

Origins edit

The Kra–Dai languages contain numerous similar forms with Austronesian which were noticed as far back as Schlegel in 1901.[1] These are considered to be too many to explain as chance resemblance.[2] The question then is whether they are due to language contact (i.e., borrowing) or to common descent (i.e., a genealogical relationship).

Evidence edit

 
Tai-Kadai migration route according to Matthias Gerner's Northeast to Southwest Hypothesis.[3]
 
Distribution of the Austronesian languages

The first proposal of a genealogical relationship was that of Paul Benedict in 1942, which he expanded upon through 1990. This took the form of an expansion of Wilhelm Schmidt's Austric phylum, and posited that Kra–Dai and Austronesian had a sister relationship within Austric, which Benedict then accepted. Benedict later abandoned Austric but maintained his Austro-Tai proposal, adding the Japonic languages to the proposal as well.[4] The proposal remained controversial among linguists, especially after the publication of Benedict (1975) whose methods of reconstruction were idiosyncratic and considered unreliable. For example, Thurgood (1994) examined Benedict's claims and concluded that since the sound correspondences and tonal developments were irregular, there was no evidence of a genealogical relationship, and the numerous cognates must be chalked up to early language contact.[5]

However, the fact that many of the Austro-Tai cognates are found in core vocabulary, which is generally more resistant to borrowing, continued to intrigue scholars. There were later several advances over Benedict's approach: Abandoning the larger Austric proposal; focusing on lexical reconstruction and regular sound correspondences; including data from additional branches of Kra–Dai, Hlai and Kra; using better reconstructions of Kra–Dai; and reconsidering the nature of the relationship, with Kra–Dai possibly being a branch (daughter) of Austronesian.[6]

Sagart (2005a) cited a core of regular sound correspondences relating words belonging to the basic vocabulary in Benedict's work. He pointed out the lack of a substantial body of shared cultural words. He took these facts as indications that Benedict's Austro-Tai cannot be explained as a contact phenomenon. He further listed a number of specifically Malayo-Polynesian features in the vocabulary shared by Tai-Kadai and Austronesian, concluding that Tai-Kadai is a subgroup within Austronesian, rather than a sister group to it.

Ostapirat (2000) reconstructed proto-Kra, one of the least-well attested branches of Kra–Dai. Ostapirat (2005) later presented fifty core vocabulary items found in all five branches of Kra–Dai, and demonstrated that half of them—words such as child, eat, eye, fire, hand, head, I, you, louse, moon, tooth, water, this, etc.—can be related to proto-Austronesian by regular sound correspondences, a connection which Reid (2006) finds convincing.[7]

Austronesian is characterized by disyllabic roots, whereas Kra–Dai is predominantly monosyllabic. It appears that in Kra–Dai, the first vowel reduced and then dropped out, leaving a consonant cluster which frequently reduced further to a single consonant. For example, the proto-Austronesian root *qudip "live, raw" corresponds to proto-Kra (k-)Dep and its reflex ktʰop in Laha, as well as Tai dip, all with the same meaning (the *-D- consonant is Ostapirat's voiced plosive of undetermined quality, probably alveolar as opposed to dental articulation).[8]

In proto-Kra–Dai, there appear to have been three tones in words ending in a sonorant (vowel or nasal consonant), labeled simply A, B, C, plus words ending in a stop consonant, D, which did not have tone. In general, Austronesian words ending in a sonorant correspond to A, and words ending in a stop correspond to D. This accounts for most of the words. There are also a few cognates with B and C tone. From Indic borrowings it appears that tone B was originally a final h in Kra–Dai, and some of the corresponding Austronesian roots also end in h, such as AN *qəmpah "chaff", Kam–Sui paa-B (Mulam kwaa-B), though there are few examples to go on. Tone C seems to have originally been creaky voice or a final glottal stop. It may correspond to *H, a laryngeal consonant of uncertain manner, in proto-Austronesian (AN *quluH "head", Thai klau-C), but again the number of cognates is too low to draw firm conclusions.

Sagart (2004) presented data from a newly described Kra language, Buyang, which—like many other Kra languages—retains the disyllabic roots characteristic of Austronesian. Some examples are:

Root Buyang Proto-MP
"to die" matɛ́ *matay
"eye" matá *mata
"head" qaðù *quluH
"eight" maðû *walu
"bird" manùk *manuk
"flower" maŋà *buŋah

Ostapirat (2013) lists the following potential cognates between Proto-Kra-Dai and Proto-Austronesian.[9] The Proto-Kra-Dai "C" signifies any unknown consonant; the Proto-Austronesian "C" is a phoneme tentatively reconstructed either as /t͡s/ or /t/.

Meaning Proto-Kra-Dai Proto-Austronesian
"eye" *maTaː *maCa
"hand" *(C)imɤː *(qa)lima
"tongue" *(C)əmaː *Səma
"tooth" *lipan *nipən
"louse" *KuTuː *kuCu
"fire" *(C)apuj *Sapuy
"water" *(C)aNam *daNum
"I" *akuː *aku
"you", sg. *isuː *iSu
"one" *(C)itsɤː *əsa, *isa
"to die" *maTaːj *ma-aCay

Sagart (2019) finds multiple examples of the correlation between the coda of Proto-Austronesian polysyllabic words and the tone of suspected Kra-Dai cognates.[10]

  • Sonorant-final Austronesian terms corresponded with tone A in Kra-Dai.
  • Proto-Austronesian uvular fricative finals corresponded with tone B.
  • Proto-Austronesian final sibilants and /h/ corresponded with tone C.

Ostapirat (2005) edit

Austro-Tai sound correspondences and cognate sets listed by Ostapirat (2005) are as follows.

Core vocabulary edit

Kra-Dai core vocabulary and Proto-Austronesian cognates:

# Gloss p-Austronesian p-Tai p-Kam-Sui p-Hlai Gelao (Anshun) p-Kra-Dai tone
1 blood *lɯat *phjaat *daːt plɒ *D
2 bone *duuk *laak *rɯːʔ taŋ *D
3 ear *huu *qhaa (*zai) zau *A
4 eye *maCa *taa *daa *tsha tau *A
5 excrement *Caqi *khii *qee *hai *C
6 fart *qe(n)tut *tot *tət *thuːt tae (Laozhai) *D
7 fingernail *lep *ljap *liːp kle *D
8 grease *SimaR *man *man *man (Be) mal (Laha) *A
9 hand (*qa)lima *mɯɯ *mjaa *meɯ mpau *A
10 head *qulu *klau *ku *rau (klɒ B) *C
11 knee *khau *quu (*rou) qo (Laozhai) *B
12 leg, thigh *paqa *khaa *qaa *ha qau *A
13 liver *tap *tap (*ŋaːn) tae (Laozhai) *D
14 navel *dɯɯ *ʔdwaa *reɯ zo (Qiaoshang) *A
15 nose *ijuŋ *daŋ *ʔnaŋ *doŋ daŋ (Laha) *A
16 shoulder *qabaRa *baa *wie (Lakkia) *va baa (Laha) *B
17 tooth *nipen *fan *wjan *phen pan *A
18 bear (n.) *Cumay *mii *ʔmii *mui mi (Laozhai) *A
19 bird *manuk (PMP) *nok *nok (*taȶ) ntau *D
20 dog *maa *m̥aa *ma mpau *A
21 fish *plaa *paa (Kam) *da lau *A
22 horn *khau *qaau *hau (Baoding) qa *A
23 louse (head) *kuCu *hau *tuu *tshou ta *A
24 tail (*haaŋ) *hət *tshut tshan *D
25 leaf (*ʔabag) *bai *waa (Lakkia) *beɯ (vu) *A
26 seed *fan (White Tai) *wan *phen pa (Qiaoshang) *A
27 sesame *leŋa *ŋaa *ʔŋaa *keɯ (Baoding) ŋklau *A
28 cloud *faa *faa *fa (Baoding) phaa (Laha) *C
29 fire *Sapuy *fai *wii *pei pai *A
30 moon *bulaN *dɯan *njaan *ɳaːn daan (Laha) *A
31 path *hon *khun *kuːn qan *A
32 rain *fon *fən *pun (jal) (Laha) *A
33 stone *hin *tin *tshiːn (pɣaa) *A
34 smoke *khwan *kwan *hwoːn *A
35 water *daNum *naam *nam *nom (əɯ C) *C
36 black *tidem *dam *ʔnam *dom C ʔdam (Buyang) *A
37 dry *khaɯ (Lao) *khu C *kheɯ xau *B
38 full (*tem) *tik *thiːʔ tei *D
39 green *khiau *ɕu *khiːu (ten) *A
40 long *rii *ʔɣaai *loi (Be) ðii C (Buyang) *A
41 live, raw *qudip *dip *ʔdjup *riːp te *D
42 come *maa *m̥aa *peɯ (Baoding) mu *A
43 eat *kaen *kin *tsjaan *khan (Be) kaan (Buyang) *A
44 kill *khaa *haa *hau (ven) *C
45 walk, go *pai *paai *pei pai *A
46 child, person *aNak *luuk *laak *dɯːʔ lei *D
47 grandmother *aya *jaa B *jaa C *tsaɯ C (Baoding) ʑɒ C *B/C
48 this *i-ni *nii *naai *nei ni *B/C
49 I *aku *kuu (*ju) *hou (Baoding) kuu (Buyang) *A
50 you *kamu *mɯŋ *maa (Lakkia) *meɯ maa (Buyang) *A

Final consonants edit

Summary of Austro-Tai final sound correspondences:

p-Austronesian p-Kra-Dai
*-p *-p
*-t *-t
*-k *-k
*-q *-k
*-C *-C
*-s *-c
*-b *-w
*-d *-y
*-g (?) *-ɣ
*-m *-m
*-n *-n
*-ŋ *-ŋ
*-N *-N (> -n, -l)
*-R *-R (> -ɣ, -l)
*-w *-w
*-y *-y
*-l *-y

Cognates with final consonant correspondences:

Gloss p-Austronesian p-Tai p-Kam-Sui p-Hlai Kra (Laha) p-Kra-Dai
water *daNum *nam *nam *nom *-m
tooth *nipen *fan *wjan *phen pan (Gelao) *-n
nose *ijuŋ (PMP) *daŋ *ʔnaŋ *doŋ daŋ *-ŋ
live, raw *qudip *dip *ʔdjup *riːp kthop (Ta Mit Laha) *-p
fart *qe(n)tut *tot *tət *thuːt tut (Buyang) *-t
pungent *paqiC *phet *geȶ pat *-C
fowl, bird *manuk (PMP) *nok *nok noːk (Baoding) nok *-k
taro *biRaq *phɯak *ʔɣaak geːk (Baoding) haak *-k
weep *Caŋis *hai *ʔɲe *ŋei ɲit *-c
star *qalejaw *daaw ʔdaau (Mulam) *raːu *-w
fire *Sapuy *fai *wi *pei pəi *-y
navel *pudeR *dɯɯ *ʔdaa *reɯɯ dau *-ɣ

Contrast between *-C and *-t in both Kra-Dai and Austronesian:

Gloss p-Austronesian Siamese Saek Be Hlai (Baoding) p-Kra-Dai
fart *-t tot rɛt dut thuːt *-t
bitter, spicy *-C phet geȶ *-C
skin, scale *-C klet trɛk liʔ *-C
ant mot mɛk muʔ puȶ *-C

Proto-Austronesian final *-q and Proto-Kra-Dai *-k/-C:

Gloss p-Austronesian p-Tai p-Kam-Sui Hlai (Baoding) Kra (Laha) p-Kra-Dai
taro *biRaq *phɯak *ʔɣaak geːk haak *-k
otter *Sanaq *naak teːk *-k
ten *puluq phuːt put (Buyang) *-C

Proto-Austronesian final *-s and Proto-Kra-Dai *-c:

Gloss p-Austronesian p-Tai p-Kam-Sui p-Hlai p-Kra p-Kra-Dai
weep *Caŋis *hai *ʔɲe *ŋei *ɲit *-c
stream *qaRus *huai *kui *-c

Proto-Austronesian final *-R and *-N and Proto-Kra-Dai *-l/-n:

Gloss p-Austronesian p-Tai p-Kam-Sui p-Hlai Kra (Laha) p-Kra-Dai
navel *pudeR *dɯɯ *ʔdaa *reɯ dau
fat (n.) *SimaR *man *man mal *-l
moon *bulaN *dɯan *njaan *ɲaːn daan *-n
rain *quzaN jal *-l

Special Proto-Kra-Dai development corresponding to Proto-Austronesian *-R:

Gloss p-Austronesian p-Tai p-Kam-Sui p-Be Kra (Laha) p-Kra-Dai
flow *qaluR *lai *lui *ləi kləi *-y

Proto-Atayal voiced stop endings corresponding to Kra-Dai final voiced glides:

Gloss Proto-Atayal p-Tai p-Kam-Sui p-Hlai p-Kra p-Kra-Dai
yawn *surab *haau *kho *kaːu *-w
mouse *qawlid *lai *-y
leaf *ʔabag *bai *beɯ *-ɣ

Proto-Austronesian final *-l corresponding to Kra-Dai final glides (possible development):

Gloss p-Austronesian p-Tai p-Kam-Sui p-Hlai p-Kra p-Kra-Dai
clam, snail *ku(S)ul *hɔɔi *khuy *tshei *ci *-y

Medial consonants edit

Medial correspondences between Proto-Austronesian and Proto-Kra-Dai, assuming that Proto-Kra-Dai was polysyllabic:

Gloss p-Austronesian p-Tai p-Kam-Sui p-Hlai Kra (Laha) p-Kra-Dai
tooth *nipen *fan *wjan *phen pan (Gelao) *-p-
fire *Sapuy *fai *wi *pei pəi *-p-
fart *qe(n)tut *tot *tət *thuːt tut (Buyang) *-t-
head louse *kuCu *hau *tu *tshou tou *-C-
eye *maCa *taa *daa *tsha taa *-C-
I *aku *kuu *hou (Baoding) kuu (Buyang) *-k-
leg *paqa *khaa *qaa *ha (Tongshi) kaa *-q-
excrement *Caqi *khii *qe *hai kai *-q-
hand (*qa)lima *mɯɯ *mjaa *meɯ maa *-m-
bear (n.) *Cumay *mii *ʔmi *mui me *-m-
otter *Sanaq *naak *naːʔ *-n-
this *i-ni *nii *naai *nei nəi *-n-
bird *manuk (PMP) *nok *nok *noːk (Baoding) nok *-N-
water *daNum *naam *nam *nom *-N-
weep *Caŋis *hai *ʔɲe *ŋei ɲit *-ŋ-
sesame *leŋa *ŋaa *ʔŋaa *keɯ (Baoding) ŋaa (Buyang) *-ŋ-
shoulder *qabaRa *baa *wie (Lakkia) *va baa *-b-
navel *pudeR *dɯɯ *ʔdaa *reɯ dau *-d-
live, raw *qudip *dip *ʔdjup *riːp kthop (Ta Mit Laha) *-d-
black *tidem *dam *ʔnam *dom ʔdam (Buyang) *-d-
nose *ijuŋ (PMP) *dap *ʔnaŋ *doŋ daŋ *-d-
grandmother *aya *jaa *jaa *tsaɯ jaa *-j-
rain *quZaN jal *-j- (?)
taro *biRaq *phɯak *ʔɣaak *geːk (Baoding) pɣaak *-R-
net *aray *hɛɛ re (Then) *raːi *-R-
saliva *ŋalay *laai ŋwee (Kam) *laːi laai (Buyang) *-l-
head *qulu *klau kɣo (Mulam) *rau *-ɮ-
sour *qa(l)sem *som *fum *-s-
centipede *qalu-Sipan *khep *khup *riːp *-S-
clam, snail *ku(S)ul *hɔɔi *khuy *tshei ci *-S-

Proto-Kra–Dai *d- corresponds to both Proto-Austronesian *d- and *j- according to Ostapirat (2023). For example:[11]

Gloss Buyang Thai p-Austronesian
raw qa ʔdip dip *qudip
black ʔdam dam *tidem
bone qa ʔdaːk duːk
nose qa ʔdaŋ daŋ *ujung
navel ma ʔduə dɯː *puja
boat ʔdaː (rɯa) *aluja

Proto-Kra–Dai *b-l- corresponds to Proto-Austronesian *bVl- according to Ostapirat (2023):[11]

Gloss Saek Thai p-Kra–Dai p-Austronesian
moon blian dɯan *bulaːn *bulaN
flower blɔːk dɔːk *baluːk *bulak
to weed (bjaːi) daːi *bəlaːy
spotted (bjaːŋ) daːŋ *bəlaːŋ *belaŋ

Tones edit

Proto-Kra-Dai tone B correspondences:

Gloss p-Austronesian p-Tai p-Kam-Sui p-Hlai Kra (Laha) p-Kra-Dai tone
chaff, bran *qepa (*ram) *paa *vo (B) paa *B
shoulder *qabaRa *baa wie (Lakkia) *va baa *B

Tone B in Tai (kinship):

Gloss p-Tai p-Kam-Sui p-Hlai Kra (Buyang) p-Kra-Dai tone
grandfather *puu B *phau C puu B *B
grandmother *jaa B *jaa C *tsaɯ C jaa C *C

Proto-Kra-Dai tone C correspondences:

Gloss p-Austronesian p-Tai p-Kam-Sui p-Hlai p-Kra p-Kra-Dai tone
excrement *Caqi *khii *qe *hai *kai *C
head *qulu *klau *ku *rau (*klɒ) *C
water *daNum *nam *nam *nom *C
sour *qa(l)sem *som *fum *C

Tone C from Proto-Kra-Dai *-c in some Kra-Dai groups:

Gloss p-Austronesian p-Tai p-Kam-Sui p-Hlai p-Kra p-Kra-Dai
weep *Caŋis *hai C *ʔɲe C *ŋei C *ɲit *-c
stream *qaRus *huai C *kui C *-c

Smith (2021) edit

Smith (2021) presents additional phonological and lexical evidence for Austro-Tai.[12] Additional supporting data is also published in Smith (2022).[13][14][15]

Lexical correspondences between Proto-Austronesian and Proto-Tai proposed by Smith (2021) are:

Gloss p-Austronesian p-Tai
fear *talaw *ʰlaːwA 'afraid'
rattan *quay *C.waːyA
to plant *tanəm 'to bury; plant' *t.namA 'to transplant a crop'
to hold *kəmkəm 'to hold in the fist' *kamA 'hold in the closed hand'
fish hook *kabit 'fishing hook' *ɓetD
fish poison *tubah 'Derris root' *C.bɯəA1 'to poison fish'
shadow *qaNiŋu *ŋawA
leech *məCaq 'paddy leech' *daːkD

Other lexical correspondences (basic vocabulary) between Proto-Austronesian and Proto-Tai from Smith (2021) are:

Gloss p-Austronesian p-Tai
moon *bulaN *ɓlɯənA
vomit *utaq *rwɯəkD
paddle/boat *aluja (paddle) *C̬.rwɯəA (boat)
navel *puja *ɗwɯːA
bear *Cumay *ʰmwɯjA
hand *qalima *mwɯːA
otter *Sanaq *naːkD
eye *maCa *p.taːA
die *m-aCay *p.taːjA
leg *paqa *p.qaːA

Lexical correspondences between Proto-Malayo-Polynesian (PMP) and Proto-Tai proposed by Smith (2021) are:

Gloss PMP p-Tai
to hurt *sakit 'sick; to hurt; be in pain' *keːtD
spotted *bəlaŋ *ɓlaːŋB

Smith deduces that Proto-Austronesian final-syllable *a regularly corresponds to Proto-Tai *ɯ(ə) if penultimate Proto-Austronesian syllable contained a high vowel, like *i or *u. On the other hand, if that penultimate syllable had a low vowel instead, Proto-Austronesian *a would instead correspond to Proto-Tai *aː.

Lexical correspondences between Proto-Austronesian and Proto-Hlai, as well as Proto-Kra:

Gloss p-Austronesian p-Hlai p-Kra
to sell *baliw/saliw *aRiːu *s-ɣwi
to fall *-tuq *ʔtuk *tokD

Relationship edit

Among scholars who accept the evidence as definitive, there is disagreement as to the nature of the relationship. Benedict attempted to show that Tai–Kadai has features which cannot be accounted for by proto-Austronesian, and that therefore it must be a separate family coordinate with Austronesian (a sister relationship). Ostapirat concluded that these reconstructed linguistic features are spurious. However, he could not rule out the possibility that Tai–Kadai tone cannot be explained, and so leaves the question open pending further reconstruction of Proto-Austronesian. He supports the consensus hypothesis of several scholars that proto-Austronesian was spoken on Formosa or adjacent areas of coastal China, and that the likely homeland of Proto-Tai–Kadai was coastal Fujian or Guangdong. The spread of the Tai–Kadai peoples may have been aided by agriculture, but any who remained near the coast were eventually absorbed by the Chinese.

Sagart, on the other hand, holds that Tai–Kadai is a branch of Austronesian which migrated back to the mainland from northeastern Formosa long after Formosa was settled, but probably before the expansion of Malayo-Polynesian out of Formosa. He presents a distinct argument for subgrouping Tai-Kadai with Malayo-Polynesian: he argues that the numerals 5–10, shared by Tai-Kadai, Malayo-Polynesian and three southeastern Formosan languages, are post-proto-Austronesian innovations. Part of the problem of evidence may be due to the loss of the ancestral languages in the Philippines: the uniformity of Philippine languages suggests widespread language replacement after the expected time of the Tai–Kadai split.[16]

Sagart (2005b) again proposes an Eastern Formosan–Malayo-Polynesian connection with Tai–Kadai, based on words such as Proto-Tai–Kadai *maNuk and Eastern Formosan *manuk "bird", as compared to Proto-Austronesian, where the word for "bird" was *qayam, and *maNuk meant "chicken" (cf. English "fowl", which once meant "bird" but has come to usually refer to chickens and other birds raised for meat), and a few other words such *-mu "thou" which have not been reconstructed for proto-Austronesian. However, Ostapirat notes Tai–Kadai retains the Austronesian *N in this word, which had been lost from Eastern Formosan and Malayo-Polynesian, and that a change in meaning from "chicken" to "bird" could easily have happened independently, for example among proto-Tai–Kadai speakers when they borrowed the mainland word *ki "chicken" (cognate with Old Chinese *kej and Hmongic /qai/).

 
Proposed genesis of Daic languages and their relation with Austronesians (Blench, 2018)[17]

Sagart (2005b) suggests that Austronesian (including Tai-Kadai) is ultimately related to the Sino-Tibetan languages, forming a Sino-Austronesian family. The Proto-Sino-Austronesian speakers would have originated from the Neolithic communities of the coastal regions of prehistoric North China or East China. Ostapirat disputes this view, noting that the apparent cognates are rarely found in all branches of Tai–Kadai, and almost none in core vocabulary.

Ostapirat maintains that Tai–Kadai could not descend from Malayo-Polynesian in the Philippines, and likely not from the languages of eastern Formosa either. His evidence is in the Tai–Kadai sound correspondences, which reflect Austronesian distinctions that were lost in Malayo-Polynesian and even Eastern Formosan. These are the pairs of proto-AN sounds *t/*C and *n/*N, which fell together as *t and *n in Proto-MP and Eastern Formosan, but which each correspond to pairs of distinct sounds in Proto-Tai–Kadai. Further, Proto-AN *S corresponds to *s in Proto-Tai–Kadai but was debuccalized to *h in Proto-MP. There are also Austro-Tai roots related to Proto-Austronesian roots which are not attested from Malayo-Polynesian, such as *Cumay "bear". In Sagart's model, such roots have to be treated as retentions from Proto-Austronesian only shared by Tai-Kadai and Formosan, and lost in Malayo-Polynesian.

Ostapirat (2013) concludes that Kra-Dai and Austronesian are sister languages with one common ancestor.[9]

Roger Blench (2018) supports the genealogical relation between Kra-Dai and Austronesian based on the fundamentally shared vocabulary. He further suggests that Kra-Dai was later influenced from a back-migration from Taiwan and the Philippines.[18]

See also edit

References edit

  1. ^ Schlegel, G. (1901). Review of Frankfurter's Siamese grammar. Tʻoung Pao 2:76–87.
  2. ^ Reid, L. A. (2006). "Austro-Tai Hypotheses". Pp. 740–741 in Keith Brown (editor in chief), The Encyclopedia of Language and Linguistics, 2nd edition.
  3. ^ Gerner, Matthias (2014). "Project Discussion: The Austro-Tai Hypothesis. The 14th International Symposium on Chinese Languages and Linguistics (IsCLL-14)" (PDF): 158. {{cite journal}}: Cite journal requires |journal= (help)
  4. ^ Benedict (1990).
  5. ^ Thurgood (1994).
  6. ^ Reid (2006).
  7. ^ "Data such as these [i.e. Ostapirat (2005) and Sagart (2004)] establish beyond any doubt that a genetic relationship exists between the two families." Reid 2006, p. 610.
  8. ^ Ostapirat (2000).
  9. ^ a b Ostapirat, Weera (2013). Austro-Tai revisited. Paper presented at the 23rd Annual Meeting of the Southeast Asian Linguistics Society, 29-31 May 2013, Chulalongkorn University.
  10. ^ Sagart, Laurent (2019). "A model of the origin of Kra-Dai tones". Cahiers de Linguistique Asie Orientale. 48 (1): 1–29. doi:10.1163/19606028-04801004. S2CID 198553640. hal-02179092.
  11. ^ a b Ostapirat, Weera (2023). Proto-Kra–Dai consonants: an outline and outstanding issues. 32nd Annual Meeting of the Southeast Asian Linguistics Society (SEALS 2023), May 18, 2023. Chiang Mai University.
  12. ^ Smith, Alexander D. 2021. More Austro-Tai Comparisons and Observations on Vowel Correspondences. SEALS 2021 2021-12-16 at the Wayback Machine. (Slides)
  13. ^ Smith, Alexander (2022-01-28). Alves, Mark; Sidwell, Paul (eds.). "More Austro-Tai Comparisons and Observations on Vowel Correspondences". Journal of the Southeast Asian Linguistics Society: Papers from the 30th Conference of the Southeast Asian Linguistics Society (2021). 15 (3): 112–134. doi:10.5281/zenodo.5781307. ISSN 1836-6821. Retrieved 2022-02-14.
  14. ^ Smith, Alexander. 2022b. Submorphemic crossover in Kra-Dai and Austronesian. Presentation given at the 31st Annual Meeting of the Southeast Asian Linguistics Society (SEALS 31), University of Hawaiʻi at Mānoa, May 18–20, 2022. (video)
  15. ^ Smith, Alexander. 2022c. Reevaluating two schwa-initial reconstructions in Proto- and pre-Proto-Austronesian numerals. Presentation given at the 31st Annual Meeting of the Southeast Asian Linguistics Society (SEALS 31), University of Hawaiʻi at Mānoa, May 18–20, 2022. (video)
  16. ^ Sagart (2005b)
  17. ^ Blench, Roger (2018). Tai-Kadai and Austronesian are Related at Multiple Levels and their Archaeological Interpretation (draft).
  18. ^ Blench, Roger (2018). Tai-Kadai and Austronesian are Related at Multiple Levels and their Archaeological Interpretation (draft). The volume of cognates between Austronesian and Daic, notably in fundamental vocabulary, is such that they must be related. Borrowing can be excluded as an explanation

Bibliography edit

  • Benedict, Paul K. (1942). "Thai, Kadai, and Indonesian: A new alignment in South-Eastern Asia" American Anthropologist 44.576-601.
  • Benedict, Paul K. (1975). Austro-Thai language and culture, with a glossary of roots. New Haven: HRAF Press. ISBN 0-87536-323-7.
  • Benedict, Paul K. (1990). Japanese/Austro-Tai. Ann Arbor: Karoma. ISBN 0-89720-078-0.
  • Blench, Roger (2004). Paper for the Symposium : Human migrations in continental East Asia and Taiwan: genetic, linguistic and archaeological evidence. Geneva, June 10–13.
  • Blench, Roger. (2010). Why we don't need Austric or any other macrophyla in SE Asia: The southern Yunnan interaction sphere (manuscript).
  • Blust, Robert. (2014). "The Higher Phylogeny of Austronesian and the Position of Tai-Kadai: Another Look". In The 14th International Symposium on Chinese Languages and Linguistics (IsCLL-14).
  • Carr, Michael. (1986). "Austro-Tai *Tsum(b)anget 'spirit' and Archaic Chinese *XmwângXmwet 恍惚 'bliss'". Asia-Africa Gengo Bunka Kenkyū, 32. 91-126. Tōkyō: Tōkyō Gaikokugo Daigaku.
  • Chamberlain, James R. (2016). "Kra-Dai and the Proto-History of South China and Vietnam". Journal of the Siam Society, 104, 27-76.
  • Li, Hui (李辉). (2005). Genetic structure of Austro-Tai populations (Doctoral dissertation). Fudan University.
  • Li, Hui (李辉) et al. (2008). "Paternal genetic affinity between Western Austronesians and Daic populations". BMC Evolutionary Biology, 8, 146. doi:10.1186/1471-2148-8-146
  • Luo, Y.-X. (2008). Sino-Tai and Tai-Kadai: Another Look. In A. V. N. Diller, J. A. Edmondson, & Y.-X. Luo (Eds.), The Tai-Kadai Languages (pp. 9-28). New York, NY: Routledge.
  • Miyake, Marc. 2013. Thurgood's "Tai-Kadai and Austronesian: the nature of the historical relationship" (1994).
  • Ostapirat, Weera. 2005. "Kra–Dai and Austronesian: Notes on phonological correspondences and vocabulary distribution." Laurent Sagart, Roger Blench & Alicia Sanchez-Mazas, eds. The Peopling of East Asia: Putting Together Archaeology, Linguistics and Genetics. London: Routledge Curzon, pp. 107–131.
  • Reid, Lawrence A. (1994). "Morphological Evidence for Austric. Oceanic Linguistics, 33(2), 323-344.
  • Reid, Lawrence A. (1999). "New Linguistic Evidence for the Austric Hypothesis" 2021-08-03 at the Wayback Machine. Selected Papers From the Eighth International Conference on Austronesian Linguistics (8ICAL) (pp. 5-30).
  • Reid, Lawrence A. (2005). "The Current Status of Austric: A review and evaluation of the lexical and morphosyntactic evidence". 2021-08-03 at the Wayback Machine In L. Sagart, R. Blench, & A. Sanchez-Mazas (Eds.), The Peopling of East Asia: Putting Together Archaeology, Linguistics and Genetics (pp. 132-160).
  • Reid, Lawrence A. (2006). "Austro-Tai Hypotheses". In Keith Brown (Ed.), The Encyclopedia of Language and Linguistics, 2nd edition (pp. 609–610).
  • Sagart, Laurent. (2004). "The higher phylogeny of Austronesian and the position of Tai-Kadai". Oceanic Linguistics, 43(2), 411-444.
  • Sagart, Laurent. (2005a). "Sino-Tibetan-Austronesian: An Updated and Improved Argument". In L. Sagart, R. Blench, & A. Sanchez-Mazas (Eds.), The Peopling of East Asia: Putting Together Archaeology, Linguistics and Genetics (pp. 161-176).
  • Sagart, Laurent. (2005b). "Tai-Kadai as a subgroup of Austronesian". In L. Sagart, R. Blench, & A. Sanchez-Mazas (Eds.), The Peopling of East Asia: Putting Together Archaeology, Linguistics and Genetics (pp. 177-181).
  • Schmidt, Wilhelm. (1906) Die Mon-Khmer Völker, ein Bindeglied zwischen Völkern Zentralasiens und Austronesiens. Braunschweig: Friedrich Vieweg und Sohn.
  • Thurgood, Graham. (1994). "Tai–Kadai and Austronesian: the nature of the relationship." Oceanic Linguistics 33.345-368.

austro, languages, sometimes, also, austro, thai, languages, proposed, language, family, that, comprises, austronesian, languages, languages, austro, proposed, geographicdistributionsoutheast, asia, east, asialinguistic, classificationproposed, language, famil. The Austro Tai languages sometimes also Austro Thai languages are a proposed language family that comprises the Austronesian languages and the Kra Dai languages Austro Tai proposed GeographicdistributionSoutheast Asia East AsiaLinguistic classificationproposed language familySubdivisionsAustronesian Kra Dai Japonic rarely included GlottologNoneRelated proposals include Austric Wilhelm Schmidt in 1906 and Sino Austronesian Laurent Sagart in 1990 2005 Contents 1 Origins 2 Evidence 2 1 Ostapirat 2005 2 1 1 Core vocabulary 2 1 2 Final consonants 2 1 3 Medial consonants 2 1 4 Tones 2 2 Smith 2021 3 Relationship 4 See also 5 References 6 BibliographyOrigins editThe Kra Dai languages contain numerous similar forms with Austronesian which were noticed as far back as Schlegel in 1901 1 These are considered to be too many to explain as chance resemblance 2 The question then is whether they are due to language contact i e borrowing or to common descent i e a genealogical relationship Evidence edit nbsp Tai Kadai migration route according to Matthias Gerner s Northeast to Southwest Hypothesis 3 nbsp Distribution of the Austronesian languagesThe first proposal of a genealogical relationship was that of Paul Benedict in 1942 which he expanded upon through 1990 This took the form of an expansion of Wilhelm Schmidt s Austric phylum and posited that Kra Dai and Austronesian had a sister relationship within Austric which Benedict then accepted Benedict later abandoned Austric but maintained his Austro Tai proposal adding the Japonic languages to the proposal as well 4 The proposal remained controversial among linguists especially after the publication of Benedict 1975 whose methods of reconstruction were idiosyncratic and considered unreliable For example Thurgood 1994 examined Benedict s claims and concluded that since the sound correspondences and tonal developments were irregular there was no evidence of a genealogical relationship and the numerous cognates must be chalked up to early language contact 5 However the fact that many of the Austro Tai cognates are found in core vocabulary which is generally more resistant to borrowing continued to intrigue scholars There were later several advances over Benedict s approach Abandoning the larger Austric proposal focusing on lexical reconstruction and regular sound correspondences including data from additional branches of Kra Dai Hlai and Kra using better reconstructions of Kra Dai and reconsidering the nature of the relationship with Kra Dai possibly being a branch daughter of Austronesian 6 Sagart 2005a cited a core of regular sound correspondences relating words belonging to the basic vocabulary in Benedict s work He pointed out the lack of a substantial body of shared cultural words He took these facts as indications that Benedict s Austro Tai cannot be explained as a contact phenomenon He further listed a number of specifically Malayo Polynesian features in the vocabulary shared by Tai Kadai and Austronesian concluding that Tai Kadai is a subgroup within Austronesian rather than a sister group to it Ostapirat 2000 reconstructed proto Kra one of the least well attested branches of Kra Dai Ostapirat 2005 later presented fifty core vocabulary items found in all five branches of Kra Dai and demonstrated that half of them words such as child eat eye fire hand head I you louse moon tooth water this etc can be related to proto Austronesian by regular sound correspondences a connection which Reid 2006 finds convincing 7 Austronesian is characterized by disyllabic roots whereas Kra Dai is predominantly monosyllabic It appears that in Kra Dai the first vowel reduced and then dropped out leaving a consonant cluster which frequently reduced further to a single consonant For example the proto Austronesian root qudip live raw corresponds to proto Kra k Dep and its reflex ktʰop in Laha as well as Tai dip all with the same meaning the D consonant is Ostapirat s voiced plosive of undetermined quality probably alveolar as opposed to dental articulation 8 In proto Kra Dai there appear to have been three tones in words ending in a sonorant vowel or nasal consonant labeled simply A B C plus words ending in a stop consonant D which did not have tone In general Austronesian words ending in a sonorant correspond to A and words ending in a stop correspond to D This accounts for most of the words There are also a few cognates with B and C tone From Indic borrowings it appears that tone B was originally a final h in Kra Dai and some of the corresponding Austronesian roots also end in h such as AN qempah chaff Kam Sui paa B Mulam kwaa B though there are few examples to go on Tone C seems to have originally been creaky voice or a final glottal stop It may correspond to H a laryngeal consonant of uncertain manner in proto Austronesian AN quluH head Thai klau C but again the number of cognates is too low to draw firm conclusions Sagart 2004 presented data from a newly described Kra language Buyang which like many other Kra languages retains the disyllabic roots characteristic of Austronesian Some examples are Root Buyang Proto MP to die matɛ matay eye mata mata head qadu quluH eight madu walu bird manuk manuk flower maŋa buŋahOstapirat 2013 lists the following potential cognates between Proto Kra Dai and Proto Austronesian 9 The Proto Kra Dai C signifies any unknown consonant the Proto Austronesian C is a phoneme tentatively reconstructed either as t s or t Meaning Proto Kra Dai Proto Austronesian eye maTaː maCa hand C imɤː qa lima tongue C emaː Sema tooth lipan nipen louse KuTuː kuCu fire C apuj Sapuy water C aNam daNum I akuː aku you sg isuː iSu one C itsɤː esa isa to die maTaːj ma aCaySagart 2019 finds multiple examples of the correlation between the coda of Proto Austronesian polysyllabic words and the tone of suspected Kra Dai cognates 10 Sonorant final Austronesian terms corresponded with tone A in Kra Dai Proto Austronesian uvular fricative finals corresponded with tone B Proto Austronesian final sibilants and h corresponded with tone C Ostapirat 2005 edit Austro Tai sound correspondences and cognate sets listed by Ostapirat 2005 are as follows Core vocabulary edit Kra Dai core vocabulary and Proto Austronesian cognates Gloss p Austronesian p Tai p Kam Sui p Hlai Gelao Anshun p Kra Dai tone1 blood lɯat phjaat daːt plɒ D2 bone duuk laak rɯːʔ taŋ D3 ear huu qhaa zai zau A4 eye maCa taa daa tsha tau A5 excrement Caqi khii qee hai qɒ C6 fart qe n tut tot tet thuːt tae Laozhai D7 fingernail lep ljap liːp kle D8 grease SimaR man man man Be mal Laha A9 hand qa lima mɯɯ mjaa meɯ mpau A10 head qulu klau ku rau klɒ B C11 knee khau quu rou qo Laozhai B12 leg thigh paqa khaa qaa ha qau A13 liver tap tap ŋaːn tae Laozhai D14 navel dɯɯ ʔdwaa reɯ zo Qiaoshang A15 nose ijuŋ daŋ ʔnaŋ doŋ daŋ Laha A16 shoulder qabaRa baa wie Lakkia va baa Laha B17 tooth nipen fan wjan phen pan A18 bear n Cumay mii ʔmii mui mi Laozhai A19 bird manuk PMP nok nok taȶ ntau D20 dog maa m aa ma mpau A21 fish plaa paa Kam da lau A22 horn khau qaau hau Baoding qa A23 louse head kuCu hau tuu tshou ta A24 tail haaŋ het tshut tshan D25 leaf ʔabag bai waa Lakkia beɯ vu A26 seed fan White Tai wan phen pa Qiaoshang A27 sesame leŋa ŋaa ʔŋaa keɯ Baoding ŋklau A28 cloud faa faa fa Baoding phaa Laha C29 fire Sapuy fai wii pei pai A30 moon bulaN dɯan njaan ɳaːn daan Laha A31 path hon khun kuːn qan A32 rain fon fen pun jal Laha A33 stone hin tin tshiːn pɣaa A34 smoke khwan kwan hwoːn qɒ A35 water daNum naam nam nom eɯ C C36 black tidem dam ʔnam dom C ʔdam Buyang A37 dry khaɯ Lao khu C kheɯ xau B38 full tem tik thiːʔ tei D39 green khiau ɕu khiːu ten A40 long rii ʔɣaai loi Be dii C Buyang A41 live raw qudip dip ʔdjup riːp te D42 come maa m aa peɯ Baoding mu A43 eat kaen kin tsjaan khan Be kaan Buyang A44 kill khaa haa hau ven C45 walk go pai paai pei pai A46 child person aNak luuk laak dɯːʔ lei D47 grandmother aya jaa B jaa C tsaɯ C Baoding ʑɒ C B C48 this i ni nii naai nei ni B C49 I aku kuu ju hou Baoding kuu Buyang A50 you kamu mɯŋ maa Lakkia meɯ maa Buyang AFinal consonants edit Summary of Austro Tai final sound correspondences p Austronesian p Kra Dai p p t t k k q k C C s c b w d y g ɣ m m n n ŋ ŋ N N gt n l R R gt ɣ l w w y y l yCognates with final consonant correspondences Gloss p Austronesian p Tai p Kam Sui p Hlai Kra Laha p Kra Daiwater daNum nam nam nom mtooth nipen fan wjan phen pan Gelao nnose ijuŋ PMP daŋ ʔnaŋ doŋ daŋ ŋlive raw qudip dip ʔdjup riːp kthop Ta Mit Laha pfart qe n tut tot tet thuːt tut Buyang tpungent paqiC phet geȶ pat Cfowl bird manuk PMP nok nok noːk Baoding nok ktaro biRaq phɯak ʔɣaak geːk Baoding haak kweep Caŋis hai ʔɲe ŋei ɲit cstar qalejaw daaw ʔdaau Mulam raːu wfire Sapuy fai wi pei pei ynavel pudeR dɯɯ ʔdaa reɯɯ dau ɣContrast between C and t in both Kra Dai and Austronesian Gloss p Austronesian Siamese Saek Be Hlai Baoding p Kra Daifart t tot rɛt dut thuːt tbitter spicy C phet geȶ Cskin scale C klet trɛk liʔ Cant mot mɛk muʔ puȶ CProto Austronesian final q and Proto Kra Dai k C Gloss p Austronesian p Tai p Kam Sui Hlai Baoding Kra Laha p Kra Daitaro biRaq phɯak ʔɣaak geːk haak kotter Sanaq naak teːk kten puluq phuːt put Buyang CProto Austronesian final s and Proto Kra Dai c Gloss p Austronesian p Tai p Kam Sui p Hlai p Kra p Kra Daiweep Caŋis hai ʔɲe ŋei ɲit cstream qaRus huai kui cProto Austronesian final R and N and Proto Kra Dai l n Gloss p Austronesian p Tai p Kam Sui p Hlai Kra Laha p Kra Dainavel pudeR dɯɯ ʔdaa reɯ daufat n SimaR man man mal lmoon bulaN dɯan njaan ɲaːn daan nrain quzaN jal lSpecial Proto Kra Dai development corresponding to Proto Austronesian R Gloss p Austronesian p Tai p Kam Sui p Be Kra Laha p Kra Daiflow qaluR lai lui lei klei yProto Atayal voiced stop endings corresponding to Kra Dai final voiced glides Gloss Proto Atayal p Tai p Kam Sui p Hlai p Kra p Kra Daiyawn surab haau kho kaːu wmouse qawlid lai yleaf ʔabag bai beɯ ɣProto Austronesian final l corresponding to Kra Dai final glides possible development Gloss p Austronesian p Tai p Kam Sui p Hlai p Kra p Kra Daiclam snail ku S ul hɔɔi khuy tshei ci yMedial consonants edit Medial correspondences between Proto Austronesian and Proto Kra Dai assuming that Proto Kra Dai was polysyllabic Gloss p Austronesian p Tai p Kam Sui p Hlai Kra Laha p Kra Daitooth nipen fan wjan phen pan Gelao p fire Sapuy fai wi pei pei p fart qe n tut tot tet thuːt tut Buyang t head louse kuCu hau tu tshou tou C eye maCa taa daa tsha taa C I aku kuu hou Baoding kuu Buyang k leg paqa khaa qaa ha Tongshi kaa q excrement Caqi khii qe hai kai q hand qa lima mɯɯ mjaa meɯ maa m bear n Cumay mii ʔmi mui me m otter Sanaq naak naːʔ n this i ni nii naai nei nei n bird manuk PMP nok nok noːk Baoding nok N water daNum naam nam nom N weep Caŋis hai ʔɲe ŋei ɲit ŋ sesame leŋa ŋaa ʔŋaa keɯ Baoding ŋaa Buyang ŋ shoulder qabaRa baa wie Lakkia va baa b navel pudeR dɯɯ ʔdaa reɯ dau d live raw qudip dip ʔdjup riːp kthop Ta Mit Laha d black tidem dam ʔnam dom ʔdam Buyang d nose ijuŋ PMP dap ʔnaŋ doŋ daŋ d grandmother aya jaa jaa tsaɯ jaa j rain quZaN jal j taro biRaq phɯak ʔɣaak geːk Baoding pɣaak R net aray hɛɛ re Then raːi R saliva ŋalay laai ŋwee Kam laːi laai Buyang l head qulu klau kɣo Mulam rau ɮ sour qa l sem som fum s centipede qalu Sipan khep khup riːp S clam snail ku S ul hɔɔi khuy tshei ci S Proto Kra Dai d corresponds to both Proto Austronesian d and j according to Ostapirat 2023 For example 11 Gloss Buyang Thai p Austronesianraw qa ʔdip dip qudipblack ʔdam dam tidembone qa ʔdaːk duːknose qa ʔdaŋ daŋ ujungnavel ma ʔdue dɯː pujaboat ʔdaː rɯa alujaProto Kra Dai b l corresponds to Proto Austronesian bVl according to Ostapirat 2023 11 Gloss Saek Thai p Kra Dai p Austronesianmoon blian dɯan bulaːn bulaNflower blɔːk dɔːk baluːk bulakto weed bjaːi daːi belaːyspotted bjaːŋ daːŋ belaːŋ belaŋTones edit See also Proto Tai Tones Proto Kra Dai tone B correspondences Gloss p Austronesian p Tai p Kam Sui p Hlai Kra Laha p Kra Dai tonechaff bran qepa ram paa vo B paa Bshoulder qabaRa baa wie Lakkia va baa BTone B in Tai kinship Gloss p Tai p Kam Sui p Hlai Kra Buyang p Kra Dai tonegrandfather puu B phau C puu B Bgrandmother jaa B jaa C tsaɯ C jaa C CProto Kra Dai tone C correspondences Gloss p Austronesian p Tai p Kam Sui p Hlai p Kra p Kra Dai toneexcrement Caqi khii qe hai kai Chead qulu klau ku rau klɒ Cwater daNum nam nam nom Csour qa l sem som fum CTone C from Proto Kra Dai c in some Kra Dai groups Gloss p Austronesian p Tai p Kam Sui p Hlai p Kra p Kra Daiweep Caŋis hai C ʔɲe C ŋei C ɲit cstream qaRus huai C kui C cSmith 2021 edit Smith 2021 presents additional phonological and lexical evidence for Austro Tai 12 Additional supporting data is also published in Smith 2022 13 14 15 Lexical correspondences between Proto Austronesian and Proto Tai proposed by Smith 2021 are Gloss p Austronesian p Taifear talaw ʰlaːwA afraid rattan quay C waːyAto plant tanem to bury plant t namA to transplant a crop to hold kemkem to hold in the fist kamA hold in the closed hand fish hook kabit fishing hook ɓetDfish poison tubah Derris root C bɯeA1 to poison fish shadow qaNiŋu ŋawAleech meCaq paddy leech daːkDOther lexical correspondences basic vocabulary between Proto Austronesian and Proto Tai from Smith 2021 are Gloss p Austronesian p Taimoon bulaN ɓlɯenAvomit utaq rwɯekDpaddle boat aluja paddle C rwɯeA boat navel puja ɗwɯːAbear Cumay ʰmwɯjAhand qalima mwɯːAotter Sanaq naːkDeye maCa p taːAdie m aCay p taːjAleg paqa p qaːALexical correspondences between Proto Malayo Polynesian PMP and Proto Tai proposed by Smith 2021 are Gloss PMP p Taito hurt sakit sick to hurt be in pain keːtDspotted belaŋ ɓlaːŋBSmith deduces that Proto Austronesian final syllable a regularly corresponds to Proto Tai ɯ e if penultimate Proto Austronesian syllable contained a high vowel like i or u On the other hand if that penultimate syllable had a low vowel instead Proto Austronesian a would instead correspond to Proto Tai aː Lexical correspondences between Proto Austronesian and Proto Hlai as well as Proto Kra Gloss p Austronesian p Hlai p Krato sell baliw saliw aRiːu s ɣwito fall tuq ʔtuk tokDRelationship editAmong scholars who accept the evidence as definitive there is disagreement as to the nature of the relationship Benedict attempted to show that Tai Kadai has features which cannot be accounted for by proto Austronesian and that therefore it must be a separate family coordinate with Austronesian a sister relationship Ostapirat concluded that these reconstructed linguistic features are spurious However he could not rule out the possibility that Tai Kadai tone cannot be explained and so leaves the question open pending further reconstruction of Proto Austronesian He supports the consensus hypothesis of several scholars that proto Austronesian was spoken on Formosa or adjacent areas of coastal China and that the likely homeland of Proto Tai Kadai was coastal Fujian or Guangdong The spread of the Tai Kadai peoples may have been aided by agriculture but any who remained near the coast were eventually absorbed by the Chinese Sagart on the other hand holds that Tai Kadai is a branch of Austronesian which migrated back to the mainland from northeastern Formosa long after Formosa was settled but probably before the expansion of Malayo Polynesian out of Formosa He presents a distinct argument for subgrouping Tai Kadai with Malayo Polynesian he argues that the numerals 5 10 shared by Tai Kadai Malayo Polynesian and three southeastern Formosan languages are post proto Austronesian innovations Part of the problem of evidence may be due to the loss of the ancestral languages in the Philippines the uniformity of Philippine languages suggests widespread language replacement after the expected time of the Tai Kadai split 16 Sagart 2005b again proposes an Eastern Formosan Malayo Polynesian connection with Tai Kadai based on words such as Proto Tai Kadai maNuk and Eastern Formosan manuk bird as compared to Proto Austronesian where the word for bird was qayam and maNuk meant chicken cf English fowl which once meant bird but has come to usually refer to chickens and other birds raised for meat and a few other words such mu thou which have not been reconstructed for proto Austronesian However Ostapirat notes Tai Kadai retains the Austronesian N in this word which had been lost from Eastern Formosan and Malayo Polynesian and that a change in meaning from chicken to bird could easily have happened independently for example among proto Tai Kadai speakers when they borrowed the mainland word ki chicken cognate with Old Chinese kej and Hmongic qai nbsp Proposed genesis of Daic languages and their relation with Austronesians Blench 2018 17 Sagart 2005b suggests that Austronesian including Tai Kadai is ultimately related to the Sino Tibetan languages forming a Sino Austronesian family The Proto Sino Austronesian speakers would have originated from the Neolithic communities of the coastal regions of prehistoric North China or East China Ostapirat disputes this view noting that the apparent cognates are rarely found in all branches of Tai Kadai and almost none in core vocabulary Ostapirat maintains that Tai Kadai could not descend from Malayo Polynesian in the Philippines and likely not from the languages of eastern Formosa either His evidence is in the Tai Kadai sound correspondences which reflect Austronesian distinctions that were lost in Malayo Polynesian and even Eastern Formosan These are the pairs of proto AN sounds t C and n N which fell together as t and n in Proto MP and Eastern Formosan but which each correspond to pairs of distinct sounds in Proto Tai Kadai Further Proto AN S corresponds to s in Proto Tai Kadai but was debuccalized to h in Proto MP There are also Austro Tai roots related to Proto Austronesian roots which are not attested from Malayo Polynesian such as Cumay bear In Sagart s model such roots have to be treated as retentions from Proto Austronesian only shared by Tai Kadai and Formosan and lost in Malayo Polynesian Ostapirat 2013 concludes that Kra Dai and Austronesian are sister languages with one common ancestor 9 Roger Blench 2018 supports the genealogical relation between Kra Dai and Austronesian based on the fundamentally shared vocabulary He further suggests that Kra Dai was later influenced from a back migration from Taiwan and the Philippines 18 See also editEast Asian languages Austric languages Old Yue language Sino Austronesian languages Austronesian Ongan languages Proto Kra Dai languageReferences edit Schlegel G 1901 Review of Frankfurter s Siamese grammar Tʻoung Pao 2 76 87 Reid L A 2006 Austro Tai Hypotheses Pp 740 741 in Keith Brown editor in chief The Encyclopedia of Language and Linguistics 2nd edition Gerner Matthias 2014 Project Discussion The Austro Tai Hypothesis The 14th International Symposium on Chinese Languages and Linguistics IsCLL 14 PDF 158 a href Template Cite journal html title Template Cite journal cite journal a Cite journal requires journal help Benedict 1990 Thurgood 1994 Reid 2006 Data such as these i e Ostapirat 2005 and Sagart 2004 establish beyond any doubt that a genetic relationship exists between the two families Reid 2006 p 610 Ostapirat 2000 a b Ostapirat Weera 2013 Austro Tai revisited Paper presented at the 23rd Annual Meeting of the Southeast Asian Linguistics Society 29 31 May 2013 Chulalongkorn University Sagart Laurent 2019 A model of the origin of Kra Dai tones Cahiers de Linguistique Asie Orientale 48 1 1 29 doi 10 1163 19606028 04801004 S2CID 198553640 hal 02179092 a b Ostapirat Weera 2023 Proto Kra Dai consonants an outline and outstanding issues 32nd Annual Meeting of the Southeast Asian Linguistics Society SEALS 2023 May 18 2023 Chiang Mai University Smith Alexander D 2021 More Austro Tai Comparisons and Observations on Vowel Correspondences SEALS 2021 Archived 2021 12 16 at the Wayback Machine Slides Smith Alexander 2022 01 28 Alves Mark Sidwell Paul eds More Austro Tai Comparisons and Observations on Vowel Correspondences Journal of the Southeast Asian Linguistics Society Papers from the 30th Conference of the Southeast Asian Linguistics Society 2021 15 3 112 134 doi 10 5281 zenodo 5781307 ISSN 1836 6821 Retrieved 2022 02 14 Smith Alexander 2022b Submorphemic crossover in Kra Dai and Austronesian Presentation given at the 31st Annual Meeting of the Southeast Asian Linguistics Society SEALS 31 University of Hawaiʻi at Manoa May 18 20 2022 video Smith Alexander 2022c Reevaluating two schwa initial reconstructions in Proto and pre Proto Austronesian numerals Presentation given at the 31st Annual Meeting of the Southeast Asian Linguistics Society SEALS 31 University of Hawaiʻi at Manoa May 18 20 2022 video Sagart 2005b Blench Roger 2018 Tai Kadai and Austronesian are Related at Multiple Levels and their Archaeological Interpretation draft Blench Roger 2018 Tai Kadai and Austronesian are Related at Multiple Levels and their Archaeological Interpretation draft The volume of cognates between Austronesian and Daic notably in fundamental vocabulary is such that they must be related Borrowing can be excluded as an explanationBibliography editBenedict Paul K 1942 Thai Kadai and Indonesian A new alignment in South Eastern Asia American Anthropologist 44 576 601 Benedict Paul K 1975 Austro Thai language and culture with a glossary of roots New Haven HRAF Press ISBN 0 87536 323 7 Benedict Paul K 1990 Japanese Austro Tai Ann Arbor Karoma ISBN 0 89720 078 0 Blench Roger 2004 Stratification in the peopling of China how far does the linguistic evidence match genetics and archaeology PDF Paper for the Symposium Human migrations in continental East Asia and Taiwan genetic linguistic and archaeological evidence Geneva June 10 13 Blench Roger 2010 Why we don t need Austric or any other macrophyla in SE Asia The southern Yunnan interaction sphere manuscript Blust Robert 2014 The Higher Phylogeny of Austronesian and the Position of Tai Kadai Another Look In The 14th International Symposium on Chinese Languages and Linguistics IsCLL 14 Carr Michael 1986 Austro Tai Tsum b anget spirit and Archaic Chinese XmwangXmwet 恍惚 bliss Asia Africa Gengo Bunka Kenkyu 32 91 126 Tōkyō Tōkyō Gaikokugo Daigaku Chamberlain James R 2016 Kra Dai and the Proto History of South China and Vietnam Journal of the Siam Society 104 27 76 Li Hui 李辉 2005 Genetic structure of Austro Tai populations Doctoral dissertation Fudan University 1 Li Hui 李辉 et al 2008 Paternal genetic affinity between Western Austronesians and Daic populations BMC Evolutionary Biology 8 146 doi 10 1186 1471 2148 8 146 Luo Y X 2008 Sino Tai and Tai Kadai Another Look In A V N Diller J A Edmondson amp Y X Luo Eds The Tai Kadai Languages pp 9 28 New York NY Routledge Miyake Marc 2013 Thurgood s Tai Kadai and Austronesian the nature of the historical relationship 1994 Ostapirat Weera 2005 Kra Dai and Austronesian Notes on phonological correspondences and vocabulary distribution Laurent Sagart Roger Blench amp Alicia Sanchez Mazas eds The Peopling of East Asia Putting Together Archaeology Linguistics and Genetics London Routledge Curzon pp 107 131 Reid Lawrence A 1994 Morphological Evidence for Austric Oceanic Linguistics 33 2 323 344 Reid Lawrence A 1999 New Linguistic Evidence for the Austric Hypothesis Archived 2021 08 03 at the Wayback Machine Selected Papers From the Eighth International Conference on Austronesian Linguistics 8ICAL pp 5 30 Reid Lawrence A 2005 The Current Status of Austric A review and evaluation of the lexical and morphosyntactic evidence Archived 2021 08 03 at the Wayback Machine In L Sagart R Blench amp A Sanchez Mazas Eds The Peopling of East Asia Putting Together Archaeology Linguistics and Genetics pp 132 160 Reid Lawrence A 2006 Austro Tai Hypotheses In Keith Brown Ed The Encyclopedia of Language and Linguistics 2nd edition pp 609 610 Sagart Laurent 2004 The higher phylogeny of Austronesian and the position of Tai Kadai Oceanic Linguistics 43 2 411 444 Sagart Laurent 2005a Sino Tibetan Austronesian An Updated and Improved Argument In L Sagart R Blench amp A Sanchez Mazas Eds The Peopling of East Asia Putting Together Archaeology Linguistics and Genetics pp 161 176 Sagart Laurent 2005b Tai Kadai as a subgroup of Austronesian In L Sagart R Blench amp A Sanchez Mazas Eds The Peopling of East Asia Putting Together Archaeology Linguistics and Genetics pp 177 181 Schmidt Wilhelm 1906 Die Mon Khmer Volker ein Bindeglied zwischen Volkern Zentralasiens und Austronesiens Braunschweig Friedrich Vieweg und Sohn Thurgood Graham 1994 Tai Kadai and Austronesian the nature of the relationship Oceanic Linguistics 33 345 368 Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Austro Tai languages amp oldid 1213573179, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

article

, read, download, free, free download, mp3, video, mp4, 3gp, jpg, jpeg, gif, png, picture, music, song, movie, book, game, games.