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Tai languages

The Tai or Zhuang–Tai[1] languages (Thai: ภาษาไท or ภาษาไต, transliteration: p̣hās̛̄āthay or p̣hās̛̄ātay) are a branch of the Kra–Dai language family. The Tai languages include the most widely spoken of the Tai–Kadai languages, including Standard Thai or Siamese, the national language of Thailand; Lao or Laotian, the national language of Laos; Myanmar's Shan language; and Zhuang, a major language in the Southwestern China's Guangxi Zhuang Autonomous Region, spoken by the Zhuang (壯) people, the largest minority ethnic group in China,[2] with a population of 15.55 million, living mainly in Guangxi, the rest scattered across Yunnan, Guangdong, Guizhou and Hunan provinces.

Tai
Zhuang–Tai
Geographic
distribution
Southern China (esp. Guangxi, Guizhou, Yunnan and Guangdong), Southeast Asia, north-east India
Linguistic classificationKra–Dai
Proto-languageProto-Tai
Subdivisions
ISO 639-2 / 5tai
Glottologdaic1237
Distribution of Tai languages:
  Northern Tai / Northern Zhuang
  Central Tai / Southern Zhuang
  Southwestern Tai / Thai

Name

Cognates with the name Tai (Thai, Dai, etc.) are used by speakers of many Tai languages. The term Tai is now well-established as the generic name in English. In his book The Tai-Kadai Languages Anthony Diller claims that Lao scholars he has met are not pleased with Lao being regarded as a Tai language.[3] For some, Thai should instead be considered a member of the Lao language family.[3] One or more Ancient Chinese characters for 'Lao' may be cited in support of this alternative appellation.[3] Some scholars including Benedict (1975), have used Thai to refer to a wider (Tai) grouping and one sees designations like proto-Thai and Austro-Thai in earlier works.[3] In the institutional context in Thailand, and occasionally elsewhere, sometimes Tai (and its corresponding Thai-script spelling, without a final -y symbol) is used to indicate varieties in the language family not spoken in Thailand or spoken there only as the result of recent immigration.[3] In this usage Thai would not then be considered a Tai language.[3] On the other hand, Gedney, Li and others have preferred to call the standard language of Thailand Siamese rather than Thai, perhaps to reduce potential Thai/Tai confusion, especially among English speakers not comfortable with making a word initial unaspirated voiceless sound for Tai, which in any event might sound artificial or arcane to outsiders.

According to Michel Ferlus, the ethnonyms Tai/Thai (or Tay/Thay) would have evolved from the etymon *k(ə)ri: 'human being' through the following chain: kəri: > kəli: > kədi:/kədaj (-l- > -d- shift in tense sesquisyllables and probable diphthongization of -i: > -aj).[4][5] This in turn changed to di:/daj (presyllabic truncation and probable diphthongization -i: > -aj). And then to *dajA (Proto-Southwestern Tai) > tʰajA2 (in Siamese and Lao) or > tajA2 (in the other Southwestern and Central Tai languages by Li Fangkuei). Michel Ferlus' work is based on some simple rules of phonetic change observable in the Sinosphere and studied for the most part by William H. Baxter (1992).[5]

The Central Tai languages are called Zhuang in China and Tay and Nung in Vietnam.

History

 
Map showing linguistic family tree overlaid on a geographic distribution map of the Tai family. This map only shows general pattern of the migration of Tai-speaking tribes, not specific routes, which would have snaked along the rivers and over the lower passes.

Citing the fact that both the Zhuang and Thai peoples have the same exonym for the Vietnamese, kɛɛuA1,[a] Jerold A. Edmondson of the University of Texas at Arlington posited that the split between Zhuang (a Central Tai language) and the Southwestern Tai languages happened no earlier than the founding of Jiaozhi in Vietnam in 112 BCE but no later than the 5th-6th century AD.[6] Based on layers of Chinese loanwords in Proto-Southwestern Tai and other historical evidence, Pittayawat Pittayaporn (2014) suggests that the dispersal of Southwestern Tai must have begun sometime between the 8th and 10th centuries AD.[7]

Connection to ancient Yue language(s)

The Tai languages descend from proto-Tai-Kadai, which has been hypothesized to originate in the Lower Yangtze valleys. Ancient Chinese texts refer to non-Sinitic languages spoken across this substantial region and their speakers as "Yue". Although those languages are extinct, traces of their existence could be found in unearthed inscriptional materials, ancient Chinese historical texts and non-Han substrata in various Southern Chinese dialects. Thai, as the most-spoken language in the Tai-Kadai language family, has been used extensively in historical-comparative linguistics to identify the origins of language(s) spoken in the ancient region of South China. One of the very few direct records of non-Sinitic speech in pre-Qin and Han times having been preserved so far is the "Song of the Yue Boatman" (Yueren Ge 越人歌), which was transcribed phonetically in Chinese characters in 528 BC, and found in the 善说 Shanshuo chapter of the Shuoyuan 说苑 or 'Garden of Persuasions'. In the early 1980's the Zhuang linguist Wei Qingwen using reconstructed Old Chinese for the characters discovered that the resulting vocabulary showed strong resemblance to modern Zhuang.[8] Later, Zhengzhang Shangfang (1991) followed Wei's insight but used Thai orthography for comparison, since this orthography dates from the 13th century and preserves archaisms vis-à-vis the modern pronunciation.[9]

Internal classification

Haudricourt (1956)

Haudricourt emphasizes the specificity of Dioi (Zhuang) and proposes to make a two-way distinction between the following two sets.[10] The original language names used in Haudricourt's (1956) are provided first; alternative names are given in parentheses.

Characteristics of the Dioi group pointed out by Haudricourt are

  • r- corresponding to the lateral l- in the other Tai languages,[verification needed]
  • divergent vowel system characteristics, e.g. 'tail' has an /a/ vowel in Tai proper, as against /ə̄/ in Bo-ai, /iə/ in Tianzhou, and /ɯə/ in Tianzhou and Wuming, and
  • the lack of aspirated stops and affricates, which are found everywhere in Tai proper.

Li (1977)

Li Fang-Kuei divided Tai into three sister branches.

Li's Northern group corresponds to Haudricourt's Dioi group, while his Central and Southwestern groups correspond to Haudricourt's Tai proper. The three last languages in Haudricourt's list of 'Tai proper' languages are Tho (Tày), Longzhou, and Nung, which Li classifies as 'Central Tai'.

This classification scheme has long been accepted as standard in comparative Tai linguistics. However, Central Tai does not appear to be a monophyletic group.

Gedney (1989)

Gedney (1989) considers Central and Southwestern Tai to form a subgroup, of which Northern Tai is a sister. The top-level branching is in agreement with Haudricourt (1956).

Luo (1997)

Luo Yongxian (1997) classifies the Tai languages as follows, introducing a fourth branch called Northwestern Tai that includes Ahom, Shan, Dehong Dai, and Khamti. All branches are considered to be coordinate to each other.[11]

Pittayaporn (2009)

 
Southwestern Tai languages

Overview

Pittayawat Pittayaporn (2009) classifies the Tai languages based on clusters of shared innovations (which, individually, may be associated with more than one branch) (Pittayaporn 2009:298). In Pittayaporn's preliminary classification system of the Tai languages, Central Tai is considered to be paraphyletic and is split up into multiple branches, with the Zhuang varieties of Chongzuo in southwestern Guangxi (especially in the Zuo River valley at the border to Vietnam) having the most internal diversity. The Southwestern Tai and Northern Tai branches remain intact as in Li Fang-Kuei's 1977 classification system, and several of the Southern Zhuang languages allocated ISO codes are considered to be paraphyletic. The classification is as follows.[12]

Standard Zhuang is based on the dialect of Shuangqiao (双桥), Wuming District.

 
Sites surveyed in Zhang (1999), subgrouped according to Pittayaporn (2009):    N,    M,    I,    C,    B,    F,    H,    L,    P

Sound changes

 
Distribution of Central and Northern Tai languages (Zhuang, Tay-Nung and Bouyei included)

The following phonological shifts occurred in the Q (Southwestern), N (Northern), B (Ningming), and C (Chongzuo) subgroups (Pittayaporn 2009:300–301).

Proto-Tai reflexes
Proto-Tai Subgroup Q[b] Subgroup N[c] Subgroup B Subgroup C
*ɤj, *ɤw, *ɤɰ *aj, *aw, *aɰ *i:, *u:, *ɯ: *i:, *u:, *ɯ:
*ɯj, *ɯw *iː, *uː[d] *aj, *aw[e] *iː, *uː
*we, *wo *eː, *oː *iː, *uː *eː, *oː[f] *eː, *oː[g]
*ɟm̩.r- *br- *ɟr- *ɟr-
*k.t- *tr- *tr-
*ɤn, *ɤt, *ɤc *an, *at, *ac[h]

Furthermore, the following shifts occurred at various nodes leading up to node Q.

  • E: *p.t- > *p.r-; *ɯm > *ɤm
  • G: *k.r- > *qr-
  • K: *eː, *oː > *ɛː, *ɔː
  • O: *ɤn > *on
  • Q: *kr- > *ʰr-

Edmondson (2013)

Jerold A. Edmondson's (2013) computational phylogenetic analysis of the Tai languages is shown below. Tay and Nung are both shown to be coherent branches under Central Tai. Northern Tai and Southwestern Tai are also shown to be coherent branches.[13]

Reconstruction

Proto-Tai has been reconstructed in 1977 by Li Fang-Kuei and by Pittayawat Pittayaporn in 2009.[14]

Proto-Southwestern Tai has also been reconstructed in 1977 by Li Fang-Kuei and by Nanna L. Jonsson in 1991.[15]

Proto-Tai Pronouns[citation needed]
Proto-Tai Thai alphabet
1st singular *ku กู
dual (exclusive) *pʰɯa เผือ
plural (exclusive) *tu ตู
Incl. dual (inclusive) *ra รา
plural (inclusive) *rau เรา
2nd singular *mɯŋ มึง
dual *kʰɯa เขือ
plural *su สู
3rd singular *man มัน
dual *kʰa ขา
plural *kʰau เขา

Comparison

 
Tai alphabets. The phrase is kind elephant rider.

Below is comparative table of Tai languages.

English Proto-Southwestern Tai[16] Thai Lao Northern Thai Shan Tai Lü Standard Zhuang Ahom
wind *lom /lōm/ /lóm/ /lōm/ /lóm/ /lôm/ /ɣum˧˩/ lum
town *mɯaŋ /mɯ̄aŋ/ /mɯ́aŋ/ /mɯ̄aŋ/ /mɤ́ŋ/ /mɤ̂ŋ/ /mɯŋ˧/ mvng
earth *ʔdin /dīn/ /dìn/ /dīn/ /lǐn/ /dín/ /dei˧/ nin
fire *vai/aɯ /fāj/ /fáj/ /fāj/ /pʰáj/ or /fáj/ /fâj/ /fei˧˩/ phai
heart *čai/aɯ /hǔa tɕāj/ /hǔa tɕàj/ /hǔa tɕǎj/ /hǒ tsǎɰ/ /hó tɕáj/ /sim/ chau
love *rak /rák/ /hāk/ /hák/ /hâk/ /hak/ /gyai˧˩/ rak
water *naam /náːm/ /nâm/ /nám/ /nâm/ /nà̄m/ /ɣaem˦˨/ nam

Writing systems

 
Graphical summary of the development of Tai scripts from a Shan perspective, as reported in Sai Kam Mong's Shan Script book.

Many Southwestern Tai languages are written using Brahmi-derived alphabets. Zhuang languages are traditionally written with Chinese characters called Sawndip, and now officially written with a romanized alphabet, though the traditional writing system is still in use to this day.

See also

Notes

  1. ^ A1 designates a tone.
  2. ^ Unless indicated otherwise, all phonological shifts occurred at the primary level (node A).
  3. ^ Unless indicated otherwise, all phonological shifts occurred at the primary level (node D).
  4. ^ Also, the *ɯːk > *uːk shift occurred at node A.
  5. ^ Innovation at node N
  6. ^ For node B, the affected Proto-Tai syllable was *weː, *woː.
  7. ^ For node C, the affected Proto-Tai syllable was *weː, *woː.
  8. ^ Innovation at node J

References

  1. ^ Diller, 2008. The Tai–Kadai Languages, p. 7.
  2. ^ "The Zhuang ethnic minority".
  3. ^ a b c d e f Diller, Anthony; Edmondson, Jerry; Luo, Yongxian (2004). The Tai-Kadai Languages. Routledge (2004), pp. 5-6. ISBN 1135791163.
  4. ^ Ferlus, Michel (2009). Formation of Ethnonyms in Southeast Asia. 42nd International Conference on Sino-Tibetan Languages and Linguistics, Nov 2009, Chiang Mai, Thailand. 2009, p.3.
  5. ^ a b Pain, Frédéric (2008). An Introduction to Thai Ethnonymy: Examples from Shan and Northern Thai. Journal of the American Oriental Society Vol. 128, No. 4 (Oct. - Dec., 2008), p.646.
  6. ^ Edmondson, Jerold A. The power of language over the past: Tai settlement and Tai linguistics in southern China and northern Vietnam. Studies in Southeast Asian languages and linguistics, Jimmy G. Harris, Somsonge Burusphat and James E. Harris, ed. Bangkok, Thailand: Ek Phim Thai Co. Ltd. http://ling.uta.edu/~jerry/pol.pdf (see page 15)
  7. ^ Pittayaporn, Pittayawat (2014). Layers of Chinese Loanwords in Proto-Southwestern Tai as Evidence for the Dating of the Spread of Southwestern Tai. MANUSYA: Journal of Humanities, Special Issue No 20: 47–64.
  8. ^ Edmondson 2007, p. 16.
  9. ^ Zhengzhang 1991, pp. 159–168.
  10. ^ Haudricourt, André-Georges. 1956. De la restitution des initiales dans les langues monosyllabiques : le problème du thai commun. Bulletin de la Société de Linguistique de Paris 52. 307–322.
  11. ^ Luo, Yongxian. (1997). The subgroup structure of the Tai Languages: a historical-comparative study. Journal of Chinese Linguistics Monograph Series, (12), p. 232.
  12. ^ Pittayaporn, Pittayawat. 2009. The Phonology of Proto-Tai. PhD dissertation. Department of Linguistics, Cornell University.
  13. ^ Edmondson, Jerold A. 2013. Tai subgrouping using phylogenetic estimation. Presented at the 46th International Conference on Sino-Tibetan Languages and Linguistics (ICSTLL 46), Dartmouth College, Hanover, New Hampshire, United States, August 7–10, 2013 (Session: Tai-Kadai Workshop).
  14. ^ Jonsson, Nanna L. (1991) Proto Southwestern Tai. PhD dissertation, available from UMI and SEAlang.net on http://sealang.net/crcl/proto/
  15. ^ . Archived from the original on 13 April 2017. Retrieved 29 November 2010.
  16. ^ Thai Lexicography Resources

Further reading

  • Brown, J. Marvin. From Ancient Thai to Modern Dialects. Bangkok: Social Science Association Press of Thailand, 1965.
  • Chamberlain, James R. A New Look at the Classification of the Tai Languages. [s.l: s.n, 1972.
  • Conference on Tai Phonetics and Phonology, Jimmy G. Harris, and Richard B. Noss. Tai Phonetics and Phonology. [Bangkok: Central Institute of English Language, Office of State Universities, Faculty of Science, Mahidol University, 1972.
  • Diffloth, Gérard. An Appraisal of Benedict's Views on Austroasiatic and Austro-Thai Relations. Kyoto: Center for Southeast Asian Studies, Kyoto University, 1976.
  • Đoàn, Thiện Thuật. Tay-Nung Language in the North Vietnam. [Tokyo?]: Instttute [sic] for the Study of Languages and Cultures of Asia and Africa, Tokyo University of Foreign Studies, 1996.
  • Gedney, William J. On the Thai Evidence for Austro-Thai. [S.l: s.n, 1976.
  • Gedney, William J., and Robert J. Bickner. Selected Papers on Comparative Tai Studies. Michigan papers on South and Southeast Asia, no. 29. Ann Arbor, Mich., USA: Center for South and Southeast Asian Studies, University of Michigan, 1989. ISBN 0-89148-037-4
  • Gedney, William J., Carol J. Compton, and John F. Hartmann. Papers on Tai Languages, Linguistics, and Literatures: In Honor of William J. Gedney on His 77th Birthday. Monograph series on Southeast Asia. [De Kalb]: Northern Illinois University, Center for Southeast Asian Studies, 1992. ISBN 1-877979-16-3
  • Gedney, William J., and Thomas J. Hudak. (1995). William J. Gedney's central Tai dialects: glossaries, texts, and translations. Michigan papers on South and Southeast Asia, no. 43. Ann Arbor, Mich: Center for South and Southeast Asian Studies, University of Michigan ISBN 0-89148-075-7
  • Gedney, William J., and Thomas J. Hudak. William J. Gedney's the Yay Language: Glossary, Texts, and Translations. Michigan papers on South and Southeast Asia, no. 38. Ann Arbor, Mich: Center for South and Southeast Asian Studies, University of Michigan, 1991. ISBN 0-89148-066-8
  • Gedney, William J., and Thomas J. Hudak. William J. Gedney's Southwestern Tai Dialects: Glossaries, Texts and Translations. Michigan papers on South and Southeast Asia, no. 42. [Ann Arbor, Mich.]: Center for South and Southeast Asian Studies, University of Michigan, 1994. ISBN 0-89148-074-9
  • Hudak, Thomas John. William J. Gedney's The Tai Dialect of Lungming: Glossary, Texts, and Translations. Michigan papers on South and Southeast Asia, no. 39. [Ann Arbor]: Center for South and Southeast Asian Studies, University of Michigan, 1991. ISBN 0-89148-067-6
  • Li, Fang-kuei. 1977. Handbook of Comparative Tai. Honolulu, Hawaii: University of Hawaiʼi Press.
  • Li, Fang-kuei. The Tai Dialect of Lungchow; Texts, Translations, and Glossary. Shanghai: Commercial Press, 1940.
  • Østmoe, Arne. A Germanic–Tai Linguistic Puzzle. Sino-Platonic papers, no. 64. Philadelphia, PA, USA: Dept. of Asian and Middle Eastern Studies, University of Pennsylvania, 1995.
  • Sathāban Sūn Phāsā Qangkrit. Bibliography of Tai Language Studies. [Bangkok]: Indigenous Languages of Thailand Research Project, Central Institute of English Language, Office of State Universities, 1977.
  • Shorto, H. L. Bibliographies of Mon–Khmer and Tai Linguistics. London oriental bibliographies, v. 2. London: Oxford University Press, 1963.
  • Tingsabadh, Kalaya and Arthur S. Abramson. Essays in Tai Linguistics. Bangkok: Chulalongkorn University Press, 2001. ISBN 974-347-222-3

External links

  • SEAlang Library
  • Comparative Tai–Kadai Swadesh vocabulary lists (from Wiktionary's Swadesh-list appendix)
  • ABVD: Proto-Tai word list
  • ABVD: Proto-Southwestern Tai word list
  • Kelley, Liam. Tai Words and the Place of the Tai in the Vietnamese Past.

languages, confused, with, thai, language, language, guinea, zhuang, languages, thai, ภาษาไท, ภาษาไต, transliteration, hās, āthay, hās, ātay, branch, language, family, include, most, widely, spoken, kadai, languages, including, standard, thai, siamese, nationa. Not to be confused with Thai language or Tai language New Guinea The Tai or Zhuang Tai 1 languages Thai phasaith or phasait transliteration p has athay or p has atay are a branch of the Kra Dai language family The Tai languages include the most widely spoken of the Tai Kadai languages including Standard Thai or Siamese the national language of Thailand Lao or Laotian the national language of Laos Myanmar s Shan language and Zhuang a major language in the Southwestern China s Guangxi Zhuang Autonomous Region spoken by the Zhuang 壯 people the largest minority ethnic group in China 2 with a population of 15 55 million living mainly in Guangxi the rest scattered across Yunnan Guangdong Guizhou and Hunan provinces TaiZhuang TaiGeographicdistributionSouthern China esp Guangxi Guizhou Yunnan and Guangdong Southeast Asia north east IndiaLinguistic classificationKra DaiKam TaiBe Tai TaiProto languageProto TaiSubdivisionsNorthern NT Central CT Southwestern SWT see also Zhuang languages ISO 639 2 5taiGlottologdaic1237Distribution of Tai languages Northern Tai Northern Zhuang Central Tai Southern Zhuang Southwestern Tai Thai Contents 1 Name 2 History 2 1 Connection to ancient Yue language s 3 Internal classification 3 1 Haudricourt 1956 3 2 Li 1977 3 3 Gedney 1989 3 4 Luo 1997 3 5 Pittayaporn 2009 3 5 1 Overview 3 5 2 Sound changes 3 6 Edmondson 2013 4 Reconstruction 5 Comparison 6 Writing systems 7 See also 8 Notes 9 References 10 Further reading 11 External linksName EditCognates with the name Tai Thai Dai etc are used by speakers of many Tai languages The term Tai is now well established as the generic name in English In his book The Tai Kadai Languages Anthony Diller claims that Lao scholars he has met are not pleased with Lao being regarded as a Tai language 3 For some Thai should instead be considered a member of the Lao language family 3 One or more Ancient Chinese characters for Lao may be cited in support of this alternative appellation 3 Some scholars including Benedict 1975 have used Thai to refer to a wider Tai grouping and one sees designations like proto Thai and Austro Thai in earlier works 3 In the institutional context in Thailand and occasionally elsewhere sometimes Tai and its corresponding Thai script spelling without a final y symbol is used to indicate varieties in the language family not spoken in Thailand or spoken there only as the result of recent immigration 3 In this usage Thai would not then be considered a Tai language 3 On the other hand Gedney Li and others have preferred to call the standard language of Thailand Siamese rather than Thai perhaps to reduce potential Thai Tai confusion especially among English speakers not comfortable with making a word initial unaspirated voiceless sound for Tai which in any event might sound artificial or arcane to outsiders According to Michel Ferlus the ethnonyms Tai Thai or Tay Thay would have evolved from the etymon k e ri human being through the following chain keri gt keli gt kedi kedaj l gt d shift in tense sesquisyllables and probable diphthongization of i gt aj 4 5 This in turn changed to di daj presyllabic truncation and probable diphthongization i gt aj And then to dajA Proto Southwestern Tai gt tʰajA2 in Siamese and Lao or gt tajA2 in the other Southwestern and Central Tai languages by Li Fangkuei Michel Ferlus work is based on some simple rules of phonetic change observable in the Sinosphere and studied for the most part by William H Baxter 1992 5 The Central Tai languages are called Zhuang in China and Tay and Nung in Vietnam History Edit Map showing linguistic family tree overlaid on a geographic distribution map of the Tai family This map only shows general pattern of the migration of Tai speaking tribes not specific routes which would have snaked along the rivers and over the lower passes Citing the fact that both the Zhuang and Thai peoples have the same exonym for the Vietnamese kɛɛuA1 a Jerold A Edmondson of the University of Texas at Arlington posited that the split between Zhuang a Central Tai language and the Southwestern Tai languages happened no earlier than the founding of Jiaozhi in Vietnam in 112 BCE but no later than the 5th 6th century AD 6 Based on layers of Chinese loanwords in Proto Southwestern Tai and other historical evidence Pittayawat Pittayaporn 2014 suggests that the dispersal of Southwestern Tai must have begun sometime between the 8th and 10th centuries AD 7 Connection to ancient Yue language s Edit Further information Old Yue language The Tai languages descend from proto Tai Kadai which has been hypothesized to originate in the Lower Yangtze valleys Ancient Chinese texts refer to non Sinitic languages spoken across this substantial region and their speakers as Yue Although those languages are extinct traces of their existence could be found in unearthed inscriptional materials ancient Chinese historical texts and non Han substrata in various Southern Chinese dialects Thai as the most spoken language in the Tai Kadai language family has been used extensively in historical comparative linguistics to identify the origins of language s spoken in the ancient region of South China One of the very few direct records of non Sinitic speech in pre Qin and Han times having been preserved so far is the Song of the Yue Boatman Yueren Ge 越人歌 which was transcribed phonetically in Chinese characters in 528 BC and found in the 善说 Shanshuo chapter of the Shuoyuan 说苑 or Garden of Persuasions In the early 1980 s the Zhuang linguist Wei Qingwen using reconstructed Old Chinese for the characters discovered that the resulting vocabulary showed strong resemblance to modern Zhuang 8 Later Zhengzhang Shangfang 1991 followed Wei s insight but used Thai orthography for comparison since this orthography dates from the 13th century and preserves archaisms vis a vis the modern pronunciation 9 Internal classification EditHaudricourt 1956 Edit Haudricourt emphasizes the specificity of Dioi Zhuang and proposes to make a two way distinction between the following two sets 10 The original language names used in Haudricourt s 1956 are provided first alternative names are given in parentheses Tai Dioi group Yei Zhuang Yongbei Zhuang Youjiang Zhuang Bouyei Buyi Tai proper Ahom Shan Siamese Thai Lao White Tai Tai Don Black Tai Tai Dam Southern Zhuang Tho Tay Nung Characteristics of the Dioi group pointed out by Haudricourt are r corresponding to the lateral l in the other Tai languages verification needed divergent vowel system characteristics e g tail has an a vowel in Tai proper as against e in Bo ai ie in Tianzhou and ɯe in Tianzhou and Wuming and the lack of aspirated stops and affricates which are found everywhere in Tai proper Li 1977 Edit Li Fang Kuei divided Tai into three sister branches Tai Northern Tai Central Tai Southwestern Tai Thai Li s Northern group corresponds to Haudricourt s Dioi group while his Central and Southwestern groups correspond to Haudricourt s Tai proper The three last languages in Haudricourt s list of Tai proper languages are Tho Tay Longzhou and Nung which Li classifies as Central Tai This classification scheme has long been accepted as standard in comparative Tai linguistics However Central Tai does not appear to be a monophyletic group Gedney 1989 Edit Gedney 1989 considers Central and Southwestern Tai to form a subgroup of which Northern Tai is a sister The top level branching is in agreement with Haudricourt 1956 Tai Northern Tai Central Tai Southwestern Tai Luo 1997 Edit Luo Yongxian 1997 classifies the Tai languages as follows introducing a fourth branch called Northwestern Tai that includes Ahom Shan Dehong Dai and Khamti All branches are considered to be coordinate to each other 11 Tai Northern Tai Central Tai Southwestern Tai Northwestern Tai Pittayaporn 2009 Edit Southwestern Tai languages Overview Edit See also Zhuang languages Varieties Pittayawat Pittayaporn 2009 classifies the Tai languages based on clusters of shared innovations which individually may be associated with more than one branch Pittayaporn 2009 298 In Pittayaporn s preliminary classification system of the Tai languages Central Tai is considered to be paraphyletic and is split up into multiple branches with the Zhuang varieties of Chongzuo in southwestern Guangxi especially in the Zuo River valley at the border to Vietnam having the most internal diversity The Southwestern Tai and Northern Tai branches remain intact as in Li Fang Kuei s 1977 classification system and several of the Southern Zhuang languages allocated ISO codes are considered to be paraphyletic The classification is as follows 12 Tai D Northern Tai I Qinzhou Zhuang Yongnan Zhuang of Qinzhou J M Wuming Zhuang Yongnan Zhuang Long an Zhuang Fusui N Core Northern Tai Saek Bouyei Yay Youjiang Zhuang and others C Chongzuo Zhuang Yongnan Zhuang of Chongzuo Shangsi Zhuang Yongnan Zhuang of Shangsi Caolan Vietnam B Ningming Zhuang Zuojiang Zhuang of Ningming A F Lungchow Zhuang Leiping Zhuang E H Lungming Zhuang Daxin Zhuang G L Nung Yang Zhuang of Debao Yang Zhuang of Jingxi Western Nung of Mường Khương District Nong Zhuang of Wenshan City Nong Zhuang of Yanshan K P Tay Tay of Bảo Yen Tay of Cao Bằng Dai Zhuang of Wenma 文麻 O R Sapa Vietnam Q Southwestern Tai Laos Thailand Burma Standard Zhuang is based on the dialect of Shuangqiao 双桥 Wuming District Sites surveyed in Zhang 1999 subgrouped according to Pittayaporn 2009 N M I C B F H L P Sound changes Edit See also Proto Tai language Distribution of Central and Northern Tai languages Zhuang Tay Nung and Bouyei included The following phonological shifts occurred in the Q Southwestern N Northern B Ningming and C Chongzuo subgroups Pittayaporn 2009 300 301 Proto Tai reflexes Proto Tai Subgroup Q b Subgroup N c Subgroup B Subgroup C ɤj ɤw ɤɰ aj aw aɰ i u ɯ i u ɯ ɯj ɯw iː uː d aj aw e iː uː we wo eː oː iː uː eː oː f eː oː g ɟm r br ɟr ɟr k t tr tr ɤn ɤt ɤc an at ac h Furthermore the following shifts occurred at various nodes leading up to node Q E p t gt p r ɯm gt ɤm G k r gt qr K eː oː gt ɛː ɔː O ɤn gt on Q kr gt ʰr Edmondson 2013 Edit Jerold A Edmondson s 2013 computational phylogenetic analysis of the Tai languages is shown below Tay and Nung are both shown to be coherent branches under Central Tai Northern Tai and Southwestern Tai are also shown to be coherent branches 13 Tai Northern Tai Buyi Yay Po Ai Wuming Zhuang Mashan Zhuang Central Tai core Central Tai Nung Chau Pingxiang Zhuang Leiping Zhuang Ningming Zhuang Nung Western Nung Nung Yang Nung An Thu Lao Tay Tay Bao Lac Tay Khanh Trung Cao Lan Southwestern Tai Ahom Shan Dehong Tai Theeng Nghe An Black Tai White Tai Padi Lao ThaiReconstruction EditMain article Proto Tai language Proto Tai has been reconstructed in 1977 by Li Fang Kuei and by Pittayawat Pittayaporn in 2009 14 Proto Southwestern Tai has also been reconstructed in 1977 by Li Fang Kuei and by Nanna L Jonsson in 1991 15 Proto Tai Pronouns citation needed Proto Tai Thai alphabet1st singular ku kudual exclusive pʰɯa ephuxplural exclusive tu tuIncl dual inclusive ra raplural inclusive rau era2nd singular mɯŋ mungdual kʰɯa ekhuxplural su su3rd singular man mndual kʰa khaplural kʰau ekhaComparison Edit Tai alphabets The phrase is kind elephant rider Below is comparative table of Tai languages English Proto Southwestern Tai 16 Thai Lao Northern Thai Shan Tai Lu Standard Zhuang Ahomwind lom lōm lom lōm lom lom ɣum lumtown mɯaŋ mɯ aŋ mɯ aŋ mɯ aŋ mɤ ŋ mɤ ŋ mɯŋ mvngearth ʔdin din din din lǐn din dei ninfire vai aɯ faj faj faj pʰaj or faj faj fei phaiheart cai aɯ hǔa tɕaj hǔa tɕaj hǔa tɕǎj hǒ tsǎɰ ho tɕaj sim chaulove rak rak hak hak hak hak gyai rakwater naam naːm nam nam nam na m ɣaem namWriting systems Edit Graphical summary of the development of Tai scripts from a Shan perspective as reported in Sai Kam Mong s Shan Script book Many Southwestern Tai languages are written using Brahmi derived alphabets Zhuang languages are traditionally written with Chinese characters called Sawndip and now officially written with a romanized alphabet though the traditional writing system is still in use to this day Thai script 1 Lao script 2 Sawndip 3 Shan script 4 Ahom script 5 Tai Viet script 6 Tai Le script 7 New Tai Lue alphabet 8 Tai Tham script 9 See also EditMiscellaneous Tai languages Zomia region Notes Edit A1 designates a tone Unless indicated otherwise all phonological shifts occurred at the primary level node A Unless indicated otherwise all phonological shifts occurred at the primary level node D Also the ɯːk gt uːk shift occurred at node A Innovation at node N For node B the affected Proto Tai syllable was weː woː For node C the affected Proto Tai syllable was weː woː Innovation at node JReferences Edit Diller 2008 The Tai Kadai Languages p 7 The Zhuang ethnic minority a b c d e f Diller Anthony Edmondson Jerry Luo Yongxian 2004 The Tai Kadai Languages Routledge 2004 pp 5 6 ISBN 1135791163 Ferlus Michel 2009 Formation of Ethnonyms in Southeast Asia 42nd International Conference on Sino Tibetan Languages and Linguistics Nov 2009 Chiang Mai Thailand 2009 p 3 a b Pain Frederic 2008 An Introduction to Thai Ethnonymy Examples from Shan and Northern Thai Journal of the American Oriental Society Vol 128 No 4 Oct Dec 2008 p 646 Edmondson Jerold A The power of language over the past Tai settlement and Tai linguistics in southern China and northern Vietnam Studies in Southeast Asian languages and linguistics Jimmy G Harris Somsonge Burusphat and James E Harris ed Bangkok Thailand Ek Phim Thai Co Ltd http ling uta edu jerry pol pdf see page 15 Pittayaporn Pittayawat 2014 Layers of Chinese Loanwords in Proto Southwestern Tai as Evidence for the Dating of the Spread of Southwestern Tai MANUSYA Journal of Humanities Special Issue No 20 47 64 Edmondson 2007 p 16 sfn error no target CITEREFEdmondson2007 help Zhengzhang 1991 pp 159 168 sfn error no target CITEREFZhengzhang1991 help Haudricourt Andre Georges 1956 De la restitution des initiales dans les langues monosyllabiques le probleme du thai commun Bulletin de la Societe de Linguistique de Paris 52 307 322 Luo Yongxian 1997 The subgroup structure of the Tai Languages a historical comparative study Journal of Chinese Linguistics Monograph Series 12 p 232 Pittayaporn Pittayawat 2009 The Phonology of Proto Tai PhD dissertation Department of Linguistics Cornell University Edmondson Jerold A 2013 Tai subgrouping using phylogenetic estimation Presented at the 46th International Conference on Sino Tibetan Languages and Linguistics ICSTLL 46 Dartmouth College Hanover New Hampshire United States August 7 10 2013 Session Tai Kadai Workshop Jonsson Nanna L 1991 Proto Southwestern Tai PhD dissertation available from UMI and SEAlang net on http sealang net crcl proto ABVD Proto Southwestern Tai Archived from the original on 13 April 2017 Retrieved 29 November 2010 Thai Lexicography ResourcesFurther reading EditBrown J Marvin From Ancient Thai to Modern Dialects Bangkok Social Science Association Press of Thailand 1965 Chamberlain James R A New Look at the Classification of the Tai Languages s l s n 1972 Conference on Tai Phonetics and Phonology Jimmy G Harris and Richard B Noss Tai Phonetics and Phonology Bangkok Central Institute of English Language Office of State Universities Faculty of Science Mahidol University 1972 Diffloth Gerard An Appraisal of Benedict s Views on Austroasiatic and Austro Thai Relations Kyoto Center for Southeast Asian Studies Kyoto University 1976 Đoan Thiện Thuật Tay Nung Language in the North Vietnam Tokyo Instttute sic for the Study of Languages and Cultures of Asia and Africa Tokyo University of Foreign Studies 1996 Gedney William J On the Thai Evidence for Austro Thai S l s n 1976 Gedney William J and Robert J Bickner Selected Papers on Comparative Tai Studies Michigan papers on South and Southeast Asia no 29 Ann Arbor Mich USA Center for South and Southeast Asian Studies University of Michigan 1989 ISBN 0 89148 037 4 Gedney William J Carol J Compton and John F Hartmann Papers on Tai Languages Linguistics and Literatures In Honor of William J Gedney on His 77th Birthday Monograph series on Southeast Asia De Kalb Northern Illinois University Center for Southeast Asian Studies 1992 ISBN 1 877979 16 3 Gedney William J and Thomas J Hudak 1995 William J Gedney s central Tai dialects glossaries texts and translations Michigan papers on South and Southeast Asia no 43 Ann Arbor Mich Center for South and Southeast Asian Studies University of Michigan ISBN 0 89148 075 7 Gedney William J and Thomas J Hudak William J Gedney s the Yay Language Glossary Texts and Translations Michigan papers on South and Southeast Asia no 38 Ann Arbor Mich Center for South and Southeast Asian Studies University of Michigan 1991 ISBN 0 89148 066 8 Gedney William J and Thomas J Hudak William J Gedney s Southwestern Tai Dialects Glossaries Texts and Translations Michigan papers on South and Southeast Asia no 42 Ann Arbor Mich Center for South and Southeast Asian Studies University of Michigan 1994 ISBN 0 89148 074 9 Hudak Thomas John William J Gedney s The Tai Dialect of Lungming Glossary Texts and Translations Michigan papers on South and Southeast Asia no 39 Ann Arbor Center for South and Southeast Asian Studies University of Michigan 1991 ISBN 0 89148 067 6 Li Fang kuei 1977 Handbook of Comparative Tai Honolulu Hawaii University of Hawaiʼi Press Li Fang kuei The Tai Dialect of Lungchow Texts Translations and Glossary Shanghai Commercial Press 1940 Ostmoe Arne A Germanic Tai Linguistic Puzzle Sino Platonic papers no 64 Philadelphia PA USA Dept of Asian and Middle Eastern Studies University of Pennsylvania 1995 Sathaban Sun Phasa Qangkrit Bibliography of Tai Language Studies Bangkok Indigenous Languages of Thailand Research Project Central Institute of English Language Office of State Universities 1977 Shorto H L Bibliographies of Mon Khmer and Tai Linguistics London oriental bibliographies v 2 London Oxford University Press 1963 Tingsabadh Kalaya and Arthur S Abramson Essays in Tai Linguistics Bangkok Chulalongkorn University Press 2001 ISBN 974 347 222 3External links EditSEAlang Library Comparative Tai Kadai Swadesh vocabulary lists from Wiktionary s Swadesh list appendix ABVD Proto Tai word list ABVD Proto Southwestern Tai word list Kelley Liam Tai Words and the Place of the Tai in the Vietnamese Past Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Tai languages amp oldid 1122634075, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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