Yei Zhuang | |
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Buyue | |
Pronunciation | |
Native to | China |
Region | Wenshan Prefecture, Yunnan; western Guangxi |
Ethnicity | Sha |
Native speakers | 1 million (2007) |
Language family | Kra–Dai
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Dialects |
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Language codes | |
ISO 639-3 | Either:zgn – Guibian Zhuangzqe – Qiubei Zhuang |
Glottolog | guib1244 Guibianqiub1238 Qiubei |
Yei Zhuang is a Northern Tai language complex spoken in Wenshan Prefecture, Yunnan, China. Its speakers are also known as the Sha (沙族), a subgroup of the Zhuang.
Distribution
In Yunnan, Yei Zhuang dialects are spoken in Funing and Guangnan counties (also in Guangxi to the east and north), as well as Qiubei (probably also in Qujing Municipality to the north). The largest concentrations of Yei Zhuang speakers are found in Qiubei (80% of total Zhuang population) and Funing (50% of total Zhuang population) counties (Johnson 2011a:43).
Po-ai, a Tai language of Funing County described by Fang-kuei Li in the mid-1900s, was determined by Johnson (2011b) to be a Yei Zhuang dialect.
Names
Below are various names (both autonyms and exonyms) for speakers of Yei Zhuang (Johnson 2011a:43).
- pu Nong (濮侬)
- pu35 ʔjai34, pu33 juei34, pu22 jai13; bu ji (Qiubei)
- bu Yai (布雅衣)
- bu Yei (布依, 布瑞, 布越)
- Shazu (沙族) or Sharen (沙人)
- Baisha (白沙)
- Nongqianbeng (侬迁绷)
- Zhongjia (仲家)
Many of these are names of Bouyei as well.
Characteristics
There are no palatalized consonants in Qiubei Zhuang. /pj/ in standard Zhuang is /p/, as in /pja1/ "fish", pjak7 "vegetable" is /pa/1, /pak/7. /mj/ is m or n,for example mjaːk3 "slippery", mjaːi2 "saliva" as /ma6/, /naːi2/. /kj/ is merged into k or t,for example kjaːŋ1 "middle", kja4(orphan) is /kaːŋ3/, /tsa4/. The consonant k before i, e is changed to ts, for instance ki3 "several", kiːŋ2 (triangular cooker), ke5 "old" as /tʃi1/, /tʃiːŋ2/, /tʃes/.
References
- The Chinese name. An approximation, as Yei and Yai are not possible in Mandarin.
- Guibian Zhuang at Ethnologue (18th ed., 2015) (subscription required)
Qiubei Zhuang at Ethnologue (18th ed., 2015) (subscription required) - See Proto-Tai_language#Tones for an explanation of the tone codes.
- Johnson, Eric C. 2011a. "The Southern Zhuang Languages of Yunnan Province's Wenshan Prefecture from a Sociolinguistic Perspective." . S.l.: s.n. 49 pages.
- Johnson, Eric C. 2011b. "A Lexical and Phonological Comparison of the Central Taic Languages of Wenshan Prefecture, China: Getting More Out of Language Survey Wordlists Than Just Lexical Similarity Percentages." SIL Electronic Working Papers 2011-005: 170.
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Italics indicate extinct languages |