Lahu language

Source: Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia.
Lahu
Ladhof
Native toYunnan, China; Thailand; Laos; Myanmar
EthnicityLahu
Native speakers
600,000 (2007–2012)[1]
Sino-Tibetan
  • (
    Lolo–Burmese
Latin script
Official status
Official language in
Lancang Lahu Autonomous County, Yunnan
Language codes
ISO 639-3Variously:
lhu – Lahu
lhi – Lahu Shi
lkc – Kucong
Glottologlaho1234

Lahu (autonym: Ladhof [lɑ˥˧xo˩]) is a Tibeto-Burman language spoken by the Lahu people of China, Thailand, Myanmar, Vietnam and Laos. It is widely used in China, both by Lahu people, and by other ethnic minorities in Yunnan, who use it as a lingua franca.[2] However, the language is not widely used nor taught in any schools in Thailand, where many Lahu are in fact refugees and illegal immigrants, having crossed into Thailand from Myanmar.[3]

Distribution by dialect

Lahu Na (Black Lahu) is the northern and standard Lahu dialect and is spoken in most of Yunnan, China, in Kengtung District of Shan State, Myanmar and in most parts of Thailand. It should not be confused with Lahu Aga (Black Lahu of Laos (See below) or Kucong (Black Lahu of Vietnam).

Lahu Phu (White Lahu) is the southern and most spoken dialects of the Lahu language. It is spoken all five countries wher it is spoken, including in

Lai Châu Province
.

Lahu Nyi (Red Lahu) is only spoken in Thailand, including in the southern

Yala Province
.

Lahu Aga (Black Lahu) is spoken in

Xishuangbanna).[4]

Classification

The Lahu language, along with the closely related

Southern Loloish branch in Satterthwaite-Phillips' (2011) computational phylogenetic analysis of the Lolo-Burmese languages.[7]

Dialects

Matisoff (2006)

A few dialects are noted, which are each known by a variety of names:[8]

Pham (2013)

Phạm Huy (2013:13) lists the following 3 branches.

Yunnan (1998)

Yunnan (1998:280)[11] lists 5 Lahu dialects.

  • Lancang (standard) dialect 澜沧标准音区片 (in most of Lancang, Ximeng, Menglian, Cangyuan, and Shuangjiang counties)
  • Nanmei dialect 南美土语群片 (in Nanmei Township 南美乡, Lincang County; Gengma County, and other nearby areas)
  • Mojiang dialect 墨江土语群片 (in Pu'er, Simao, Mojiang, Xinping counties, etc.; Lahu Shi)
  • Menghai dialect 勐海土语群片 (in Menghai, Jinghong, Mengla, Lancang counties (in Jiujing 酒井, Yakou 雅口, Qianliu 谦六 townships, etc.); Lahu Shi)
  • Jinping-Lüchun dialect 金绿土语群片 (in Jinping and Lüchun counties)

Traditionally Lahu folk taxonomy splits the Lahu people into the two groups of Black Lahu and Yellow Lahu; Red Lahu and White Lahu are new dialect clusters originating in messianic movements within the past few centuries.[12] Black Lahu is the standard dialect in China,[2] as well as the lingua franca among different groups of Lahu in Thailand.[3] However, it is intelligible to speakers of Yellow Lahu only with some difficulty.[2]

Bradley (1979)

Based on the numbers of shared lexical items, Bradley (1979) classifies the Lahu dialects as follows:[13]

Common Lahu
  • Black Lahu
    • Shehleh
    • (Core)
      • Black Lahu proper
      • Red Lahu
  • Yellow Lahu
    • Bakeo
    • Banlan

Lama (2012)

Lama (2012) gives the following tentative classification for what he calls Lahoid.

Lahoid
  • Lahu-Xi (Yellow Lahu)
  • (Black Lahu cluster)
    • Lahu-Na (Black Lahu)
    • Lahu-Ni (Red Lahu)
    • Lahu-Pu (White Lahu)
    • Lahu-Shehleh

Jin (2007)

Jin Youjing (2007)[14] classifies the Lahu dialects as follows.

  • Lahu Na 拉祜纳 (Black Lahu 黑拉祜): about 80% of all Lahu
    • Xia'nanxian 下南现 (Nanling Township 南岭乡) dialect
    • Dongkahe 东卡河 (Laba Township 拉巴乡) dialect
  • Lahu Xi 拉祜西 (Yellow Lahu 黄拉祜): about 20% of all Lahu
    • Northern dialect: Donghe 东河, Xincheng 新城, Qianliu 谦六, Wendong 文东, Fudong 富东, and Dashan 大山 townships
    • Central dialect: Yakou 雅口, Qianmai 谦迈, and Yingpan 营盘 townships
    • Southern dialect: Southern Nuofu 糯福(南), Northern Nuofu 糯福(北), and Huimin 惠民 townships
  • Lahu Alai 拉祜阿莱: located in Alai Dazhai 阿莱大寨, Fubang Township 富邦乡,
    Lancang County
    and a few other nearby villages
  • Kucong 苦聪: located in Jinping, Lüchun, Zhenyuan, and other counties

Jin Youjing (1992)[15] covers Lahu linguistic geography and dialectology in detail.

Heh (2008)

Heh (2008)[16] lists Lahu Shi (Yellow Lahu) dialects as:

  • Mikeng
  • Nakeo
  • Lahu Aga (also called Aphubele; spoken in Laos)
  • Bakeo
  • Balan

Lahu Aga was classified as Lahu Shi by Bradley (1979), but Heh (2008) found that it is actually linguistically closer to Lahu Na (Black Lahu). In Laos, there are about 9,000 Lahu Aga located in

Bokeo Province
(Tonpheung district, Muang Muang district, Houj Xai district, and the special region of Nam Yut) and
Chiang Rai Province
, Thailand. Heh (2008) provides comparative Lahu Aga dialectal data for:

  • Na Kat Neua village, Vieng Phoukha district, Luang Namtha province
  • Don Keao village, Tonpheung district, Bokeo province
  • Na Kha village, Muang Muang Township, Bokeo province

Phonology

Consonants

Labial Dental/
Alveolar
Palatal Velar Uvular/
Glottal
Plosive
voiceless
p
t
c k q
aspirated
voiced b
d
ɟ ɡ
Fricative
voiceless f ʃ (x) h
voiced v ɣ
Nasal m
n
ŋ
Approximant
l
j
  • Palatal consonant sounds when occurring before a close central vowel /cɨ, cʰɨ, ɟɨ, ʃɨ, jɨ/ are heard as dental affricate sounds [tsɹ̩, tsʰɹ̩, dzɹ̩, sɹ̩, zɹ̩]. Stop sounds may also be heard as palato-alveolar sounds [tʃ, tʃʰ, dʒ] elsewhere, in free variation.[17]
  • /h/ may also be heard as a velar fricative [x], in free variation.
  • /n/ before /i/, can be articulated as a palatal nasal [ɲ].
  • Labial sounds before a close back vowel /pu, pʰu, bu, mu/ have affricated variants, heard as [pfɯ, pfʰɯ, bvɯ, mvɯ].

Vowels

Front Central Back
Close i ɨ u
Mid e ə o
Open ɛ a ɔ
  • When following palatal or labial consonants, /ɨ, u/ have special allophones [ɹ̩, ɯ].[18]

Tones

Name Symbol Pitch
Mid 33 ˧
High-rising 35 ˦˥
High-falling 53 ˥˧
Low-falling 21 ˨˩
Very low 11 ˩
High-checked 54ʔ ˥˧ʔ
Low-checked 21ʔ ˨˩ʔ

Sound changes

Lama (2012) lists the following sound changes from Proto-Loloish as Lahu innovations.

  • *s-l- > x-
  • *z- > dz-
  • *ŋ- > x-

Grammar

Lahu has a similar grammar to many

Tibeto-Burman languages.[19]

Vocabulary

Below, common Vocabulary of the Lahu language.[20]

IPA Gloss
tɔ̀-kɔ=ya Akha
qhɔ̀ʔ-la ash
khɛ̂ bowl
cow
nû-ɛ́ calf
kâlâ=g̈ ɔ̂-ma carrot (lit. foreign vegetable)
cê-lê clerk
pa-lûʔ ~ pa-lú catfish
show
a-ví sibling
hɔ́-yɛ temple
yes
qhɔ̀ʔ year

See also

Notes

  1. ^ Lahu at Ethnologue (18th ed., 2015) (subscription required)
    Lahu Shi at Ethnologue (18th ed., 2015) (subscription required)
    Kucong at Ethnologue (18th ed., 2015) (subscription required)
  2. ^ a b c Gordon, Raymond G. Jr., ed. (2005). "Lahu". Ethnologue: Languages of the World (Fifteenth ed.). Archived from the original on 1 October 2005.
  3. ^ a b Reh 2005
  4. ^ Ethnologue[full citation needed]
  5. ^ Lama, Ziwo Qiu-Fuyuan. 2012. Subgrouping of Nisoic (Yi) Languages. Ph.D. thesis, University of Texas at Arlington.
  6. ^ Bradley, David. 2007. East and Southeast Asia. In Moseley, Christopher (ed.), Encyclopedia of the World's Endangered Languages, 349-424. London & New York: Routledge.
  7. ^ Satterthwaite-Phillips, Damian. 2011. Phylogenetic inference of the Tibeto-Burman languages or On the usefulness of lexicostatistics (and "Megalo"-comparison) for the subgrouping of Tibeto-Burman. Ph.D. dissertation, Stanford University.
  8. ^ Matisoff 2006, p. xiii
  9. ^ Lahuyu Jianzhi 拉祜语简志 (1986)
  10. ^ "澜沧拉祜族自治县糯福乡南段村". Archived from the original on 2017-12-01. Retrieved 2013-03-07.
  11. ^ Yunnan Gazetteer Commission [云南省地方志编纂委员会] (ed). 1998. Yunnan Provincial Gazetteer, Vol. 59: Minority Languages Orthographies Gazetteer [云南省志. 卷五十九, 少数民族语言文字志]. Kunming: Yunnan People's Press [云南人民出版社].
  12. ^ Bradley 1979, p. 41
  13. ^ Bradley 1979, p. 159
  14. ^ Jin Youjing [金有景]. 2007. "Guanyu Lahuyu de fangyan" [关于拉祜语的方言]. Minzu Yuwen 民族语文 2007:3.
  15. ^ Jin Youjing 金有景, et al. 1992. 中国拉祜语方言地图集 = Cokawr Ladhof khawd fayer diqthurcir = the linguistic atlas of Lahu in China. Tianjin: Tianjin she hui ke xue yuan chu ban she 天津社会科学出版社.
  16. ^ Heh, Sa Mollay Kya. 2008. ;;A sociolinguistic comparison of Lahu Aga with Lahu Na. Master’s thesis.
  17. ^ Bradley 1979.
  18. ^ Matisoff, James A. (2003). Lahu. Graham Thurgood and Randy J. LaPolla (eds.), The Sino-Tibetan Languages: London & New York: Routledge. pp. 208–221.
  19. ^ "Tibeto-Burman languages - Tibeto-Burman and areal grammar | Britannica".
  20. ^ "English-Lahu Lexicon. Matisoff, James A." (PDF). 2006-04-01.

Sources

Further reading

External links