Hruso language explained

Hruso
Also Known As:Angka(e), Gusso, Hrusso, Tenae
Nativename:Aka
States:Arunachal Pradesh, India
Region:Southeast Kameng, Bichom River Valley
Ethnicity:Hruso
Speakers:3,000
Speakers2:perhaps including Levai
Date:2007
Ref:e18
Familycolor:Sino-Tibetan
Fam1:possibly Sino-Tibetan, or a language isolate
Fam2:Hrusish?
Dia1:Levai?
Script:Latin
Iso3:hru
Glotto:hrus1242
Glottorefname:Hruso

Hruso, also known as Aka (Angka), is a language of Arunachal Pradesh India. Long assumed to be a Sino-Tibetan language, it may actually be a language isolate.[1] It is spoken by 3,000 people in 21 villages in Thrizino Circle, West Kameng District. The Hruso people inhabit areas of South East Kameng and are concentrated in the Bichom River Valley, and speak English, Hindi, and Miji in addition to Hruso.

Bangru (Ləvai), spoken on the Tibetan border, might be related to Hruso, but it seems more likely that it is a dialect of Miji.

Locations

According to the Ethnologue, Hruso is spoken in the following villages of Thrizino circle, West Kameng district, Arunachal Pradesh, in India.

Hruso is also spoken in Pisang village, Seppa circle, East Kameng district.

Status

Ethnologue lists the language as 6b, or "threatened", The same can be said on another example, where ELP, or Endangered Languages Project, with a 20% certainty also lists it as "threatened."

Dialects/varieties

The book Hruso by Robert Shafer, notes the two dialects that Hruso is divided into. The first one is known to be recorded by Campbell and the second dialect is known to be recorded by Anderson, Hesslmeyer, and Payne. Also Dialect A has some differentiation in vocabulary when compared to Dialect B. Dialect A is also known to be briefly recorded and is more archaic than dialect B which has very little recording evidence behind it.

Dialects A1 Anderson hhu, k' k'ii "water ", Hess. xu. And. diaha (p. 9), diak'a (17) " to-morrow ". And. yo " to-day ", ya " now ". And. k'sesi " goat " (6), k's8 (18), H. kisie, P. k'esi, k'isi. Camp. gle " foot ", P. -ksi, si-, si, And. -si, H. si. 2 To chew; p. 17, to eat. 3 In na-yu "ear emerald ". 4 The consonant seems to be palatalized in this root in some languages and the vowel perhaps umlauted, both perhaps due to the following *-s. But these languages are too poorly recorded to form a basis for a conclusion.[2]

References

External links

Notes and References

  1. Web site: Hammarström. Harald. Forke. Robert. Haspelmath. Martin. Bank. Sebastian. 2020. Hruso . Glottolog 4.3.
  2. 608994. Hruso. Robert. Shafer. 1 January 1947. Bulletin of the School of Oriental and African Studies, University of London. 12. 1. 184–196. 10.1017/s0041977x00079994. 246637851 .