Northern Qiang language explained

Northern Qiang
Nativename:Rrmearr
Pronunciation:pronounced as /[ʐmeʐ]/
States:China
Region:Sichuan Province
Ethnicity:Qiang people
Date:1999
Ref:e18
Familycolor:Sino-Tibetan
Fam2:Tibeto-Burman
Fam3:Qiangic
Fam4:Qiang
Script:Latin, Rma
Iso3:cng
Glotto:nort2722
Glottoname:Northern Qiang
Glotto2:sout3257
Glottoname2:Southeast Maoxian Qiang
Notice:IPA

Northern Qiang is a Sino-Tibetan language of the Qiangic branch, more specifically falling under the Tibeto-Burman family. It is spoken by approximately 60,000 people in East Tibet, and in north-central Sichuan Province, China.

Unlike its close relative Southern Qiang, Northern Qiang is not a tonal language.

Northern Qiang dialects

Northern Qiang is composed of several different dialects, many of which are easily mutually intelligible. Sun Hongkai in his book on Qiang in 1981 divides Northern Qiang into the following dialects: Luhua, Mawo, Zhimulin, Weigu, and Yadu. These dialects are located in Heishui County as well as the northern part of Mao County. The Luhua, Mawo, Zhimulin, and Weigu varieties of Northern Qiang are spoken by the Heishui Tibetans. The Mawo dialect is considered to be the prestige dialect by the Heishui Tibetans.

Names seen in the older literature for Northern Qiang dialects include Dzorgai (Sifan), Kortsè (Sifan), Krehchuh, and Thóchú/Thotcu/Thotśu. The last is a place name.[1]

Sims (2016)[2] characterizes Northern (Upstream) Qiang as the *nu- innovation group. Individual dialects are highlighted in italics.

Northern Qiang

Phonology

The phonemic inventory of the Northern Qiang of Ronghong village consists of 37 consonants, and eight basic vowel qualities. The syllable structure of Northern Qiang allows up to six sounds.

Consonants

LabialDentalRetroflexPalatalVelarUvularGlottal
Nasalpronounced as /link/pronounced as /link/pronounced as /link/pronounced as /link/
Stop/
Affricate
voicelesspronounced as /link/pronounced as /link/pronounced as /link/pronounced as /link/pronounced as /link/pronounced as /link/pronounced as /link/
aspiratedpronounced as /link/pronounced as /link/pronounced as /link/pronounced as /link/pronounced as /link/pronounced as /link/pronounced as /link/
voicedpronounced as /link/pronounced as /link/pronounced as /link/pronounced as /link/pronounced as /link/pronounced as /link/
Fricativevoicelesspronounced as /link/pronounced as /link/pronounced as /link/pronounced as /link/pronounced as /link/pronounced as /link/pronounced as /link/pronounced as /link/
voicedpronounced as /link/pronounced as /link/pronounced as /link/pronounced as /link/
Approximantpronounced as /link/[{{IPA link|j}}][{{IPA link|w}}]

Vowels

Northern Qiang distinguishes between unstressed and long vowels (signified by two small dots, "ː") for all of its vowels except for /ə/ . In addition, there exist 15 diphthongs and one triphthong in the language of Northern Qiang.

Northern Qiang Vowel Inventory!!Front!Mid!Back
Highi, iː y, yːu, uː
Mide, eːəo, oː
Lowa, aːɑ, ɑː
There may not be a significant phonetic difference in sound between /i/ and /e/, and /u/ and /o/, respectively. In fact, they are often used in place of one another without changing the meaning.

Diphthongs and triphthongs

Diphthongs: ia, iɑ, ie, ye, eu, əu, ei, əi, oi, uɑ, ua, uə, ue, ui, ya

Triphthong: uəi

As the Northern Qiang language becomes more endangered, the use of r-coloring is not being passed down to younger generations of the Northern Qiang people. As a result, there is great variation in its use. R-coloring is not considered its own phoneme because it is a vowel feature and only used to produce vowel harmony (see below), most commonly signifying a first person plural marking.

Syllable structure

The following is the Northern Qiang Syllable prototype structure. All are optional apart from the central vowel (underlined):

FCGVGCᴾF.(The final 'fricative' may be a fricative F, an affricate ᴾF, or /l/.)

All consonants occur as initials, though /ŋ/ only before /u/, and /ɦ/ only in a directional prefix and in a filler interjection. Almost all apart from the aspirated consonants occur as finals. These do not preserve Proto-Tibeto-Burman finals, which have all been lost, but are the result of the reduction of unstressed syllables (e.g. [səf] 'tree' from /sə/ 'wood' + /pʰə/ 'forest').

Initial FC clusters may be:

/ʂ/ + /p t tɕ k q b d dʑ ɡ m/,

/x/ + /tɕ tʂ k s ʂ ɬ l dʑ dʐ z ʐ/,

/χ/ + /tʂ q s ʂ ɬ l d dʑ dʐ z ʐ n/

The fricatives are voiced to [ʐ ɣ ʁ] before a voiced consonant. In addition, /ʂ/ > [s z] before /t d/ and > [ɕ ʑ] before /pi pe bi tɕ dʑ/.

In final CᴾF clusters, the C is a fricative. Clusters include /ɕtɕ xʂ xtʂ xɬ ɣz ɣl χs/.

Examples of syllables permitted in Northern Qiang!Template!Qiang Word!Translation
Vɑ'one'
VGɑu'one pile'
GV'bird'
VCɑs'one day'
VCFəχʂ'tight'
CV'buy'
CGVkʰuə'dog'
CGVGkuɑi-tʰɑ'strange'
CVCpɑq'intererst'
CVCFbəxʂ'honey'
CGVCduɑp'thigh'
FCVxtʂe'louse'
FCGVʂkue'roast'
FCGVGʂkuəi'mt. goat'
FCVCʂpəl'kidney'
FCVCFʂpəχs'Chibusu'
FCGVCʂquɑp'quiet'
FCGVCFɕpiexɬ'scar'

Phonological processes

Initial weakening

When a compound or a directional prefix is added before an aspirated initial, the latter becomes the final of the preceding syllable in the new word. This typically causes it to lose its aspiration.

Vowel harmony exists in the Mawo (麻窝) dialect. Typically, vowel harmony is used to match a preceding syllable's vowel with the succeeding vowel or its height. In some cases, however, the vowel of a succeeding syllable will harmonize in the opposite way, matching with the preceding vowel. This process occurs across syllables in compounds or in prefix + root combinations. Vowel harmony can also occur for r-coloring on the first syllable if the second syllable of a compound or prefix + root combination already has r-coloring.

The vowel /ə/ can be embedded within a collection of consonants that are restricted by the syllable canon. The epenthetic vowel is used to combine sounds that would typically be impermissible.

For some words, changing or adding consonants produces no phonological difference in meaning. The most common consonant interchange is between /ʂ/ and /χ/.

Orthography

a
aebbbcchddddheeafggggvhhhhviiujjjkkvl
IPAapronounced as /æ/pronounced as /p/bpronounced as /t͡sʰ/pronounced as /ʈ͡ʂʰ/tdpronounced as /ɖ͡ʐ/pronounced as /ə/efkgqxpronounced as /ɣ/hiypronounced as /t͡ɕ/pronounced as /d͡ʑ/pronounced as /kʰ/pronounced as /qʰ/l
lh
mnngnyopphqrrsshsstuvvhvvwxxxyzzhzz
IPApronounced as /ɬ/mnpronounced as /ŋ/pronounced as /ȵ/opronounced as /pʰ/pronounced as /ɸ/pronounced as /t͡ɕʰ/pronounced as /ʐ/spronounced as /ʂ/zpronounced as /tʰ/upronounced as /χ/pronounced as /ɦ/pronounced as /ʁ/pronounced as /w/, pronounced as /u̥/pronounced as /ɕ/pronounced as /ʑ/pronounced as /j/pronounced as /t͡s/pronounced as /ʈ͡ʂ/pronounced as /d͡z/
Nasalized vowels are indicated with trailing nn, rhotacized vowels are indicated with trailing r, long vowels are indicated by doubling the vowel letter.

Morphology

Northern Qiang uses affixes in the form of prefixes and suffixes to describe or modify the meaning of nouns and verbs. Other morphological processes that are affixed include gender marking, marking of genitive case, compounding, and nominalization. Northern Qiang also uses non-affixational processes such as reduplication.

Noun phrase

In Northern Qiang, any combination of the following order is allowed as long as it follows this flow. Some of the items found below, such as adjectives, may be used twice within the same noun phrase.

Northern Qiang noun phrase structure

GEN phrase + Rel. clause + Noun + ADJ + DEM/DEF + (NUM + CL)/PL

Gender marking

Gender marking only occurs in animals. Typically, /mi/ is the suffix for females, while /zdu/ is the suffix for males.

Pronouns

Northern Qiang pronouns can be represented from the 1st, 2nd, or 3rd person, and can refer to one, two, or more than two people.

Northern Qiang Personal Pronouns!!Singular!Dual!Plural
1tɕi-zzitɕi-le
2ʔũʔi-zziʔi-le
3theː / quputhi-zzithem-le

The genitive marker /-tɕ(ə)/ is placed on the modifying noun; this modifying noun will precede the noun it modifies.

Verbal morphology

The meaning of verbs can be changed using prefixes and suffixes, or by using reduplication.

Verbal Prefixes!!Marking in Qiang!Purpose/Meaning
1intensifying adverb
2"various"direction/orientation, or 3rd person indirect directive
3/mə-/, or /tɕə-/simple negation, or prohibitive
4/tɕi/continuative aspect
Verbal Suffixes!!Marking in Qiang!Purpose/Meaning
5/-ʐ/causative
6/-ɑː/prospective aspect
7/kə/ or /lə/'(to) go', or '(to) come' (auxiliary directional verbs)
8/-jə/repetition
9/-ji/change of state
10/-l-/1st person indirect directive
11/-k/inferential evidential, mirative
12/-u/visual evidential
13/-ʂɑ/, /-sɑn/, /-ʂəʴ/, /-sɑi/, [-wu/ ~ -u]non-actor person (1sg, 2sg, 1pl, 2pl, 3sg/pl)
14/-ɑ/, /-n/, /-əʴ/, /-i/, /-tɕi/actor person (1sg, 2sg, 1pl, 2pl, 3pl)
15/-i/hearsay evidential

Reduplication

Repetition of the same root verb signifies a reciprocal action upon one actors, or an ongoing action.

Other morphological processes

In Northern Qiang, the modifying noun of the compound must precede the modified noun.

Nominalization

Nouns are created from adjectives or verbs using clitics /-s/, /-m/, or /-tɕ/, the indefinite markers /le/ or /te/, or the definite marker /ke/.

Syntax

The Northern Qiang language has quite a predictable syntax without many variations. The typical basic word order is subject–object–verb (SOV). Northern Qiang borrows some Mandarin Chinese words and phrases.

Clause structure

Order

(TEMP) (LOC) (ACTOR) (GOAL/RECIPIENT) (ADV) (UG) VC (PART)

(TEMP = temporal phrase; UG = undergoer; VC = verb complex; PART = clause-final particle)

A sentence in Northern Qiang may be as short as a verb complex, which may just be a predicate noun.

As shown from the order stated above, Northern Qiang is a language with a SOV sentence structure.

Code mixing

Many loan words or loan phrases from Mandarin are borrowed, but the word order of these phrases is rearranged to fit the grammatical structure of Northern Qiang.

In this sentence, the words "tɕiutɕin" and "ʂə" are borrowed from Mandarin.

Status

As with many Qiangic languages, Northern Qiang is becoming increasingly threatened.[4] Because the education system largely uses Standard Chinese as a medium of instruction for the Qiang people, and as a result of the universal access to schooling and television, most Qiang children are fluent or even monolingual in Chinese while an increasing percentage cannot speak Qiang. Much of the population marry people from other parts of China who only speak Mandarin.

See also

Bibliography

Notes and References

  1. Sun . Jackson T.-S. . 1992 . Review of Zangmianyu Yuyin He Cihui "Tibeto-Burman Phonology and Lexicon" . Linguistics of the Tibeto-Burman Area . en . 15 . 2 . 76–77.
  2. Sims . Nathaniel . 2016 . Towards a More Comprehensive Understanding of Qiang Dialectology . Language and Linguistics . en . 17 . 3 . 351–381 . 10.1177/1606822X15586685.
  3. Book: Sun, Hongkai 孙宏开 . Qiāngyǔ jiǎnzhì . 1981 . Minzu chubanshe . zh . zh:羌语简志.
  4. Web site: Qiang, Southern. Ethnologue. en. 2019-03-17.