Singpho dialect explained

Singpho
Ethnicity:Singpho
Speakers:2,500
Date:2006
Ref:e18
Familycolor:Sino-Tibetan
Fam2:Tibeto-Burman
Fam3:Sal
Fam4:Jingpho–Luish
Fam5:Jingpho
Iso3:sgp
Glotto:sing1264
Glottorefname:Northern Jinghpaw

Singpho is a dialect of the Jingpho language spoken by the Singpho people of Arunachal Pradesh and Assam, India. It is spoken by at least 3,000 people. "Singpho" is the local pronunciation of "Jingpho," and the dialect shares 50% lexical similarity with Jingpho.[1]

The Jingpho (Jinghpaw, Chingp'o), or Kachin, language is a Tibeto-Burman language mainly spoken in Kachin State, Myanmar and Yunnan Province, China. The term Kachin language can refer either to the Jingpho language or to a group of languages spoken by various ethnic groups in the same region as Jingpho: Lisu, Lachit, Rawang, Zaiwa, Lhaovo, Achang (Ngo Chang), and Jingpho. These languages are from distinct branches of the highest level of the Tibeto-Burman family. The total estimated native speakers are 950,000 (2001 census).

Singpho is spoken the eastern extreme of northeastern India, such as Bordumsa Circle, Tirap District, Arunachal Pradesh, and also in nearby parts of Lohit District.[2]

Singpho lacks the system of person-number agreement on an auxiliary particle found in the other dialects of Jingpho. DeLancey attributes this to creolization "in the broad sense", as a simplification brought about by a large population of enslaved Assamese rice farmers learning Singpho as a second language.[3]

External links

Notes and References

  1. Web site: 2016 . Myanmar . dead . https://web.archive.org/web/20161010180533/http://www.ethnologue.com/country/MM/languages . 2016-10-10 . Ethnologue: Languages of the World.
  2. Book: Das Gupta . Kamalesh . A Phrase Book in Singpho . 1979 . Govt. of Arunachal Pradesh . Shillong . 8168660.
  3. DeLancey . Scott . 2010 . Towards a History of Verb Agreement in Tibeto-Burman . Himalayan Linguistics . 9 . 1 . 1544-7502 . 2022-06-21 . 1–39 [28].