Tai Yo language explained

Tai Yo
Imagescale:0.3
Region:Isan, Mekong floodplain, Vietnam
Date:1990  - 1995 census
Ref:e18
Familycolor:Kra-Dai
Fam2:Tai
Fam3:Northern[1] or Southwestern[2]
Script:Vietnamese alphabet
Thai script
Lai Tay script
Lc1:tyj
Ld1:Tai Yo
Lc2:nyw
Ld2:Tai Nyaw
Glotto:taid1248
Glottorefname:Tai Do-Mene-Yo
Nativename:ไทญ้อ
Ethnicity:Nyaw

Tai Yo (Thai: ไทญ้อ), also known as Tai Mène and Nyaw (Thai: ไตเมือง), is a Tai language of Southeast Asia. It is closely related to Tai Pao of Vietnam, where it may have originated. It was once written in a unique script, the Tai Yo script, but that is no longer in use. The language is known regionally in Laos and Thailand as Tai Mène and Tai Nyaw and, in Vietnam as Tai Do (old-fashioned English transcription) and Tai Quy Chau. Superficially, Tai Yo appears to be a Southwestern Tai language but this is only because of centuries of language contact and it is properly classified with the Northern Tai languages. The Nyaw/Nyo spoken in central Thailand and western Cambodia is not the same as Tai Yo.[3]

Tai Mène (Tai Maen)

The Mène people of Laos claim to be from Xieng Mène (also Xieng My) in Vietnam. These two names correspond to the following two towns in Nghệ An Province, Vietnam, located near Quỳ Châu (Chamberlain 1998).

Tai Mène appears to be related to Tai Pao (paaw 4 < *baaw A),[4] whose speakers claim to have originated from Tương Dương District, Nghệ An province, Vietnam (Chamberlain 1991). Tai Mène or related languages may have also been spoken in Thường Xuân District, Thanh Hóa, Vietnam by the Yo (Do) people (Robequain 1929).

Distribution

Tai Mène is spoken in Borikhamxay Province, in many villages of Khamkeut District and several villages in Vieng Thong District (Chamberlain 1998). The Vietic languages Liha, Phong, Toum, Ayoy, Maleng, and Thaveung are spoken nearby.

Further reading

References

External links

Notes and References

  1. Chamberlain (1991), p. 119
  2. Book: Pittayawat Pittayaporn . 2009 . The Phonology of Proto-Tai . PhD dissertation, Department of Linguistics, Cornell University . 318.
  3. Thananan (2014)
  4. See Proto-Tai language#Tones for an explanation of the tone codes.