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Kiranti languages

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(Redirected fromRai languages)
Kiranti
EthnicityKirati,Yakkha,Limbu,RaiandSunuwar
Geographic
distribution
Eastern NepalandIndia(Sikkim,Darjeeling,Kalimpong&Bhutan
Linguistic classificationSino-Tibetan
Subdivisions
  • Eastern
  • Central
  • Western
Glottologkira1253

TheKiranti languagesare a major family ofSino-Tibetan languagesspoken inNepalandIndia(notablySikkim,Darjeeling,Kalimpong,andBhutan) by theKirati people.

External relationships

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George van Driemhad formerly proposed that the Kiranti languages were part of aMahakirantifamily, although specialists are not completely certain of either the existence of a Kiranti subgroup or its precise membership.[1]LaPolla (2003), though, proposes that Kiranti may be part of a larger "Rung"group.

Classification

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There are about two dozen Kiranti languages. Among the better known areLimbu,Sunuwar,Bantawa,Chamling,Khaling,Bahing,Yakkha,Wayu,Dungmali,Lohorung,andKulung.

Kiranti verbs are not easily segmentable, due in large part to the presence ofportmanteaumorphemes,crowdedaffixstrings, and extensive (and often nonintuitive)allomorphy.Thus their relationship to each other has been a subject of debate.

Overall, Kiranti languages are classified:

EthnologueaddsTilung languageto Western Kiranti, based on Opgenort (2011).

Opgenort (2005)

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Opgenort (2005)[2]classifies the Kiranti languages as follows, and recognizes a basic east-west division within Kiranti.

Gerber & Grollmann (2018)

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Historical linguists,as early as 2012, do not consider Kiranti to be a coherent group, but rather aparaphyleticone due to lack ofshared innovations.[3]Gerber & Grollmann (2018) presented additional evidence supporting the paraphyletic nature of Kiranti. A Central-Eastern Kiranti group is considered to be valid by Gerber & Grollmann (2018), but they consider "Western Kiranti" unclassified withinTrans-Himalayan languages.[4]

Independent branches (formerly part of "Western Kiranti" ) that are unclassified within Trans-Himalayan (Sino-Tibetan):

Grollmann (2023) identifies aKhambusubgroup that consists of three languages,Kulung,Nachiring,andSampang.Camlingmay also be a Khambu language.[5]

Sound changes

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Sound changesdefining each subgroup (Gerber & Grollmann 2018):[4]

  • Central-Eastern Kiranti (*voiceless > preglottalised; *voiced > voiceless; *ʔk > kʰ; *ʔc > cʰ)
    • Lhokpu, Dhimal, Toto
    • Central Kiranti (*ʔp > b; *ʔt > d)
    • Upper Arun (*ʔp > b; *ʔt > d; *r > j)
    • Greater Yakkha-Limbu (*ʔp > pʰ; *ʔt > tʰ; *r > j)

Independent branches (formerly part of "Western Kiranti" ) that are unclassified within Trans-Himalayan (Sino-Tibetan):

  • Dumi-Khaling (innovative verbal dual marker -i)
  • Chaurasiya-Northwest (*kʷ > ʔw ~ ʔb)
    • Wambule, Bahing, Sunuwar;? Jero;? Hayu
  • Thulung-Tilung-Kohi (*p > t; *b > d)

The Khambu branch is defined by the following sound changes.[5]

  • *ŋ > zero, *k > zero in final syllabic position, and also vowel change to o, ʌ, ə before the precending vowel *a
  • Palatalization of *t and *n before /i/ in final syllabic position
  • *eŋ > aŋ

Reconstruction

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Research on proto-Kiranti includes work on phonology and comparative morphology byGeorge van Driem,[6]reconstructions by Michailovsky (1991)[7]andSergei Starostin1994.[8]Michailovsky and Starostin differ by the number of stop series reconstructed (three vs four) and the interpretation of the correspondences.

Opgenort introduces the reconstruction of preglottalized resonants;[9][10]his reconstruction is generally based on Starostin's four series system. More recently,Jacquesproposed a reconstruction of proto-Kiranti verb roots based on Michailovsky's system,[11]and analyzes the other initial correspondences (in particular, the series reconstructed as non-aspirated unvoiced stops by Starostin) as due to morphological alternations and inter-Kiranti borrowing. In addition, he presents a preliminary discussion of the reconstruction of stem alternation and stress patterns on the basis ofKhalingandDumi.[12]

Notes

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  1. ^Matisoff 2003, pp. 5–6; Thurgood 2003, pp. 15–16; Ebert 2003, pg. 505.
  2. ^Opgenort, Jean Robert.Comparative and Etymological Kiranti DatabaseArchived2019-02-24 at theWayback Machine.
  3. ^Jacques, Guillaume (2012)."Agreement Morphology: The Case of Rgyalrongic and Kiranti".Language and Linguistics:84.
  4. ^abGerber, Pascal; Grollmann, Selin (20 November 2018)."What is Kiranti?: A Critical Account".Bulletin of Chinese Linguistics.11(1–2): 99–152.doi:10.1163/2405478X-01101010.
  5. ^abGrollmann, Selin. 2023.Remarks on the Khambu subgroup of Kiranti.26th Himalayan Languages Symposium, 4-6 September 2023. Paris: INALCO.
  6. ^van Driem, George (1990). "The Fall and Rise of the Phoneme /r/ in Eastern Kiranti: Sound Change in Tibeto-Burman".Bulletin of the School of Oriental and African Studies, University of London.53(1): 83–86.doi:10.1017/S0041977X00021273.JSTOR618970.S2CID128967034.
  7. ^Michailovsky, Boyd. 1991.Big black notebook of Kiranti, proto-Kiranti forms.(unpublished ms. contributed to STEDT).
  8. ^Starostin, Sergei A. 1994–2000. Proto-Kiranti reconstruction (online database).http://starling.rinet.ru/
  9. ^Opgenort, Jean-Robert (2004)."Implosive and preglottalized stops in Kiranti"(PDF).Linguistics of the Tibeto–Burman Area.27(1): 1–27.
  10. ^Opgenort, Jean Robert (2005).A Grammar of Jero: With a Historical Comparative Study of the Kiranti Languages.BRILL.ISBN978-90-474-1508-4.[page needed]
  11. ^Jacques, Guillaume (27 November 2017)."A reconstruction of Proto-Kiranti verb roots"(PDF).Folia Linguistica.51(s38–s1): 177–215.doi:10.1515/flih-2017-0007.S2CID149278651.
  12. ^Jacques, Guillaume (2016)."Tonogenesis and tonal alternations in Khaling"(PDF).Tone and Inflection.pp. 41–66.doi:10.1515/9783110452754-003.ISBN978-3-11-045275-4.

References

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Reconstructions

Further reading

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  • Ebert, K. 1994.The structure of Kiranti languages, comparative grammar and texts: Kiranti subordination in the South Asian areal context.Zürich: Arbeiten des Seminars für Allgemeine Sprachwissenschaft (ASAS).
  • Lahaussois, Aimée (2023). "Ideophonic patterns in Kiranti languages and beyond".Folia Linguistica.57(1): 1–36.doi:10.1515/flin-2022-2053.S2CID256548395.
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