Bai language

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Baip or Bai
Baip‧ngvp‧zix, 白语 Báiyǔ
Spoken in: Yunnan, China
Total speakers: 1 240 000 (2003)
Language family: Sino-Tibetan
 Tibeto-Burman?
  Baip or Bai
Language codes
ISO 639-1: none
ISO 639-2: sit (B)
ISO 639-3: variously:
bca – Central Baip, Jianchuan dialect
bfs – Southern Baip, Dali dialect
bfc – Northern Baip, Bijiang dialect

The Baip/Bai language (Baip: Baip‧ngvp‧zix; traditional Chinese: 白語; simplified Chinese: 白语; pinyin: Báiyǔ) is a language spoken in China, primarily in Yunnan province, by the Bai, one of the 56 ethnic groups officially recognized by the People's Republic of China. The language has over a million speakers and is divided into three main dialects. It is a tonal language with eight tones and a rather rich set of vowels. The vowels of Baip have a tense-lax (creaky voice vs. normal voice) phonemic opposition which is often found in the languages of southeast Asia. Baip is mainly a spoken language, but there exists a small amount of traditional literature written with Chinese characters, as well as a number of recent publications printed with a recently standardized system of romanisation.

[edit] Classification

Traditionally, Baip was said to be a Tibeto-Burman language, though this classification isn't clear and it could be part of an independent branch of the Sino-Tibetan language family. A large portion of the Baip lexicon (about 60%) appears to be Chinese, with many words being similar to modern S.W.Mandarin or slightly earlier stages. However, some of the oldest, most basic vocabulary resembles forms of Chinese reflecting phonological developments well over 2,000 years old, so some scholars have suggested that Baip may be a very early off-shoot from Old Chinese.[1]

Thanks to phonetic changes over time, it is possible to identify two distinct periods of borrowing. Once words from these borrowings are accounted for, there are few exclusively Bai words left. This is why some linguists exclude it from classification as a member of Tibeto-Burman.

Baip has a basic syntactic order of Subject-Verb-Object (SVO), like Chinese. Some remnant "irregular" phrases with SOV could be found in Baip and are thought to be the Tibeto-Burman substratum of ancient Baip.

[edit] References

  • Lee Yeon-ju & Sagart, L. 1998 The strata of Bai, paper presented 31th ICSTLL, University of Lund, Sweden, Sep. 30 – Oct. 4, 1998.
  • Matisoff, J. A. 2001 On the genetic position of Bai within Tibeto-Burman. Paper presented at 34th International Conference on Sino-Tibetan languages and linguistics, Yunnan minzu xueyuan.
  • Starostin, Sergej (1995) “The historical position of Bai”. In: Moskovskij Lingvisticheskij Zhurnal 1: 174-190. Moscow, 1995.
  • Wang, Feng. On the genetic position of the Bai language. Cahiers de Linguistique - Asie Orientale. Vol. 34 (1): 101–127. Paris, 2005.
  • Wang, Feng. Comparison of languages in contact: the distillation method and the case of Bai. Language and Linguistics Monograph Series B: Frontiers in Linguistics III. Taipei: Institute of Linguistics, Academia Sinica, 2006.
  • Wiersma, Grace. 1990. Investigation of the Bai (Minjia) language along historical lines, UC Berkeley: PhD thesis.
  1. ^ The Chinese language, by R.A.D. Forrest 1965, 1973

[edit] External Links