Bisu language

Loloish language spoken in Thailand and China From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Bisu (Chinese: 毕苏语) is a Loloish language of Thailand, with a couple thousand speakers in China. Varieties are Bisu proper (Mbisu) and Laomian (Guba), considered by Pelkey to be distinct languages.

Quick Facts Native to, Ethnicity ...
Bisu
Native toThailand, China
Ethnicity700 in Thailand (2007)[1]
Native speakers
240 in China (2005)[1]
Thai script, Latin script
Language codes
ISO 639-3bzi
Glottologbisu1244
ELPBisu
Close

The Laomian are classified within the Lahu ethnic group; the Lahu proper call them the "Lawmeh".[2]

Distribution

According to Bisuyu Yanjiu 毕苏语研究 (2002), there are over 5,000 Bisu speakers in Yunnan, China, and a total of nearly 10,000 Bisu speakers in all countries combined. Within Yunnan, it is spoken mostly in Pu'er Prefecture, as well as neighboring parts of Xishuangbanna.

In Thailand, two dialects of Bisu are spoken in the following villages of Phan District, Chiang Rai Province (Bisuyu Yanjiu 2002:152).

  • Dialect 1: Huai Chomphu village (also called Ban Huaisan) and Doi Pui village
  • Dialect 2: Phadaeng village

Another variety of Bisu differing from the Phayao variety is spoken in Takɔ (Ban Thako), Mae Suai District, Chiang Rai Province.

In Laos, Bisu (pi33 su44; also called Lao-Phai) is spoken in Phudokcham village, Phongxaly District.[5] In Myanmar, Bisu is spoken in three or two villages of Shan State, and Bisu speakers live alongside Pyen speakers

Orthography

In Thailand, the Bisu language is written with the Thai script.

Consonants

More information Labial, Coronal ...
Consonants[6][7]
Labial Coronal Palatal Velar Glottal
plain sibilant
Plosive/
Affricate
unaspirated p p, ป t t, ต ts c, จฺ t͡ɕ~t͡ʃ č, จ k k, ก ʔ -, อ
aspirated ph, พ th, ท tsʰ ch, ชฺ t͡ɕʰ~t͡ʃʰ čh, ช kh, ค
voiced b b, บ d d, ด g g, กง
Fricative f f, ฟ s s, ซ ʃ š, ซฺ h h, ฮ
Nasal plain m m, ม n n, น ɲ ñ, ญ ŋ ŋ, ง
preaspirated hm, ฮม hn, ฮน ɲ̊ hñ, ฮญ ŋ̊ hŋ, ฮง
Approximant plain w w, ว l l, ล j y, ย
preaspirated hl, ฮล hy, ฮย
Close

Vowels

There is no different meaning between long and short vowels. However, check syllables may sound shorter than non-checked ones when speaking. Thai standard uses only long vowels.

  • -า – a – [a]
  • -ี – i – [i]
  • -ือ/-ื – ɨ – [ɨ~ʉ]
  • -ู – u – [u]
  • เ- – e – [e]
  • แ- – ɛ – [ɛ~æ]
  • โ- – o – [o]
  • -อ – ɔ – [ɔ]
  • เ-อ/เ-ิ – ə – [ə]
  • เ-ีย – ia – [ia][6][7]

Tones

  • – – no mark – mid
  • -่ – grave accent – low
  • -้ – acute accent – high

References

Loading related searches...

Wikiwand - on

Seamless Wikipedia browsing. On steroids.