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Naish languages
Subgroup of three Sino-Tibetan languages From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
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The Naish languages are a low-level subgroup of Sino-Tibetan languages that include Naxi, Na (Mosuo), and Laze.
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Classification
The Naish languages are:
In turn, Naish together with Namuyi and Shixing constitutes the Naic subgroup within Sino-Tibetan.
Arguments for relatedness include irregular morphotonology: tone patterns of numeral-plus-classifier phrases that constitute shared structural properties. Since these similarities are phonetically nontransparent, they cannot be due to borrowing.[1]
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Names
Note that in Mainland China, the term "Naxi" is commonly used for the entire language group, e.g. by the influential linguistic introduction by He and Jiang (2015).[2][3] The terms "Naish" and "Naic" are derived from the endonym Na used by speakers of several of the languages. These concepts were initially proposed by Guillaume Jacques & Alexis Michaud (2011).[4] Phylogenetic issues are summarized in the entry about the Naic subgroup. For a review of the literature about Naish languages, see Li (2015).[5]

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Lexical innovations
Jacques & Michaud (2011) list the following words as Naish lexical innovations.
Reconstruction
Summarize
Perspective
Proto-Naish, the proto-language ancestral to the Naish languages, has been reconstructed by Jacques & Michaud (2011). Another reconstruction of Proto-Naish by Zihe Li is in progress; he has published articles detailing open-syllable rhymes,[6] laterals,[7] pre-initials,[8] and retroflex finals.[9]
Phoneme inventory
The Proto-Naish consonant inventory is as follows:
The Proto-Naish vowel inventory is disputed; Jacques and Michaud reconstruct seven vowels /æ ɑ i ĩ o ɔ u/ (notated in their paper with ⟨*a *aC1 *i *iN *o *aC2 *u⟩ respectively). On the other hand, Li reconstructs a simple five-vowel system /a e i o u/.
According to Jacques and Michaud, Proto-Naish syllables are exclusively open syllables, not counting the /ĩ/ rhyme spelled by Jacques and Michaud as *iN. This situation came about due to a total loss of all pre-Naish coda consonants without a trace; pre-Naish vowels in closed syllables have identical outcomes to their open-syllable counterparts. However, Li believes that there are enough traces of the lost consonants to reconstruct a proto-Naish with closed syllables.
Reflexes of vowels
The reflexes of vowels depend heavily on the preceding consonant. Jacques and Michaud employ the following cover symbols:
- K for velar stops
- TS for affricates and sibilants
- R for *r and clusters that result in retroflex consonants in attested Naish
- S for *r or *s
Jacques & Michaud
The vowel reflexes in Naish as charted by Jacques and Michaud are as follows.
Li
Li, who reconstructs only a five-vowel system /a e i o u/, charts the vowel reflexes as follows:
Li also provides reflexes of various closed syllables he reconstructs:[10]
Reflexes of consonants
Naish features up to five series of stop corresponences: aspirated, voiceless, voiced, prenasalized voiced, and prenasalized voiceless.
Reflexes of consonant clusters
Proto-Naish possessed many syllable-initial consonant clusters that were simplified in the Naish languages.
Jacques and Michaud
In the following chart, the following cover symbols are used:
- S standing for *s or *r;
- C standing for a stop.
- N standing for a nasal consonant.
Li
Li's own analysis of consonant clusters is as follows. He reconstructs two types of pre-initial: homorganic nasal pre-initials, and a non-homorganic pre-initial *C1 (C in the below table).
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See also
- List of Proto-Naish reconstructions (Wiktionary)
References
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