Qiang language

Dialect continuum of Sichuan, China From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Qiang language

Qiang language, called Rma (尔玛) or Rme [1] by its speakers, and formerly spelled Kʻiang, is a Sino-Tibetan language cluster of the Qiangic branch spoken by approximately 140,000 people in north-central Sichuan Province, China.

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Qiang consists of:

Writing systems

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Qiang Phonetic Alphabet Scheme

There has been two phonetic writing system for Qiang commissioned by PRC authorities, both based on the Latin-script alphabet. The first design was commissioned centrally in 1958 following early PRC work on distinguishing minority ethnic groups in China, but was never officially promoted. The second system, known as the Qiang Phonetic Alphabet Scheme (羌族拼音文字方案; Qiāngzú Pīnyīn Wénzì Fāng'àn) was commissioned by the local government of Ngawa Tibetan and Qiang Autonomous Prefecture and the provincial Ethnic Affairs Commission (EAC) of Sichuan in 1989. Qiang Phonetic Alphabet Scheme uses 26 standard English alphabet letters, and is a standardised form based on the Qugu Qiang dialect, which belongs to the Northern dialect area but roughly situated at linguistic middle point between the two dialects.[2]

Qiang Phonetic Alphabet Scheme was completed in late 1990 and was approved for trial operation by Sichuan provincial government in 1991, in tandem with recommending the Scheme for official approval by the National Ethnic Affairs Commission (NEAC) in 1991. In 1993, the NEAC requested Chinese Academy of Social Sciences to organise an academic review, which concluded favourably, but NEAC only informed their approval of the Scheme to the provincial EAC by telephone. Qiang Phonetic Alphabet Scheme never ended up being officially published by NEAC or other national authorities thereafter, although the Scheme was acknowledged as legitimate in one written report from NEAC to the central government in 1999. [3]

In 2015, Beichuan Qiang Autonomous County government commissioned a Qiang language graded reader for schools, which uses Qiang Phonetic Alphabet Scheme.[4]

In 2019, a local TV station at Maoxian county started weekly news programme using the Qiang language and the Latin-based alphabet.[5]

Rma script

Thumb
Rma Script from Qiang Language

In 2017, Wei Jiuqiao (魏久乔) finalised their design of the Rma script.[6] There is no published information as to whether the script is compatible with both the Northern Qiang language and the Southern Qiang language or if it is only compatible with one of the languages. In 2022, preliminary proposal was made to encode this system in the Universal Character Set of Unicode.[7]

Consonants

b
/p/

p
//

bb
/b/

m
/m/

f
/f/

w
/w/

wf
/v/

d
/t/

t
//

dd
/d/

n
/n/

lh
/ɬ/

l
/l/

lr
//

g
/k/

k
//

gg
/ɡ/

ng
/ŋ/

h
/h/

hh
/ɣ/

j
//

q
/tɕʰ/

jj
//

x
/ɕ/

xx
/ʑ/

y
/j/

gv
/q/

kv
//

v
/χ/

vh
/ɦ/

vv
/ʁ/

z
/ts/

c
/tsʰ/

zz
/dz/

s
/s/

ss
/z/

zh
//

ch
/tʂʰ/

dh
//

sh
/ʂ/

rr
/ʐ/
Vowels

a
/a/

ae
/æ/

ea
/e/

u
/u/

e
/ə/

nn
/◌̃/

i
/i/

ü
/y/

o
/o/


/ʔ/

r
/ʴ/

Classification

Sims (2016)[8] gives the following classification for the "Qiangish" (or "Rma") languages, which include Northern Qiang and Southern Qiang. Individual dialects are highlighted in italics.

Qiangish
  • Northern Qiang ('upstream' *nu- innovation group)
    • NW Heishui: Luhua 芦花镇
    • Central Heishui
      • Qinglang 晴朗乡
      • Zhawo 扎窝乡
      • Ciba 慈坝乡
      • Shuangliusuo 双溜索乡
      • uvular V's innovation group: Zhimulin 知木林乡, Hongyan 红岩乡, Mawo 麻窝乡
    • SE Heishui: Luoduo 洛多乡, Longba 龙坝乡, Musu 木苏乡, Shidiaolou 石碉楼乡
    • North Maoxian: Taiping 太平乡, Songpinggou 松坪沟乡
    • South Songpan: Xiaoxing 小姓乡, Zhenjiangguan 镇江关乡, Zhenping 镇坪乡
    • West Maoxian / South Heishui: Weigu 维古乡, Waboliangzi 瓦钵乡梁子, Se'ergu 色尔古镇, Ekou, Weicheng 维城乡, Ronghong, Chibusu, Qugu 曲谷乡 [basis for written language], Wadi 洼底乡, Baixi 白溪乡, Huilong 回龙乡, Sanlong 三龙乡
    • Central Maoxian: Heihu 黑虎乡
    • SE Maoxian (reflexive marker innovation): Goukou 沟口乡, Yonghe 永和乡
  • Southern Qiang (perfective agreement suffixes innovation group)
    • 'inward' *ji innovation subgroup
    • 'downward' *ɚ innovation subgroup
      • Western Lixian: Puxi 蒲溪乡, Xuecheng 薛城镇, Muka 木卡乡, Jiuzi 九子村
      • Eastern Lixian: Taoping 桃坪乡, Tonghua 通化乡

Reconstruction

Sims (2017)[9] reconstructs tones for Proto-Rma (alternatively called Proto-Qiangish), proposing that the lack of tones in Northern Qiang is due to Tibetan influence. High tones and low tones are reconstructed for Proto-Rma, as well as for Proto-Prinmi.

References

Bibliography

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