Central Kuki-Chin languages
Appearance
(Redirected from Mizo languages)
This article needs additional citations for verification. (February 2023) |
Central Kuki-Chin | |
---|---|
Central Chin | |
Geographic distribution | Myanmar and Northeast India |
Ethnicity | Mizo and Chin |
Linguistic classification | Sino-Tibetan
|
Language codes | |
Glottolog | cent2330 (Central Kuki-Chin) |
Central Kuki-Chin is a branch of the Kuki-Chin languages. Central Kuki-Chin languages are spoken primarily in Mizoram, India and in Hakha Township and Falam Township of Chin State, Myanmar.
Official use
[edit]Mizo is the official language of Mizoram State, India.
Classification
[edit]VanBik (2009:23) classifies the Central Kuki-Chin languages as follows.
- Central Kuki-Chin
- Laamtuk Thet (Tawr): Laamtuk, Ruavaan dialects
- Lai languages
- Mizo languages
VanBik (2009) is unsure about the classification of Pangkhua, and tentatively places it within Central Kuki-Chin.
Sound changes
[edit]VanBik (2009) lists the following sound changes from Proto-Kuki-Chin to Proto-Central Chin.
- Proto-Kuki-Chin *k(ʰ)r-, *p(ʰ)r- > Proto-Central Chin *t(ʰ)r-
- Proto-Kuki-Chin *k(ʰ)l-, *p(ʰ)l- > Proto-Central Chin *t(ʰ)l-
- Proto-Kuki-Chin *y- > Proto-Central Chin *z-
See also
[edit]References
[edit]- Peterson, David. 2017. "On Kuki-Chin subgrouping." In Picus Sizhi Ding and Jamin Pelkey, eds. Sociohistorical linguistics in Southeast Asia: New horizons for Tibeto-Burman studies in honor of David Bradley, 189-209. Leiden: Brill.
- VanBik, Kenneth. 2009. Proto-Kuki-Chin: A Reconstructed Ancestor of the Kuki-Chin Languages. STEDT Monograph 8. ISBN 0-944613-47-0.