Maojia dialect

Maojia (猫家 mau55 ka55[1]) is a mixed language in Southern China. Maojiahua is an unclassified Sinitic language that has undergone influence from Hmongic languages.[2]

Maojia
Native toChina
RegionHunan, Guangxi
EthnicityMiao
Native speakers
(200,000 cited 1991)[1]
Language codes
ISO 639-3None (mis)
GlottologNone

Demographics

Maojiahua is spoken by about 200,000 people of Au-Ka (Aoka 奥卡) Miao ethnicity in Chengbu, Suining, Wugang and Suining in southwest part of Hunan Province, as well as in Ziyuan and Longsheng in north part of Guangxi Province.[3]

According to Chen Qiguang (2013:32),[1] "Maojia" (mau55 ka55), also known as "Qingyi Miao 青衣苗", is spoken mostly in Chengbu County, Hunan, and also in Suining, Wugang, Longsheng, and Ziyuan counties. There is a total of about 120,000 speakers. The representative dialect given in Chen (2013) is that of Xintang Village 信塘村, Yangshi Township 羊石乡, Chengbu Miao Autonomous County, Hunan Province. Li (2004) covers various dialects of Qingyi Miao in detail.

Vocabulary

Below are selected words of likely non-Chinese origin from the Qingyi Miao dialect of Wutuan Town 五团镇, Chengbu County 城步县, Hunan (Li 2004).

English glossChinese glossQingyi Miao
eaty˨˩
oillu˥˨
meatnai˦
pigte˥
smallnɑ˥
child孩子nɑŋ˥li˧˨
nose鼻子pi˥˨haŋ˨˩˧
spider蜘蛛kiou˥ɕi˥
stinkbug臭虫pie˥
star星星se˥le˧˨
dust灰尘tʰoŋ˥din˦
thisko˨˩
thatmi˦
oneɑ˦
thick (of soup)no˥˨
secretnin˨˩˧
earthworm蚯蚓din˨˩kai˧˨
sponge gourd (Luffa aegyptiaca)丝瓜se˧˨tai˥kuɑ˥
infant婴幼儿naŋ˥le˧˨
outsider外地人lai˥˨tɕie˨˩˧ŋ˦
son儿子naŋ˥li˧˨, naŋ˥tsai˧˨
spitia˥˨
vagina女阴tsɨ˥
doniɑŋ˥˨
excrementkai˨˩˧
kneelnioŋ˥
bent in, curvedmie˨˩
thintse˥

References

  1. Chen, Qiguang [陈其光] (2013). Miao and Yao language [苗瑶语文]. Beijing: China Minzu University Press.
  2. Li, Lan 李藍. 2004. Hunan Chengbu Qingyi Miaoren hua 湖南城步靑衣苗人话. Beijing: China Social Sciences Academy Press 中國社会科学出版社.
  3. http://asiaharvest.org/wp-content/themes/asia/docs/people-groups/China/chinaPeoples/A/Aoka.pdf
  • Li, Lan 李藍. 2004. Hunan Chengbu Qingyi Miaoren hua 湖南城步靑衣苗人话 (The language of the Qingyi Miao people). Beijing: China Social Sciences Academy Press 中國社会科学出版社.
  • Ming studies, 34–35:55, University of Minnesota, 1995
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