Micha language

Micha, or Miqie (Chinese: 密察; autonym: mi˥tɕʰe˨˩ pʰo˨˩[4]), is a Loloish language of Yunnan. Usage is declining.

Micha
Michie
Central Yi
Native toChina
RegionYunnan
Ethnicity>1,000 (1999)[1] to 50,000 Yi (2007)[2]
Native speakers
30,000 (2007)[2]
(assuming an ethnic population of 50,000)
Language codes
ISO 639-3yiq
Glottologmiqi1235
ELPMiqie Yi[3]

Classification

Micha (mi55 tɕʰi21 or mi55 tɕʰe21) is most closely related to Lipo, Lolopo, and Lisu (Gao 2014).

The autonym mi13 sɑ21 pɑ21[5] is used by Lalo speakers, and should not be confused with Micha.

Distribution

Micha is spoken by about 9,000 in north-central Yunnan, in Wuding County, Luquan County, and Fumin County (Gao 2014).

  • Wuding County: Shedianxiaocun, Yongtaoxiacun, Yongtaozhongcun, Yangliuhe, Maichacun, Wodudacun, Woduxincun, Shuiduifang, Shanjudacun, Shanjuxiacun, Yangjiacun, Luomian, Xiagubai, Yanziwo, Shudecun, Dacun, Xincun, Baisha, Dashiban, Puxi Xincun, Yangliuhe, Nanshancun, Maidishan, Daxinzhuang, Yangjiucun, Nuomizha, Bizu
  • Luquan County: Shanglaowu, Xiashihuiyao, Qinglongqing, Bailike, Yantang, Pingtian, Damituo, Xicun
  • Fumin County: Madishangcun, Madixiacun, Madishaocun

According to the Nanjian County Gazetteer (1993), Micha (密岔) is also spoken in Nanjian County, around Aliwu 阿里勿[6] and Santaishan 三台山,[7] southeast of Dali.

References

  1. "Themes" (PDF). asiaharvest.org.
  2. Micha at Ethnologue (18th ed., 2015)
  3. Endangered Languages Project data for Miqie Yi.
  4. Yunnan Province Ethnic Minority Languages Gazetteer (云南省志:少数民族语言文字志) (1997), p.30
  5. Yunnan Province Ethnic Minority Languages Gazetteer (云南省志:少数民族语言文字志) (1997), p.57
  6. Archived 2014-12-19 at the Wayback Machine
  7. "Archived copy". Archived from the original on 2014-12-19. Retrieved 2014-12-07.CS1 maint: archived copy as title (link)

Further reading

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