Shö language

Shö is a Kuki-Chin language dialect cluster of Burma and Bangladesh. There are perhaps three distinct dialects, Asho (Khyang), Chinbon, and Shendu.

Shö
Native toBurma, Bangladesh
EthnicityAsho Chin
Native speakers
(50,000 cited 1983–2011)[1]
plus an unknown number of Shendu
Language codes
ISO 639-3Either:
cnb  Chinbon Chin
csh  Asho Chin
shl  Shendu
Glottologchin1478  Chinbon Chin
asho1236  Asho Chin
shen1247  Shendu

Mayin and Longpaw are not mutually intelligible, but have been subsumed under the ISO code for Chinbon because Mayin-Longpaw speakers generally understand Chinbon.[2] Minkya is similarly included because most Minkya speakers understand Mayin.[3]

Geographical distribution

Chinbon (Uppu) is spoken in the following townships of Myanmar (Ethnologue).

Asho is spoken in Ayeyarwady Region, Bago Region, and Magway Region, and Rakhine State, Myanmar.

VanBik (2009:38)[4] lists the following Asho dialects.

Shendu is spoken in Mizoram, India.

Phonology

The Asho dialect (K’Chò) has 28 consonants and seven vowels.

Consonants
BilabialLabio-dentalInter-dentalAlveolarPost-AlveolarVelarGlottal
V1 stops p pʰt tʰk kʰʔ
Ingressives ɓɗ
V1 Fricatives ʃxh
Vd Fricatives vʒɣ
V1 Affricates kx
Vd Affricates d ʒk ɣ
Nasals m m̥n (n̥)ŋ ŋ̊
Lateral l ɬ
Clusters pl pʰl
Vowels
FrontCenterBack
Close i, iːɨ, ɨːu, uː
Mid e, eːə, əːɔ, ɔː
Open a, aː

Diphthongs: əi, ai, ui, ɔi

Morphology

Similar to other Kukish languages, many Asho verbs have two distinct stems. This stem alternation is a Proto-Kukish feature, which has been retained to different degrees in different Kukish languages.[5]

References

  1. Chinbon Chin at Ethnologue (18th ed., 2015)
    Asho Chin at Ethnologue (18th ed., 2015)
    Shendu at Ethnologue (18th ed., 2015)
  2. VanBik, Kenneth. 2009. Proto-Kuki-Chin: A Reconstructed Ancestor of the Kuki-Chin Languages. STEDT Monograph 8. ISBN 0-944613-47-0.
  3. http://ic.payap.ac.th/graduate/linguistics/theses/Kee_Shein_Mang_Thesis.pdf


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