Laze language
Laze, rendered in Chinese as Lare (拉热)[3] and Shuitianhua (水田话), is a language of the Naish subbranch of the Naic group of languages, spoken in Muli County, western Sichuan, China.
Laze | |
---|---|
Muli Shuitian | |
Pronunciation | lɑ33 ze33 |
Native to | China |
Region | Sichuan |
Native speakers | 300 (2012)[1] |
Language codes | |
ISO 639-3 | None (mis ) |
Glottolog | laze1238 [2] |
Laze is spoken by less than 300 fluent speakers in Xiangjiao township 项脚乡, Muli prefecture, Sichuan, China (Michaud & Jacques 2012).[1]
Name
The name Laze (IPA: [lɑ33 ze33]) is likely to be a place name.[3]
Further reading
Publications are available on:
- an outline of Laze phonology, lexicon and grammar [4]
- Laze phonemes: vowels, consonants, syllable structure [5]
- the historical phonology of Laze, Na and Naxi [6]
- the Laze tone system [7]
Recordings in Laze are available from the Pangloss Collection (an online archive of languages).[8]
gollark: It *may* become necessary to restart MIDNIGHT RUNG contingencies.
gollark: It is too late.
gollark: Oh no.
gollark: Don't do it! What if the C compiler contains exploitable bugs (it does)?
gollark: This causes no problems.
References
- Michaud, Alexis, and Guillaume Jacques. 2012. "The Phonology of Laze: Phonemic Analysis, Syllabic Inventory, and a Short Word List." Yuyanxue Luncong 语言学论丛 (45): 196–230.
- Hammarström, Harald; Forkel, Robert; Haspelmath, Martin, eds. (2017). "Laze". Glottolog 3.0. Jena, Germany: Max Planck Institute for the Science of Human History.
- Guo Dalie, and He Zhiwu. 1994. Naxizu Shi (A History of the Naxi People). Chongqing: Sichuan Minzu Chubanshe.
- 黄布凡. 2009. “木里水田话概况.” 汉藏语学报 3: 30–55 (Huang Bufan. 2009. “A Survey of Muli Shuitian (Muli Shuitianhua Gaikuang).” Journal of Sino-Tibetan Linguistics (Hanzangyu Xuebao) 3: 30–55.)
- Michaud, Alexis, and Guillaume Jacques. 2012. “The Phonology of Laze: Phonemic Analysis, Syllabic Inventory, and a Short Word List.” Yuyanxue Luncong 语言学论丛 45: 196–230.
- Jacques, Guillaume, and Alexis Michaud. 2011. "Approaching the historical phonology of three highly eroded Sino-Tibetan languages: Naxi, Na and Laze." Diachronica 28:468-498.
- Michaud, Alexis. 2009. [hal.archives-ouvertes.fr/halshs-00436463/en “The Prosodic System of Muli Shuitian (Laze) (Muli Shuitianhua Shengdiao Xitong Yanjiu 木里水田话声调系统研究).”] Minority Languages of China (Minzu Yuwen 民族语文) 6: 28–33.
- Laze recordings in the Pangloss Collection
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