Yaren Na
Appearance
[[Category:articles
with short description]]
Samfuri:For Samfuri:Distinguish
Na | |
---|---|
Narua | |
Asali a | China |
Yanki | Sichuan |
Ƙabila | Mosuo |
'Yan asalin magana | 47,000 (2010)Template:Ethnologue24 does not exist |
Lamban rijistar harshe | |
ISO 639-3 |
nru |
Glottolog |
yong1270 [1] |
Na (ko kuma Narua, Mosuo) yaren Naish ne wanda wani yanki da kabilan Naic na kungiyan yarikan Sino-Tibetan.
Ire-irensu
[gyara sashe | gyara masomin]Yongning Na, wanda ake magana a garin Yongning, gundumar Ninglang, Lijiang, Yunnan, China, Jacques and Michaud (2011) ne suka rubuta shi..[2]
Lataddi Naruasananne ne don samun matakan tonal biyu kawai.[3]
Fassarar sauti
[gyara sashe | gyara masomin]Bakake
[gyara sashe | gyara masomin]- /t, tʰ, d, n, l/ can be heard as [ʈ, ʈʰ, ɖ, ɳ, ɭ] when preceding vowel sounds /ɯ, u, v̩, ɤ, æ/.
- /p, pʰ, b, m, w/ can be heard as [ʙ̥, ʙ̥ʰ, ʙ, ɱ, v] when preceding vowel sounds /ɯ, u, v̩/.
- /ɣ/ can also be heard as uvular [ʁ] in word-initial position.
- /w, h/ is also heard as voiceless [w̥, x] in free variation.
- /n/ is heard as velar [ŋ] when before velar stops.
- [ʔ] is heard in initial position before vowels.[4]
Wasula
[gyara sashe | gyara masomin]- /ɯ/ can be heard as [ɨ] in syllable-initial position and as retroflex [ɻ̩] when after retroflex consonants.[5]
Manazarta
[gyara sashe | gyara masomin]- ↑ Hammarström, Harald; Forkel, Robert; Haspelmath, Martin, eds. (2017). "Narua". Glottolog 3.0. Jena, Germany: Max Planck Institute for the Science of Human History.
- ↑ Jacques, Guillaume, and Alexis Michaud. 2011. "Approaching the historical phonology of three highly eroded Sino-Tibetan languages[permanent dead link]." Diachronica 28:468-498.
- ↑ Dobbs, Roselle, and La Mingqing. 2016 "The two-level tonal system of Lataddi Narua." Linguistics of the Tibeto-Burman Area, Vol. 39:1 (2016), 67–104. doi:10.1075/ltba.39.1.04dob
- ↑ Lidz, Liberty A. (2010). A Descriptive Grammar of Yongning Na (Mosuo). University of Texas at Austin.
- ↑ Zhenhong, Yang (2009). An overview of the Mosuo language. Linguistics of the Tibeto-Burman Area 32. pp. 1–43.CS1 maint: location (link)
Samfuri:Sino-Tibetan languages Samfuri:Na-Qiangic languages Samfuri:Languages of China