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Pa'O language

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Karenic language
Not to be confused withother similarly named languages.

Pa'O
Taungthu
ပအိုဝ်ႏဘာႏသာႏ
Pa'O manuscript
Pa'O manuscript
Native toMyanmar
EthnicityPa'O
Native speakers
(860,000 cited 2000–2017)[1]
Burmese script (Pa'O alphabet)
Karen Braille
Official status
Recognised minority
language in
Language codes
ISO 639-3blk
Glottologpaok1235
Look upပအိုဝ်ႏဘာႏသာႏ in Wiktionary, the free dictionary.

ThePa'O language (also spelledPa-O orPa-oh;Pa'o Karen:ပအိုဝ်ႏဘာႏသာႏ,listen;Burmese:ပအိုဝ်းဘာသာ), sometimes calledTaungthu, is aKarenic language spoken by close to 900,000Pa'O people in Myanmar.[1] Although spoken in both northern and southern parts of the areas covered by the Karenic languages, Pa-O is typically classified as a Northern Karenic language alongside theKayan language.[2]

The language is primarily written using aMon-Burmese script devised by Christian missionaries,[3][4] and many of the materials now available for it on the Internet derive from Christian missionary involvement,[5] although most of the Pa'O are generally reported to be Buddhists.[6]

The language is also referred to by theexonyms "Black Karen" and "White Karen", both of which are terms originally based on traditional clothing colours used in contrast to "Red Karen" (Karenni), also of Myanmar.[7] While most of the community resides in Myanmar, a small number settled across theThai border as early as 1837.[8]

Dialects

[edit]

There are two dialects of Pa'O from the towns ofTaunggyi andThaton.[9] These are also called Highland Pa'O or Northern Pa'O for the Taunggyi dialect and the Lowland Pa'O or Southern Pa'O for the Thaton dialect. The Taunggyi Pa'O dialect has many borrowings from its neighbouringShan language and remained more isolated from the influence of theBurmese language compared to the Thaton dialect. Speakers of the two dialects can have issues with intelligibility leading many to switch to Burmese for easier communication.[2]

The southern dialect features 24 phonemes in comparison to the 20 phonemes of the north. The additional phonemes that the southern dialect features ared͡ʒ,ɲ,ʃ andç. The d͡ʒ phoneme, however, only appears in the loan word for wheat (/d͡ʒoʊn/) - taken from Burmeseဂျုံ.[10]

There is an additional dialect found inMae Hong Son province called the Huay Salop dialect. It differs from the Taunggyi dialect, for example, in replacing the /y/ vowel with /ʉ/ or /ə/.[8]

Phonology

[edit]

The following tables display the phonological features of the northern Pa'O (Taungthu) language:[11]

In addition to these simple phonemes, Pa'O also has five "secondary phonemes" that are used assyllable medial: /-j-/, /-l-/, /-r-/, /-w-/ and /-lw-/. For example, /lá/ (to fall); /ljá/ (to be hot) and /lwá/ (a saw).[10] Some dialects use /-rw-/ rather than /-lw-/[8]

Consonants

[edit]
LabialAlveolarPalatalVelarGlottal
Plosivevoicelessptckʔ
aspirated
voicedbd
Fricativesh
Nasalmnŋ
Trillr
Approximantlaterall
centralwj
  • /p,t,k,ʔ/ and/m,n,ŋ/ can occur as final consonants. Stops may also be heard as unreleased[p̚,t̚,k̚].

Vowels

[edit]

Pa'O has nine cardinal vowels and two glide vowels (diphthongs) as shown in the table below. However, this is a standardization from all Pa'O regional dialects; in reality, the vowel inventories of the various dialects have a much wider range in diversity, including additional cardinal vowels, diphthongs, nasal vowels, and glottal vowels.[8]

FrontCentralBack
Highiʉu
High-mideo
Midə
Low-midɛɔ
Lowa
Glidedai̯au̯

Tonemes

[edit]

Pa'O has four phonemic tones: high, high falling, mid and low. Syllables with a coda, can only have the High or Low tones and the presence of a coda can chance the realised tone contours of the High and Low tones. Pa'O also has two types of intonation contours: a rising and a falling contour characterised by the pitch of the last syllable or the intonation phrase.[8]

Grammar

[edit]

The structure of a Pa'O word is typically monosyllabic. In its rarer disyllabic or trisyllabic words, the stress is placed on the last syllable. Pa'O syllables follow a C(C)(C)Vᵀ or C(C)Vᵀ(C) structure and can be classed into pre-syllables, major syllables and minor syllables.[8]

The Pa'O language featuresserial verb construction where several verbs are used consecutively as part of a singleclause. Like otherKarenic languages, Pa'O mostly restricts this serialisation to thenucleus forbidding the object from being inserted in between serialised verbs. This may be due to historicalTibeto-Burman verb-final word order, but research remains limited on Pa'O historical linguistics.[2]

Pa'O also uses secondary verbs which change meaning when used with other main verbs and do not follow the general pattern in verb serialisation. The specific grammatical syntax of certain secondary verbs is a unique difference between Pa'O and other Karenic languages. For example, the word (to hit) occurs towards the end of a serialisation in Pa'O while it occurs preverbally inS'gaw Karen. These differences may have developed from influence fromBurmese, such as with the wordpʰé (to give) while some secondary verbs are directly borrowed from Burmese like the worldkʰám (to endure).[2]

Writing system

[edit]
See also:Mon-Burmese script andBurmese alphabet

Pa'O is written using a modified version of theMon-Burmese script.[4] Below are the consonant letters in Pa'O; additional letters in the Burmese letter inventory are used to transcribePali.

Pa'o consonants
က
IPA:/k/
IPA:/kʰ/
IPA:/ŋ/
IPA:/c/
IPA:/cʰ/
IPA:/ɲ/
IPA:/t/
IPA:/tʰ/
IPA:/d/
IPA:/n/
IPA:/p/
IPA:/pʰ/
IPA:/b/
IPA:/m/
IPA:/j/
IPA:/ɹ/
IPA:/l/
IPA:/w/
IPA:/s/
IPA:/h/
IPA:/a/
Tone markers

References

[edit]
Pa'O edition ofWikipedia, the free encyclopedia
  1. ^abPa'O atEthnologue (26th ed., 2023)Closed access icon
  2. ^abcdBoote Cooper, Alys (2018)."Secondary Verbs in Pa-O: A Preliminary Study".Journal of the Southeast Asian Linguistics Society. Special Publication (2):29–39.
  3. ^"Pa-oh ပအိုဝ်း - Word List".Language Documentation Training Center. 3 October 2015. Archived fromthe original on 3 October 2015. Retrieved21 March 2019.
  4. ^ab"Pa-oh ပအိုဝ်း - Writing System".Language Documentation Training Center. 9 October 2015. Archived fromthe original on 9 October 2015. Retrieved21 March 2019.
  5. ^"Pa-O in Myanmar (Burma)".Joshua Project.
  6. ^"Pa'o Religious and Literary Manuscripts | Southeast Asia Digital Library".sea.lib.niu.edu. Retrieved30 June 2022.
  7. ^"Karen".eHRAF World Cultures. Yale University.
  8. ^abcdefThanamteun, Orranat (2000).A Phonological Study of Pa-O (Taungthu) at Ban Huay Salop, Tambon Huay Pha, Muang District, Mae Hong Son Province(PDF) (Master of Arts thesis). Mahidol University.ISBN 9746643169.
  9. ^Shintani, Tadahiko. 2020.The Pao language: its Taunggyi and Kokareit dialects. Linguistic survey of Tay cultural area (LSTCA) no. 131. Tokyo: Research Institute for Languages and Cultures of Asia and Africa (ILCAA).
  10. ^abNishida, Tatsuo (1967)."Notes on the Pao Language in Burma: A preliminary Study of the Southern Pao Pa'an dialect".Journal of the Linguistic Society of Japan (in Japanese) (50):15–33.
  11. ^Thanamteun, Orranat (2000).A phonological study of Pa-O (Taungthu) at Ban Huay Salop, Tambon Huay Pha, Muang district, Mae Hong Son province. Mahidol University.
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