| Southern Qiang | |
|---|---|
| Region | Sichuan Province |
| Ethnicity | Qiang people |
Native speakers | (81,000 cited 1999)[1] |
| Language codes | |
| ISO 639-3 | qxs |
| Glottolog | sout2728 |
| ELP | Southern Qiang |
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Southern Qiang is aSino-Tibetan language of theQiangic branch spoken by approximately 81,300 people along theMinjiang (Chinese:岷江) river inSichuan Province,China.
Southern Qiang dialects preserve archaic pronoun flexions, while they have disappeared in Northern Qiang.[2] Unlike its close relativeNorthern Qiang, Southern Qiang is atonal language.
Southern Qiang is spoken inLi County (in Taoping桃坪, etc.),Wenchuan County (inLongxi龙溪,Luobozhai萝卜寨, Miansi绵虒, etc.), and parts ofMao County. It consists of seven dialects: Dajishan, Taoping, Longxi, Mianchi, Heihu, Sanlong, and Jiaochang, which are greatly divergent and are not mutually intelligible.
Names seen in theolder literature for Southern Qiang dialects includeLofuchai (Lophuchai,Lopu Chai) for Luobozhai (萝卜寨);Wagsod (Wa-gsod,Waszu) for Wasi (瓦寺) in modern-day Heping (河坪);[3] andOutside/Outer Mantse (Man-tzŭ), likely from a term for "barbarians", fromChinese:蠻子;pinyin:mánzǐ or fromTibetanསྨན་རྩེ (Wylie:sman tse).[4][5]
The Southern Qiang dialect of Puxi Township has been documented in detail by Huang (2007).[6] Liu (1998) adds Sānlóng (Chinese:三龍) and Jiàocháng (較場) as Southern subdialects.[7]
Sims (2016) characterizes Southern Qiang as the group that innovated the use of agreement suffixes in theperfective aspect, whereas Northern Qiang retains orientational prefixes as markers.[8] These suffixes also provided the basis for classifying individual dialects, as highlighted below initalics.
The consonants of Southern Qiang are presented in the table below:[9]
| Labial | Dental | Retroflex | Palato- alveolar | Palatal | Velar | Uvular | |||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| plain | sibilant | ||||||||
| Stop/ Affricate | voiceless | p | t | ts | ʈʂ | tʃ | tɕ | k | q |
| aspirated | pʰ | tʰ | tsʰ | ʈʂʰ | tʃʰ | tɕʰ | kʰ | qʰ | |
| voiced | b | d | dz | ɖʐ | dʒ | dʑ | ɡ | ɢ | |
| Fricative | voiceless | f | s | ʂ | ʃ | ɕ | (x) | χ | |
| voiced | z | ʐ | ʒ | ʑ | (ɣ) | ʁ | |||
| Nasal | m | n | ɲ | ŋ | |||||
| Approximant | plain | l | j | ||||||
| labial | ɥ | w | |||||||
The vowels of Southern Qiang are presented in the table below:[9]
| Front | Central | Back | |
|---|---|---|---|
| Close | iy | u | |
| Mid | e | əə˞ | o |
| Open | a | ɑ | |
| Syllabic | ɹ̩ |
Southern Qiang dialects have widely varyingtones. The tones become more numerous and distinct the farther the dialect is from the Northern group. Evans (2001) lists the following tonal systems:[10]
The dialect of Taoping has six tones. Liu (1998) reports 4,900 speakers. Out of 1,754 analyzed syllables, the tones are distributed as follows:
The dialect of Longxi has five tones, of which the two "major" tones make up 98.9% of the 6,150 analyzed syllables. Liu (1998) reports 3,300 speakers. The tones are distributed as follows on the analyzed syllables:
The dialect of Mianchi has 15,700 speakers according to Liu (1998). Its tones are added to apitch-accent system of high and low(-falling) pitch, wherein native words may only have one accented syllable. A phonological word may be accented or unaccented, and the accent may for the most part occur on any syllable. Of the 6,369 syllables analyzed, over 95% follow this system; the remaining few have one of threecontour tones:
The dialects that border the Northern Qiang area, such as that of Heihu, Mao County, use tone exclusively to distinguish native words and loanwords.
Wen (1950) reports that the dialect of Jiuziying utilizes a pitch-accent system, claiming that "only when two or more syllables are in juxtaposition is a pitch-accent definitely required, especially forhomophones." Below is a table comparing some vocabulary of the dialects of Jiuziying, Taoping, Longxi, and Mianchi.
| Gloss | Jiuziying | Taoping | Longxi | Mianchi |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| last year | nɤ́ pɤ́ | ȵi31 pǝ33 | nǝ́ pù | né pù |
| two years | nɤ̀ pɤ̀ | |||
| pheasant | í dzú | i31 dʑy241 | ỳ-zó | |
| friend | ì dzù | ì zù ~ ỳ zù | ì dʑòu | |
| inside | kò kò | ko55 ko33 | kù kú | qò qó |
| elder brother | kó kò | à kò | qó qò | |
| uncle | pà pá | pe33 pe33 | á pà | |
| father | pá pà | pɑ55 pɑ33 |
In the dialect of Hou'ergu,Li County, tones are variable on monosyllables depending on the directional prefix (e.g. sɹ̩31 t'ie53; sɹ̩33 t'ie21; dæ55 t'ie33). However, tones are stable on polysyllables.
The tones of the Lobuzhai dialect often have variation in their pitch patterns (e.g. so31 ɲi31 ~ so33 ɲi33), although this is not always the case.
As with many of theQiangic languages, Southern Qiang is becoming increasingly threatened. Because the education system largely usesStandard Chinese as a medium of instruction for the Qiang people, and as a result of the universal access to schooling and television, most Qiang children are fluent or even monolingual in Chinese while an increasing percentage cannot speak Qiang.[11]