| Ao | |
|---|---|
| Central Naga | |
| Geographic distribution | Nagaland,India |
| Ethnicity | Ao Naga,Lotha Naga,Sangtam Naga,Yimkhiung Naga |
| Linguistic classification | Sino-Tibetan |
| Subdivisions |
|
| Language codes | |
| Glottolog | aoic1235 |
| Culture of the Nagas |
|---|
TheAo orCentral Naga languages are a small family ofSino-Tibetan languages spoken by variousNaga peoples ofNagaland in northeastIndia. Conventionally classified as "Naga", they are not clearly related to otherNaga languages, and are conservatively classified as an independent branch of Sino-Tibetan, pending further research. There are around 607,000 speakers of the languages in total.
Coupe (2012)[1] considers theAngami–Pochuri languages to be most closely related to Ao as part of a widerAngami–Ao group.
The following languages are widely accepted as Central Naga languages:
There are also various undescribed Ao varieties including Yacham and Tengsa, which may turn out to be separate languages (seeMongsen Ao).
The following "Naga" languages spoken in and aroundLeshi Township, Myanmar are classified as Ao languages ("Ao-Yimkhiungrü") by Saul (2005).[2]
Hsiu (2021) places Makury, Long Phuri, and Para into a Greater Central Naga branch, but excludesKoki (Kokak).[3]
Bruhn (2014:370) also surmises thatMakury may be an Ao language.
Bruhn (2014) uses the termCentral Naga to refer to all of the languages above, and uses theAo to refer to only two languages, namely Chungli Ao and Mongsen Ao. The internal structure of Bruhn's Central Naga group is as follows.
Coupe (2023) suggests thatWui, a recently described divergent language of eastern Nagaland, is likely a divergent Aoic (i.e., Central Naga) language.[4]
Proto-Central Naga (Proto-Ao) has been reconstructed by Bruhn (2014).
Bruhn (2014:363) identifies the following four sound changes fromProto-Tibeto-Burman (PTB) to Proto-Central Naga (PCN) as sound changes that are characteristic of the Central Naga branch.