Tosu language

Tosu
Native to China
Native speakers
few to none (2012)[1]
Language codes
ISO 639-3 included in ers
qob (not ISO)
Glottolog tosu1234[2]

Tosu (Chinese: 多续; pinyin: Duōxù; autonym: do33 ɕu33 na31[3]) is a moribund Qiangic language of China which shows strong affiliations to both the Loloish languages and to Tangut, the language of the Western Xia. Yu (2012) classifies it as an Ersuic language, which belongs to the Qiangic branch. There are "almost no Tosu speakers left", or "practically" no Ersu speakers left.[1]

About 2,000 Tosu people live in Miǎnníng county and the villages around it, as well as in six outlying townships of that county, namely Hòushān (后山), Fùxīng (复兴), Huì’ān (惠安), Hāhā (哈哈), Línlǐ (林里), and Shābā town (沙坝镇).[4] Chirkova (2014) reports that it is spoken by more than 9 individuals, all in their seventies and eighties.

References

  1. 1 2 Yu (2012:1–2)
  2. Hammarström, Harald; Forkel, Robert; Haspelmath, Martin, eds. (2017). "Tosu". Glottolog 3.0. Jena, Germany: Max Planck Institute for the Science of Human History.
  3. Chirkova, Katia. 2015. A Phonological Sketch of Duoxu.
  4. Chirkova, Katia. 2014. The Duoxu Language and the Ersu-Lizu-Duoxu relationship. Linguistics of the Tibeto-Burman Area (37). doi:10.1075/ltba.37.1.04chi

Bibliography

  • Yu, Dominic. 2012. Proto-Ersuic. Ph.D. dissertation. Berkeley: University of California, Berkeley, Department of Linguistics.

  • Nishida, Tatsuo, 1973, 多続訳語の研究 : 新言語トス語の構造と系統 [A Study of the Tosu–Chinese Vocabulary Tosu I-yu: the structure and lineage of Tosu, a new language], 松香堂 Shokado, Kyoto (in Japanese)
  • Nishida, Tatsuo, 1975, "Hsi-hsia, Tosu, and Lolo–Burmese", Sino-Tibetan Conference VIII, Berkeley
  • Nishida, Tatsuo, 1976, "Hsi-hsia, Tosu, and Lolo–Burmese languages", Studia Phonologica 10:1–15


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