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Miao-Yao

 
Dictionary: Miao-Yao   (myou'you') pronunciation
n.
A small group of languages of uncertain affinity, including Hmong and Yao, spoken in southern China, northern Laos, Thailand, and Vietnam.


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Britannica Concise Encyclopedia: Hmong-Mien languages
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Language family of southern China, northern Vietnam, Laos, and Thailand with more than 10 million speakers. Hmongic (Miao) languages include Hmu, Hmong, Qo Xiong, Bunu, and Ho Ne; Mienic (Yao) languages include Mien, Mun, Biao Min, and others. In the 19th and early 20th centuries, many Hmong and Mien speakers emigrated from China to Southeast Asia. Hmong-Mien languages share some characteristics with other languages of the area, most notably Chinese. However, scholars have not reached consensus on the genetic relationships between Hmong-Mien and other languages; some believe that Hmong-Mien is part of the Sino-Tibetan linguistic family, while others believe that there is no genetic relationship between Hmong-Mien and any other living language.

For more information on Hmong-Mien languages, visit Britannica.com.

Wikipedia: Hmong-Mien languages
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Hmong-Mien
Miao-Yao
Geographic
distribution:
China, Southeast Asia
Genetic
classification
:
One of the world's primary language families; with proposed affinities to Sino-Tibetan[citation needed]
Subdivisions:
Mien (Yao)
(position of She obscure)
ISO 639-5: hmx
Hmong-mien languages.jpg

Hmongic languages in red, Mienic languages in purple

The Hmong-Mien or Miao-Yao languages are a small language family of southern China and Southeast Asia. They are spoken in mountainous areas of southern China, including Guizhou, Hunan, Yunnan, Sichuan, Guangxi, and Hubei provinces, where its speakers have been relegated to being "hill people," while the Han Chinese have settled the more fertile river valleys. Within the last 300–400 years, the Hmong and some Mien people have migrated to Thailand, Laos, Vietnam, and Myanmar. As a result of the Indochina Wars, many Hmong speakers left Southeast Asia for Australia, the United States, and other countries.

Contents

Relationships

Hmong (Miao) and Mien (Yao) are clearly distinct, but closely related. The relationship of the poorly known Ho Ne (or Huo Nie) of the Shē is obscure, though it may be closest to Mien. Part of the difficulty is that it has been strongly influenced by neighboring tongues. One proposed internal classification is listed below.

Earlier linguistic classifications placed the Hmong-Mien languages into the Sino-Tibetan language family, where they remain in many Chinese classifications, but the current consensus among Western linguists is that they constitute a family of their own. The family has its origins in southern or perhaps even central China. The current area of greatest agreement is that the languages appeared in the region between the Yangtze and Mekong rivers, but there is reason to believe that speakers migrated there from further north with the expansion of the Han Chinese.[citation needed]

Paul K. Benedict, an American scholar, extended the Austric theory to include the Kradai family of Southeast Asia and the Hmong-Mien languages, together forming an Austro-Tai superfamily. The Austro-Tai hypothesis never received wide acceptance, however.[1]

Names

The Mandarin names for these languages are Miáo and Yáo.

Meo, Hmu, Mong, and Hmong are local names for Miao, but since most Laotian refugees in the United States call themselves Hmong/Mong, this name has become better known in English than the others in recent decades. However, the name Hmong is not used in China, where the majority of the Miao live.

The Chinese name Yao, on the other hand, is for the Yao nationality, which is a cultural rather than ethno-linguistic group. It includes peoples speaking the Mien, Kadai, Yi, and Miao languages. For this reason the ethnonym Mien may be preferred as less ambiguous.

Characteristics

Like many languages in southern China, the Hmong-Mien languages tend to be monosyllabic and syntactically analytic. They are some of the most highly tonal languages in the world: Longmo and Zongdi Hmong have as many as twelve distinct tones[2]. They are notable phonologically for the occurrence of voiceless sonorants and uvular consonants; otherwise their phonology is also quite typical of the region.

They are SVO in word order but are not as rigidly right-branching as the Kradai or most Mon-Khmer languages, since they have genitives and numerals before the noun like Chinese. They are extremely poor in adpositions: serial verb constructions replace most functions of adpositions in languages like English. For example, a construction translating as "be near" would be used where in English preopositions like "in" or "at" would be used.[3]

Besides their tonality and lack of adpositions, another striking feature is the abundance of numeral classifiers and their use where other languages use definite articles or demonstratives to modify nouns.

Proposed internal classification

Ethnologue lists 35 Hmong-Mien languages, some of which are mutually intelligible.[4] The following classification follows Matisoff 2001.

  • Hmong (Miao) languages
    • ? 'Gelo'
    • Northern Hmong
      • Xiangxi Miao (Red Miao)
    • Western Hmong
      • Libo Miao
      • Weining Miao
      • Yi Miao
      • Hmong proper (includes Hmong Njua (Blue/Green Miao), Hmong Daw (White Miao), and Magpie Miao)
    • Central Hmong
      • Qiandong Miao (Black Miao)
      • Longli Miao
    • East Guizhou
    • Patengic
      • Pa-Hng
      • Yongcong

In addition, the position of Ho Ne is obscure.

For an examination of alternate schemes such as the one by Strecker and one prepared for Miao by Chinese linguists, see Bryce Schroeder's Hmong page.

Further reading

  • Paul K. Benedict (1942). "Thai, Kadai and Indonesian: a new alignment in south east Asia." American Anthropologist 44.576-601.
  • Paul K. Benedict (1975). Austro-Thai language and culture, with a glossary of roots. New Haven: HRAF Press. ISBN 0875363237.
  • Enwall, J. (1995). Hmong writing systems in Vietnam: a case study of Vietnam's minority language policy. Stockholm, Sweden: Center for Pacific Asian Studies.
  • Enwall, J. (1994). A myth become reality: history and development of the Miao written language. Stockholm East Asian monographs, no. 5-6. [Stockholm?]: Institute of Oriental Languages, Stockholm University. ISBN 171532692
  • Lombard, S. J., & Purnell, H. C. (1968). Yao-English dictionary.
  • Lyman, T. A. (1979). Grammar of Mong Njua (Green Miao): a descriptive linguistic study. [S.l.]: The author.
  • Lyman, T. A. (1974). Dictionary of Mong Njua: a Miao (Meo) language of Southeast Asia. Janua linguarum, 123. The Hague: Mouton.
  • Lyman, T. A. (1970). English/Meo pocket dictionary. Bangkok, Thailand: German Cultural Institute, Goethe-Institute.
  • Purnell, H. C. (1965). Phonology of a Yao dialect spoken in the province of Chiengrai, Thailand. Hartford studies in linguistics, no. 15.
  • Smalley, W. A., Vang, C. K., & Yang, G. Y. (1990). Mother of writing: the origin and development of a Hmong messianic script. Chicago: University of Chicago Press. ISBN 0226762866
  • Smith, P. (1995). Mien-English everyday language dictionary = Mienh in-wuonh dimv nzangc sou. Visalia, CA: [s.n.].

References

  1. ^ "On the Thai evidence for Austro-Tai" (PDF), in Selected Papers on Comparative Tai Studies, ed. R.J. Bickner et al., pp. 117-164. Center for South and Southeast Asian studies, the University of Michigan.
  2. ^ Goddard, Cliff; The Languages of East and Southeast Asia: An Introduction; p. 36. ISBN 0199248605
  3. ^ Goddard, The Languages of East and Southeast Asia; p. 121
  4. ^ Hmong-Mien Language Family Tree on Ethnologue

 
 
Learn More
Yao (member of a people)
Hmong (member of a people)
Hunan (province, China)

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Dictionary. The American Heritage® Dictionary of the English Language, Fourth Edition Copyright © 2007, 2000 by Houghton Mifflin Company. Updated in 2009. Published by Houghton Mifflin Company. All rights reserved.  Read more
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Wikipedia. This article is licensed under the Creative Commons Attribution/Share-Alike License. It uses material from the Wikipedia article "Hmong-Mien languages" Read more