Azha language

{{Short description|Loloish language spoken in China}}

{{for|‘Azha, the language related to Mongolian|Tuyuhun language}}

{{Infobox language

|name=Azha

|nativename=

|states=China

|speakers=53,000

|date=2007

|ref=e18

|familycolor=Sino-Tibetan

|fam2=Tibeto-Burman

|fam3=Lolo-Burmese

|fam4=Loloish

|fam5=Southeastern

|fam6=Sani–Azha

|iso3=aza

|glotto=azha1235

|glottorefname=Azha}}

Azha ({{Langx|zh|阿扎语}}) is one of the Loloish languages spoken by the Yi people of China.

Demographics

Azha (autonym: {{IPA|a33tsa21}} or {{IPA|a55tʂa33}}) is spoken in Ganhe Township of Yanshan County, Yunnan and Dongshan and Binglie Townships of Wenshan County. Pelkey (2011) identifies the Azha 阿扎 (exonym: Pula 朴喇) of Kaiyuan, Yunnan as Phowa speakers.

Azha is spoken by the Phula people, but it is not a Phula language and is a Sani–Azha language, closely related to Sani, Axi and Azhe. Samei of Kunming may be related. Speakers are classified as Yi people by the Chinese Government.

Innovations

In Azha, the words for ‘goat’, ‘eat’, and ‘drink’ are innovative (Pelkey 2011:377). Luojiayi AzhaThe representative dialect studied in Pelkey (2011) is that of Luojiayi 倮家邑, Binglie Township 秉烈乡, Wenshan Zhuang and Miao Autonomous Prefecture. {{IPA|/mɛ33 xɛ33/}} ‘goat’, {{IPA|/la̠45/}} ‘eat’, {{IPA|/ŋɨ33/}} ‘drink’ are not derived from Proto-Ngwi *(k)-citL ‘goat’, *dza² ‘eat’, and *m-daŋ¹ ‘drink’.

References

{{Reflist}}

  • Pelkey, Jamin. 2011. Dialectology as Dialectic: Interpreting Phula Variation. Berlin: De Gruyter Mouton.

{{Languages of China}}

{{Sino-Tibetan languages}}

{{Lolo-Burmese languages}}

{{authority control}}

Category:Loloish languages

Category:Languages of Yunnan

{{SinoTibetan-lang-stub}}