The Lakkia language (), also spelled Lakkja after its IPA transcription, is a KraâÂÂDai language spoken in Jinxiu Yao Autonomous County, Laibin, East-Central Guangxi, China.
Lakkia speakers are thought to have migrated from further east, possibly from the Biao-speaking areas of Northwestern Guangdong Province (L.-Thongkum 1992). Today, they live mostly in the Dayaoshan () region of Jinxiu County.
Names
Lakkia people are also known as the CháshÃÂn Yáo è¶山ç¶, meaning "Tea Mountain Yao", since they were traditionally considered by neighboring peoples to be ethnic Yao people. The name Lakkia is an autonym (self-designated name) that means "mountain people". All Lakkia dialects have 5 tones.
Classification
There is currently no consensus on the classification of Lakkia within the KraâÂÂDai family. Solnit (1988) and Hansell (1988) classify Lakkia as a sister of the KamâÂÂSui branch. Additionally, Solnit (1988) classifies Biao and Lakkia together as part of a BiaoâÂÂLakkia branch that is coordinate to Kam-Sui. However, L.-Thongkum (1992) considers Lakkia to be most closely related to the Tai branch, based on the large number of shared lexical items.
Norquest (2021) proposes a BiaoâÂÂLakkja branch as the first branch to split off from Kra-Dai.
Dialects
Dialects of Lakkia include (L.-Thongkum 1992):
- Jintian éÂÂç°
- Liula Ã¥Â
ÂæÂÂ
- Jinxiu éÂÂç§Â
- Lingzu å²Âç¥Â
- Changdong é¿å³Â
The Lingzu dialect still preserves /kl-/ initial clusters, which corresponds to /kj-/ in most other dialects (L.-Thongkum 1992). Additionally, Changdong é¿洠and Jintian éÂÂç° tone (51) corresponds to Jinxiu éÂÂç§ tone (231). Also, L.-Thongkum (1992) reports that Jintian éÂÂç° is a less conservative dialect.
Classification of Lakkia dialects by Norquest (2021):
- Lakkja
- Western
- Jintian éÂÂç°
- Eastern
- Liula Ã¥Â
ÂæÂÂ
- Jinxiu éÂÂç§Â
Distribution
Lakkia is spoken in the following locations.
- Jinxiu Township éÂÂç§ÂéÂÂ: Jinxiu éÂÂç§Â, Baisha ç½æ²Â, Liula Ã¥Â
ÂæÂÂ, Xidi æÂÂå°, Changtan é¿滩, Chang'er é¿äºÂ, Zhaibao 寨ä¿Â, Yangliu æÂ¨æÂ³, Liuduan Ã¥Â
Â段, Jiangjun å°ÂÃ¥ÂÂ, Sanpian ä¸ÂçÂÂ, Tiancun ç°æÂÂ, Liucun Ã¥ÂÂæÂÂ, Shecun 社æÂÂ, Mengcun Ã¥ÂÂæÂÂ, Meicun ç¾ÂæÂÂ, Jincun éÂÂæÂÂ, Jintian éÂÂç°, Luomeng ç½Â梦
- Changdong Township é¿æ´Â乡: Changdong é¿æ´Â, Gufang å¤æÂ¾, Pingdao å¹³éÂÂ, Daojiang éÂÂæ±Â, Dishui æ»´æ°´, Rongdong 容æ´Â
- Sanjiao Township ä¸Âè§Â乡: Liuding Ã¥Â
Âå®Â
- Zhongliang Township å¿ è¯乡: Lingzu å²Âç¥Â, Bale å·´åÂÂ
- Luoxiang Township ç½Âé¦Â乡: Pingzhu 平竹
Phonology
Consonants
Vowels
- Other sounds and , also occur in Chinese loanwords as a result of being introduced from Chinese.
Historical phonology
Lakkia is notable for preserving many prefixes that have been lost in most other Kra-Dai languages, including prefixes (such as *k.-) in archaic Chinese loanwords that are crucial for the reconstruction of Old Chinese.
Lexical isoglosses
Some BiaoâÂÂLakkja lexical isoglosses as proposed by Norquest (2021):
See also
Notes
References
Further reading
- Hansell, Mark. 1988. The Relation of Be to Tai: Evidence from Tones and Initials. In Comparative Kadai: Linguistic studies beyond Tai. Edited by Jerold A. Edmondson and David B. Solnit. Summer Institute of Linguistics and The University of Texas at Arlington Publications in Linguistics No. 86: 239âÂÂ288.
- Haudricourt, André-G. 1967. "La langue lakkia." Bulletin de l'ÃÂcole Française d'Extrême-Orient 57 / Bulletin de la Société Linguistique de de Paris 62:1:165-182.
- Lan Qingyuan èÂÂåºÂÃ¥Â
Â. 2011. Lajiayu yanjiu æÂÂçÂÂè¯Âç Âç©¶. Nanning: Guangxi Normal University Press 广西å¸ÂèÂÂ大å¦åºçÂÂ社.
- Solnit, David B. 1988. "The position of Lakkia within Kadai." In Comparative Kadai: Linguistic studies beyond Tai, Jerold A. Edmondson and David B. Solnit (eds.). pages 219âÂÂ238. Summer Institute of Linguistics Publications in Linguistics 86. Dallas: Summer Institute of Linguistics and the University of Texas at Arlington.
- Su Defu [èÂÂå¾·å¯Â], et al. 1992. Chashan Yao yanjiu wenji è¶山ç¤ç Âç©¶æÂÂéÂÂ. Beijing: Minzu University: ä¸Â央æ°ÂæÂÂå¦é¢åºçÂÂ社.
External links