Lalo (; Western Yi) is a Loloish language cluster spoken in western Yunnan, China by 300,000 speakers. Speakers are officially part of the Yi nationality, and Chinese linguists refer to it as "Western Yi" due to its distribution in western Yunnan. Lalo speakers are mostly located in southern Dali Prefecture, especially Weishan County, considered the traditional homeland of the Lalo. Historically, this area is the home of the Meng clan, who ruled the Nanzhao Kingdom (737âÂÂ902 CE). Many speakers of Core Lalo dialects claim to be descendants of the Meng clan.
Names
Many Lalo are referred to by the exonym Menghua (èÂÂÃ¥ÂÂ), a name used during the Yuan Dynasty to refer to an area comprising modern-day Weishan County and Nanjian County (Yang 2010:12). They are also referred to as Tujia (Ã¥ÂÂå®¶) people (Yunnan 1956:14-15).
David Bradley (2007) refers to the Lalo language cluster, which includes the Samatu language of Zhenkang County and Yongde County, as Laloid.
Demographics
Cathryn Yang (2010) gives the following demographic information for various Lalo languages. Combined, speakers of Lalo languages number fewer than 300,000 people.
- Central Lalo: 213,000 speakers across west-central Yunnan in Weishan County, Nanjian County, Jingdong County, and several others
- West Lalo: 44,000 speakers Yongping County, Yangbi County, and Longyang County
- East Lalo: 15,000 speakers in Dali County
- Yangliu: 7,000 speakers in Yangliu, Longyang District, Baoshan Prefecture
- Eka: 3,000 speakers in Yijiacun, Heliu, Shuangjiang County, Lincang Prefecture
- Mangdi: 3,000 speakers in Mangdi, Hepai, Gengma County, Lincang Prefecture; also in Cangyuan County
- Xuzhang: 2,000 speakers in Xuzhang, Wafang, Longyang District, Baoshan Prefecture
Wang & Zhao (2013), citing Chen, et al. (1985), divide Western Yi (å½Âè¯Â西é¨æÂ¹è¨Â) into two dialects, namely Dongshan and Xishan. In Lincang Prefecture, Western Yi speakers number approximately 30,000 people and have the autonyms ' and '.
- Dongshan ä¸Âå±±: spoken in Weishan (eastern part), Dali, Midu (in Dajiaban 大ç²æÂ¿ and Xiaojiaban å°Âç²æÂ¿), Yongping, Baoshan counties
- Xishan 西山: spoken in Weishan (western part), Dali, Yun, Changning, Lincang, Shuangjiang, Midu, Jingdong, Jinggu counties
In Jianxing Township 建åÂ
´ä¹¡, Xinping County, Yunnan, Lalu èÂ
Âé² is spoken in the two administrative villages of Malutang 马鹿塠and Mowei 磨å³ by about 3,000 people (Wang 2011:11,20).
- Malutang 马鹿塠(1,552 Lalu people): in the 11 villages of Goutoupo çÂÂ头å¡, Gaoyingzhai é«Âé´寨, Cizhujing åº竹è¦, Upper Mazongshan ä¸Â马å®Âå±±, Lower Mazongshan ä¸Â马å®Âå±±, Daliqi 大åÂÂæ°Â, Yuwuxiang çÂÂæÂ¦ä¹¡, Upper Mowei ä¸Â磨å³, Lower Mowei ä¸Â磨å³, Upper Yunpan ä¸ÂäºÂçÂÂ, Lower Yunpan ä¸ÂäºÂçÂÂ
- Mowei 磨å³ (1,460 Lalu people): in the 6 villages of Malu Dazu 马鹿大ç»Â, Lalu Xiaozhai èÂ
Âé²Âå°Â寨, Laojing èÂÂè¦, Xinzhai æÂ°å¯¨, Tianfang ç°æÂ¿, and Meizijing æ¢Â
Ã¥ÂÂè¦.
Lalu èÂ
Âé² (exonyms: Xiangtang é¦Âå  and Luoluo ç½Âç½Â) is also spoken in Sipsongpanna, including in Xiangmeng 象æÂÂ乡, Yiwu æÂÂæÂ¦ä¹¡, Mengpeng Ã¥ÂÂæÂ§éÂÂ, and Jinghong æÂ¯æ´ªå¸ townships.
Yunnan (1979) mentions the Datou 达头 of Pu'er and Simao (population: 254 as of 1960) as having traditions and festivals similar to those of the Yi people of Weishan County, who are mostly Lalo speakers.
The Aciga é¿次å of Lancang County reside in Yakou Township éÂÂ
å£乡 and Nanxian Township Ã¥ÂÂç°乡 (now Nuozhadu Town 糯æÂÂ渡éÂÂ). They numbered 50 as of 1960. 100 years ago, they had migrated from Niujian Mountain çÂÂè©山, Zhenyue County éÂÂè¶Âå¿ (now renamed as Mengla County), and had spoken a different language that is now extinct. They now speak Chinese and "Yi" (presumably Lalo, as the Yi dialects of Lancang are mostly Lalo). Aciga is an exonym, as the Aciga do not have an autonym.
Subdivisions
Lama (2012) splits Laluba into three dialects.
Laluba
- Misaba
- (branch)
- Laloba
- Laluba (')
A recent dialectological survey by Cathryn Yang (2010) shows that the Lalo cluster comprises at least 7 closely related languages. Three of these (Eastern, Western, and Central) constitute the Core Lalo group and are located in the traditional Lalo homeland of southern Dali Prefecture. There are also four peripheral languages, Mangdi, Eka, Yangliu, and Xuzhang, whose ancestors migrated out of the Lalo homeland at different times.
All Lalo languages show a reflex of the Proto-Lalo autonym *la<sup>2</sup>loà<sup>H</sup>paà<sup>L</sup>; i.e. the name that the Proto-Lalo called themselves are still preserved in the various modern Lalo languages. Eka speakersâ autonym is now ', but elderly speakers report that their more archaic autonym is ' (Yang 2010).
Yang's (2010:209) phylogenetic tree of Lalo is as follows.
- Proto-Lalo
- Eka
- Mangdi èÂÂåºÂ
- Yangliu æÂ¨æÂ³
- Greater Lalo
- Xuzhang å¾ÂæÂÂ
- Core Lalo
- Eastern
- Taoshu æ¡Âæ Â
- Core Eastern
- Central-Western
- Central
- East Mountain
- Core Central
- Western
- Yilu ä¹Âè·¯
- Core Western
Alu may also be a peripheral Lalo language, but this is uncertain due to limited data.
Other languages that may be Lalo include:
Phonology
Consonants
- are heard as alveolo-palatal before front vowels .
- The glottal fricative is mainly always nasalized as , and vowels following are also nasalized.
- Approximant sounds are in complementary distribution. is before back vowels , and is before front vowels .
- is always heard as labio-dental before front vowels . In the Western dialects, is phonemically distinct.
- is always heard as a voiced glottal sound before vowels . In the Western dialects, is heard as before , before , and before vowels .
- Nasals are heard as palatal before a close vowel .
- Nasals can have syllabic allophones of when preceding other consonants.
- The glottalized is heard as a glottalized retroflex sound before a central close vowel.
- Syllables with no initial consonant, always phonetically begin with a glottal stop .
Vowels
There is phonetic distinction between tight-throat vowels and lax-throat (plain) vowels.
- Close vowels are realized as mid tight-throat sounds and the back vowel is realized as tight , within syllables of harsh phonation. Vowels do not occur in syllables with harsh phonation.
- The close rounded vowel mainly occurs after velar initials.
- The close central vowel is heard as rounded when after bilabial consonants , as syllabic after alveolar sounds and as a syllabic retroflex after retroflex sounds . also only occurs after bilabial, retroflex and velar initial consonants and never after alveolar stops, labio-dental or labio-velar initials.
- Mid-central vowel is realized as a syllabic labiodental fricative , when after labio-dental fricatives. never occurs after labial consonants or alveolar affricates or fricatives.
- In citation form, front vowels are heard as diphthongs with an offglide as .
- Close central vowel is heard as an apical syllabic sound after alveolar affricates and fricatives and as after retroflex affricates and fricatives.
- Open back vowel is typically realized as a central and is then raised after retroflex sounds as a mid sound .
- A syllabic fricative is contrastive with back vowels . It only occurs after labio-dental consonants .
Tones
The following are the tones in Central and Western Lalo:
See also
- (Wiktionary)
- (Wiktionary)
Further reading
- Yang, Cathryn. (2019). CLDF dataset derived from Yang's "Lalo Regional Varieties" from 2011 [Data set]. Zenodo.
References