Lu, or Luren (å¢人), is an extinct Sino-Tibetan language of Guizhou, China. The Luren language may have been extinct since the 1960s.
Luren is closely related to Caijia and Longjia. However, the classification of these languages within Sino-Tibetan is uncertain. Zhengzhang (2010) suggests that Caijia and Bai form a Macro-Bai branch, while Sagart argues that Caijia and Waxiang represent an early split from Old Chinese.
In Dafang County, Guizhou, the Lu people are located in Huangni é»Â泥乡, Dashui 大水乡, Gamu Ã¥ÂÂæÂ¨ä¹¡, and Shachang 纱åÂÂé townships (Dafang County Gazetteer 1996:157).
See also
References
Further reading
- Guizhou provincial ethnic classification commission, linguistic division [è´µå·ÂçÂÂæ°ÂæÂÂè¯Âå«工ä½ÂéÂÂè¯Âè¨Âç»Â]. 1982. The language of the Caijia [Caijia de yuyan è¡家çÂÂè¯Âè¨Â]. m.s.
- Guizhou provincial ethnic classification commission [è´µå·ÂçÂÂæ°ÂæÂÂè¯Âå«工ä½ÂéÂÂ]. 1984. Report on ethnic classification issues of the Nanlong people (Nanjing-Longjia) [Ã¥ÂÂé¾Â人ï¼ÂÃ¥ÂÂ京-é¾Âå®¶ï¼ÂæÂÂå«é®é¢Âè°ÂæÂ¥æÂ¥åÂÂ]. m.s.
- Hsiu, Andrew. 2013. "New endangered Tibeto-Burman languages of southwestern China: Mondzish, Longjia, Pherbu, and others". Presentation given at ICSTLL 46, Dartmouth College.
- Zhao Weifeng [èµµå«峰]. 2011. History of the Bai people of Guizhou [è´µå·Âç½æÂÂå²çÂÂ¥]. Yinchuan, China: Ningxia People's Press [å®Âå¤Â人æ°ÂåºçÂÂ社].
- Hölzl, Andreas. 2021. The Lu(ren) language of Guizhou, China. Paper presented at 9th International Contrastive Linguistics Conference (ICLC 9), Santa Margherita-Portofino. (Online Meeting.)