The Hmu language (hveb Hmub), also known as Qiandong Miao (é»Âä¸Â, Eastern Guizhou Miao), Central Miao (ä¸Âé¨èÂÂè¯Â), East Hmongic (Ratliff 2010), or (somewhat ambiguously) Black Miao, is a dialect cluster of Hmongic languages of China. The best studied dialect is that of YÃÂnghÃÂo (Ã¥Â
ȏ¿) village, Taijiang County, Guizhou Province.
Qanu (å¯åª), a Hmu variety, had 11,450 speakers as of 2000, and is spoken just south of Kaili City, Guizhou. The Qanu are ethnoculturally distinct from the other Hmu.
Names
Autonyms include ' in Kaili, ' in Jinping County, ' in Tianzhu County, ' in Huangping County, ' in some parts of Qiandongnan (Miaoyu Jianzhi èÂÂè¯Âç®Âå¿ 1985), and ' in Rongshui Miao Autonomous County, Guangxi. Ná-Meo, spoken by the Mieu people of Cao Minh Commune, Tràng ÃÂá»Ânh District, Lạng Sán Province, Vietnam, may be closely related.
Subdivisions and distribution
Wang (1985)
Wang Fushi (1985) groups the Qiandong Miao languages as follows.
- Northern: 1,000,000 speakers in Kaili, Majiang, Nandan, Longlin, Leishan, Taijiang, Huangping, Jianhe, Zhenyuan, Sansui, Shibing, Sandu, Fuquan, Pingba, Zhenning, Xingren, Zhenfeng, Anlong, Wangmo, etc.
- Eastern: 250,000 speakers in Jinping, Liping, Jianhe, Jingzhou, Tongdao, Huitong, etc.
- Southern: 350,000 speakers in Rongjiang, Congjiang, Nandan, Sandu, Rongshui, Sanjiang, etc. Includes Na Meo of northern Vietnam.
- Western (Raojia): 15,000 speakers in Heba of Majiang, Mianluo of Duyun, Sandu, Rongjiang, parts of Nandan
Wu (2009)
Wu Zhengbiao (2009) divides Hmu into seven different dialects. Past classifications usually included only three or four dialects. For example, Li Jinping & Li Tianyi (2012), based on past classifications, divide Hmu into the three dialects of Northern, Southern, and Eastern. Datapoint locations of representative dialects are from Li Yunbing (2000).
- Eastern (Representative dialect: Sanjiang township ä¸Âæ±Â乡, Jinping County, Guizhou)
- Jinping County, Guizhou (in Ouli å¶éÂÂ寨 of Ouli Township å¶éÂÂ乡, etc.)
- Hekou æ²³å£ dialect (10,000+ speakers): spoken in Hekou æ²³å£乡, Wenniu æÂÂçÂÂ乡, and Zhanghua å½°åÂÂ乡 townships
- Ouli å¶é dialect (20,000+ speakers): spoken in Pinglve å¹³ç¥乡, Ouli å¶éÂÂ乡, Zhaizao 寨æÂ©ä¹¡, Jiaosan çÂÂä¸Â乡, Maoping èÂÂ
åª乡, Guazhi æÂÂ治乡, Pingjin å¹³éÂÂ乡, and Suijiang 稳æ±Â乡, Loujiang å¨Âæ±Â乡, and Tongpo éÂÂå¡乡 townships
- Yuhe è£Âæ²³ dialect (about 3,000 speakers): spoken in Yuhe è£Â河乡, Xinmin æÂ°æ°Â乡, and Guben åºæÂ¬ä¹¡ townships
- Sanqiao ä¸Âé¹è¯Â
- Jingzhou County, Hunan (in Caidiwan èÂÂå°湾, etc.)
- Huitong County, Hunan
- Northern (Representative dialect: Yanghao village Ã¥Â
ȏ¿æÂÂ, Guading town æÂÂä¸ÂéÂÂ, Kaili city, Guizhou)
- Kaili (in Yanghao Ã¥Â
ȏ¿ of Guading Township æÂÂä¸ÂéÂÂ, etc.)
- Leishan County
- Taijiang County
- Shibing County
- Gedong é©ä¸Âé in Jianhe County
- Huangping County
- Fuquan County
- Weng'an County
- Xingren County
- parts of Anlong County
- Yangwu æÂ¨æÂ¦ä¹¡, Longquan é¾Âæ³ÂéÂÂ, Paidiao æÂÂè°ÂéÂÂ, Xingren Ã¥Â
´ä»Âé townships, and also parts of Yahui éÂÂ
ç°乡 in Danzhai County
- Duyun
- Bagu Township Ã¥ÂÂåºéÂÂ: Jijia 鸡贾, Yanglie ç¾ÂÃ¥ÂÂ, Baduo æÂÂæÂµ, Metao ä¹Âé¶
- Wangsi Township çÂÂå¸éÂÂ: Taohua æ¡Âè±, Xinchang æÂ°åº, Wulu ä¹Âè·¯, Wuzhai äºÂ寨
- Pu'an Township æÂ®å®ÂéÂÂ: Zongjiang æÂ»å¥ÂæÂÂ, Guanghua Ã¥Â
ÂÃ¥ÂÂæÂÂ, Xingfu 幸ç¦ÂæÂÂ
- Northeastern
- Zhaitou 寨头æÂÂ, Baye å·´å¶æÂÂ, and Liangshan è¯ä¸ÂæÂ villages of Sansui County
- Gaoyongzhai é«ÂéÂÂ寨, Guanme Township è§Âä¹Â乡, Jianhe County
- Western (including Raojia; Representative dialect: Baixing village ç½åÂ
´æÂÂ, Heba township æ²³åÂÂ乡, Majiang County, Guizhou)
- Heba Village æ²³åÂÂæÂÂ, Longshan Township é¾Â山乡, Majiang County
- Raohe Village ç»Âæ²³æÂÂ, Luobang Township æ´Âé¦乡, Duyun (also in Pingzhai åª寨 of Wu'ai Village äºÂç±æÂÂ)
- Southern (Representative dialect: Yangpai village ç¾ÂæÂÂæÂÂ, Yangwu township æÂ¾Â¦ä¹¡, Danzhai County, Guizhou)
- Sandu County: Lalan æÂÂæÂ½ä¹¡ (in Paishaozhai æÂÂç§寨, etc.), Jiaoli 交梨乡, Dujiang 齿±Âé townships; Jialan ç²æÂ½, Yangwu ç¾Âå´, Dediao çÂÂÃ¥ÂÂ, Hongguang 红åÂ
Â, and Wuyun å·«å villages of Pu'an Township æÂ®å®ÂéÂÂ
- Danzhai County: Paidao æÂÂå² and Paimo æÂÂè« of Yahui Township éÂÂ
ç°乡
- Southeastern 1 (Representative dialect: Datu village 大åÂÂæÂÂ, Jiuqian township ä¹Âè¿Â乡, Libo County, Guizhou)
- Datu 大åÂÂæÂÂ, Shuiwei æ°´ç»´æÂÂ, and Jialiao ç²æÂÂæÂ villages in Jiarong ä½³è£é Township, Libo County
- parts of Jiajiu å 鸠乡 Township, Congjiang County
- Xunle Township 馴ä¹ÂèÂÂæÂÂ乡, Huanjiang County
- Southeastern 2 (Representative dialect: Zhenmin æÂ¯æ°Â, Gongdong township æÂ±æ´Â乡, Rongshui County, Guangxi)
- Bingmei ä¸Â妹éÂÂ, Tingdong Ã¥ÂÂæ´Â乡, Cuili ç¿ éÂÂ乡, and much of the Yueliangshan æÂÂ亮山 area in Congjiang County
- Rongjiang County
- Rongshui County (in Gunqinzhai æ»Âç´寨 of Dongtou Township æ´Â头乡, Yaogao å°§åÂÂ, etc.)
- Sanjiang County
- Northern Vietnam (Lang Son, Cao Bang, Bac Kan, and Tuyen Quang provinces): Na Meo language
Hsiu (2018)
Andrew Hsiu (2018) proposes the following classification of the Qiandong Miao languages based on his 2015 computational analysis, classifying Ná-Meo as a Southern Qiandong Miao dialect:
Classification
Hmu has been recognized as a branch of Hmongic since the 1950s. Wang (1985) recognized three varieties. Matisoff (2001) treated these as distinct languages, which is reflected in Ethnologue. Lee (2000) added a fourth variety, Western Hmu (10,000 speakers), among the Yao, and Matisoff (2006) lists seven (Daigong, Kaili [N], Lushan, Taijiang [N], Zhenfeng [N], Phö, Rongjiang [S]).
Writing
Northern Qiandong Miao, also known as Central Miao and as Eastern Guizhou Hmu (é»Âä¸ÂæÂ¹è¨ Qián-DÃ
Âng fÃÂngyán), was chosen as the standard for Hmu-language textbooks in China, based on the pronunciation of YÃÂnghÃÂo (Ã¥Â
ȏ¿) village.
Alphabet
The Hmu alphabet is based on Pinyin and consists of 28 letters (all the 26 letters of the English alphabet with the addition of Gh and Kh).
Digraphs other than gh and kh and Trigraphs are not considered single letters and are considered combinations of letters.
The following list shows the 28 letters of the Hmu alphabet in their uppercase and lowercase forms along with their name and pronunciation in the IPA:
- A a (called a): /a/
- B b (ba): /p/
- C c (ca): /æð/
- D d (da): /t/ ~ /tò/
- E e (e): /ÃÂ/, /e/
- F f (fa): /f/
- G g (ga): /k/
- Gh gh (gha): /q/
- H h (ha): /h/
- I i (i): /i/
- J j (je): /è/
- K k (ka): /kð/
- Kh kh (kha): /qð/
- L l (la): /l/, /ÃÂ/
- M m (ma): /m/
- N n (na): /n/, /ò/
- O o (o): /o/
- P p (pa): /pð/
- Q q (qe): /èð/
- R r (ra): /z/
- S s (sa): /ÃÂ/
- T t (ta): /tð/
- U u (u): /u/
- V v (va): /ã/
- W w (wa): /v/
- X x (xe): /ÃÂ/
- Y y (ye): /ÃÂ/, /j/
- Z z (za): /æ/
Digraphs:
- Ai ai: /ÃÂ/
- Au au: /ÃÂu/
- Dl dl: /ì/, /ìò/
- Ei ei: /ei/
- En en: /en/, /in/
- Eu eu: /ÃÂu/
- Hf hf: /fð/
- Hl hl: /ìð/, /ìðò/
- Hm hm: /mð/
- Hn hn: /nð/ ~ /òÃÂð/
- Hs hs: /sð/
- Hv hv: /xð/
- Hx hx: /ÃÂð/
- Ia ia: /iÃÂ/
- Ie ie: /ie/
- Io io: /io/
- Iu iu: /iu/
- Ng ng: /Ã
Â/
- Ua ua: /uÃÂ/
- Ue ue: /uÃÂ/
Trigraphs:
- Ang ang: /ÃÂÃ
Â/
- Iau iau: /iÃÂu/
- Ieu: /iÃÂ/
- Ong ong: /oÃ
Â/
- Uei uei: /uei/
Tones are marked with final consonant letters:
- Mid tone: b
- [çÃÂ¥/-äè]: d
- [çé/-äéè/èéç]: f
- [Ã¥ç/çÃÂ¥]: k
- [-äé/èé/ç]: l
- [-äéç/ÃÂ¥/-äè]: s
- [æ/æÃÂ¥]: t
- [ÃÂ¥~æÃÂ¥/æè/Ã¥ç]: x
- Neutral tone / no tone: unmarked
There are no diacritics or accents in the Hmu alphabet, and only the letters of the ISO basic Latin alphabet are used.
Phonology
The phonemic inventory and alphabetic transcription are as follows.
is not distinct from a zero initial (that is, if we accept as a consonant, there are no vowel-initial words in Hmu), and only occurs with tones 1, 3, 5, 7.
The aspirated nasals and fricatives do not exist in Southern or Eastern Hmu; cognates words use their unaspirated homologues. Further, in Eastern Hmu, di, ti merge into j, q; c merges into x; r (Northern ) merges into ni; and v is pronounced . In Southern Hmu, words cognate with hni (and some with ni) are pronounced ; those with r are ; and some words exchange s and x.
Ai does not occur after palatalized consonants. after palatalized consonants is spelled in.
Additional diphthongs occur in Chinese loans.
All dialects have eight tones. There is no sandhi. In the chart below, Northern Hmu is represented by Yanghao village (Kaili City), Eastern Hmu by å¶é village (Jinping County), and Southern Hmu by æÂ¯æ° (Rongshui County).
The lowest tonesâÂÂNorthern tones 4 and 6, Eastern tones 3 and 8, and Southern tone 6âÂÂare said to make the preceding consonant murmured (breathy voiced), presumably meaning that these are murmured tones as in other Hmongic languages. They are marked with in the chart.
References and notes
Further reading
External links