Taloid is a cluster of languages in the Lisoish branch of LoloâÂÂBurmese.
Languages
Yang, et al. (2017) lists the following languages as belonging to the Taloid cluster of languages, whose speakers are descendants of soldiers sent by the Nanzhao Kingdom from the Dali region to be stationed in northwestern Yunnan. Taloid languages are most closely related to Lalo, Lolopo, and Lipo, all of which share the lexical innovation aùto<sup>L</sup> for 'fire'. They are spoken primarily in Yongsheng County and Heqing County. Popei 泼佩 is spoken in Huaping County, while Gomotage is spoken in Eryuan County.
Andy Castro, et al. (2010) have reported the discovery of 5 languages in Heqing County, Yunnan that are most closely related to Talu (ä»ÂçÂÂè¯Â) of Yongsheng County. Autonyms are from Castro (2010:25). Sonaga is the most divergent, while the other four languages comprise a core subclade.
- Kua-nsi ('; è·¨æÂ©æÂ¯è¯Â): 5,000+ speakers
- Kuamasi ('; è·¨çÂÂæÂ¯è¯Â)
- Laizisi ('; è±åÂ
¹æÂ¯è¯Â)
- Zibusi ('; Ã¥ÂÂéÂÂæÂ¯è¯Â)
- Sonaga ('; éÂÂÃ¥ÂÂ
Ã¥ÂÂè¯Â): 2,000+ speakers
Gomotage ('; also known as ' or Emaorou ä¿Âæ¯ÂæÂÂ) of Eryuan County is also probably related to Kua-nsi (Yang 2010:7).
Other languages that may belong to the Taloid cluster include:
- Awu, Northern é¿ä¹Â(Ã¥ÂÂ): 3,000 speakers in Peiyuan å¹åÂ
ÂæÂÂ, Shuiping æ°´åªæÂÂ, and Yongle æ°¸ä¹ÂæÂ Villages of Da'an Township 大å®Âå½ÂæÂÂ纳西æÂÂ乡, Yongsheng County
- Liude Ã¥Â
Âå¾Â: 500 speakers in 3 villages of Liude Township Ã¥Â
Â德乡, Yongsheng County.
- Liwu éÂÂä¹Â: 4,000 speakers in Yongsheng County, in Liang'e è¯峨 and Jifu Ã¥ÂÂ禠Villages of Xinghu Township æÂÂæ¹ÂæÂÂ
- Tazhi: spoken by a few hundred people in Puwei Township æÂ®å¨ÂéÂÂ, northern Miyi County ç±³æÂÂå¿, Sichuan. The Tazhi claim they came from northern Yunnan centuries ago. It is moribund or extinct, and is perhaps related to Talu, Tagu, or other languages of Yongsheng County.
- Ta'er å¡Âå° of Ninglang County, spoken by about 1,000 people
Innovations
Some Taloid lexical innovations are:
- head hair (头åÂÂ) > fur (æ¯Â) + hair (头åÂÂ)
- 'sky' > myòdiùmoó
- 'mouth' > kðaòbiò
Taloid phonological innovations are:
- *a > u
- *ak > añ
- *(-)rwe > ua
- *(-)r/way > ua
References