The Then language (also known as Yánghuáng 佯åÂÂ诠in Chinese; alternate spellings: Tûen and Ten) is a KamâÂÂSui language spoken in Pingtang and Huishui counties, southern Guizhou. It is spoken by the Yanghuang 佯å people, many of whom are officially classified as Maonan by the Chinese government.
Names
The Yanghuang people called themselves ', except for the Yanghuang of Huishui County, Xiayou District , and Xiguan Shangmo , who called themselves ' (Bo 1997). According to the Guizhou Ethnic Gazetteer (2002:846), their autonyms include ' () and ' ().
"Yanghuang" was mentioned in a Ming Dynasty record, the Dushi Fangyu Jiyao (). According to it, "the Man people of Sizhou are Yanghuang, Gelao, Muyao (Mulao), and Miaozhi (Miaozi). ()
Phonology
Yanghuang of Kapu Township (å¡è²乡) has 71 consonants total, including those with secondary articulations. There are a total of 71 rhymes, 9 vowels, and 8 codas (Bo 1997).
Dialects
Bo (1997:138-139) lists three main dialects of Yanghuang.
- Hedong æ²³ä¸Â: spoken by more than 15,000 people, 10,000 of whom are daily users of the language. It is spoken east of the Pingtang River å¹³å¡Âæ²³ in the townships of Kapu å¡è²乡 and Zhemi èÂÂ
å¯ÂéÂÂ, in Pingtang County, as well as in parts of western Dushan County, including Balang village Ã¥ÂÂ浪寨. Their autonym is ai1 raÃÂu1. This is the representative dialect studied most by Bo (1997).
- Hexi 河西: active speaker population of about 2,000 out of a population of about 10,000 people. It is spoken west of the Pingtang River å¹³å¡Âæ²³ in the western part of Zhemi Township èÂÂ
å¯ÂéÂÂ, Pingtang County (in the villages of Liudongba Ã¥Â
Âç¡Âå and Jiaqing ç²éÂÂ), and neighboring areas.
- Huishui æÂ æ°´: spoken only by elderly people out of a population of about 2,000-3,000 people. Middle-aged and younger people do not speak the Huishui variety of Then anymore. It is spoken in Huishui County. It is spoken around the village of Yaoshao å§Âå¨, but not in Yaoshao å§Âå¨ itself. This is the most divergent dialect, and is most heavily influenced by Chinese. Their autonym ai1 thÃÂn2. Their ancestors had reportedly migrated from Liudongba Ã¥Â
Âç¡Âå during the 1800s.
Below are some lexical comparisons of Yanghuang dialects from Bo (1997:139-146).
References
- Bo, Wenze [èÂÂæÂÂæ³½]. 1997. Yanghuangyu yanjiu (A Study of Yanghuang [Then]) [佯åÂÂè¯Âç Âç©¶]. Beijing: Minzu University Press [ä¸Â央æ°ÂæÂÂ大å¦åºçÂÂ社].
External links