Tuyuhun (), also known as âÂÂAzha from Tibetan script, is an extinct language once spoken by the Tuyuhun of northern China about 500 AD. The existence of the Tuyuhun, and consequently their language, is first attested in the Book of Song, compiled around 488 AD.
Classification
Alexander Vovin (2015) identifies the extinct Tuyuhun language as a Para-Mongolic language, meaning that Tuyuhun is related to the Mongolic languages as a sister clade but is not directly descended from the Proto-Mongolic language. The Khitan language is also a Para-Mongolic language. Tuyuhun had previously been identified by Paul Pelliot (1921) as a Mongolic language.
Morphology
Tuyuhun suffixes:
- *-ÃÂin/*-ÃÂiñ [à ½Â
à ½²à ½Âà ¼Â] (Old Tibetan *çin) âÂÂhaving X (possessive)âÂÂ
- *-yin/*-yiñ [å¯Â
] (northern Early Middle Chinese **yirÃÂ) âÂÂgenitive-attributive suffixâÂÂ
Vocabulary
Shimunek (2017) reconstructs some Tuyuhun words as:
- âÂÂsecond person singular pronoun (ç¾)âÂÂ: *ÃÂðê [èÂÂ] (northern Early Middle Chinese **tÃ
Âðè); Vovin (2015) reconstructs *ÃÂðo, a 2nd person singular pronoun, equivalent to Mongolic ÃÂi. The correspondence between /o/ and /i/ is attested between Mongolic and Khitan, cf. Western Middle Mongolic taqiya vs. Khitan t[i].qo.a.
- âÂÂriver (å·Â)âÂÂ: *qÃÂl [à ½Âà ½¼à ½£à ¼Â] (Old Tibetan *kðol) ~ [à ½Âà ½¼à ½£à ¼Â] (Old Tibetan *kol)
- âÂÂmilitant (æÂ¦)âÂÂ: *bu [æÂÂ] (Late Middle Chinese *mbu)
- âÂÂelder brother (Ã¥Â
Â)âÂÂ: *aqañ [é¿干] (northern Early Middle Chinese **æakarÃÂ)
- âÂÂfather (ç¶)â or âÂÂgreatâÂÂ: *maÃÂa/*amaÃÂa [è«è³Â] (northern Early Middle Chinese *magãa)
- âÂÂgreatâÂÂ: *maÃÂa [à ½Âà ¼Âà ½Â] (Old Tibetan *maga < Indic)
- âÂÂemperor, kingâÂÂ: *qðaÃÂan [à ½Âà ¼Âà ½Âà ½Âà ¼Â] (Old Tibetan *kðagan) / **kðaÃÂãarà[å¯å¯Â] ~ [坿±Â] (northern Early Middle Chinese **kðaÃÂãarÃÂ)
- âÂÂwife (妻) of the khaghan (坿±Â)âÂÂ: *qðaÃÂæÃÂn [æÂªå°Â] (northern Early Middle Chinese **kðagæorÃÂ)
Vovin (2015) also reconstructs several words using Early Middle Chinese readings of transcribed Tuyuhun lexical items.
References