Social:Ache Yi language
From HandWiki
Short description: Sino-Tibetan language spoken in China
Ache | |
---|---|
Native to | China |
Ethnicity | Yi |
Native speakers | 35,000 (2003)[1] |
Sino-Tibetan
| |
Language codes | |
ISO 639-3 | yif |
Glottolog | ache1244 [2] |
Ache (Chinese: 阿车) is a Loloish language spoken by the Yi people of south-central Yunnan, China. Ethnologue lists Azhe as an alternate name.
Demographics
Ache is spoken in Shuangbai County (pop. 23,000), Yimen County (pop. 11,100),[3] Eshan County, and Lufeng County. Yunnan (1955) reports that their autonym in Xinping County is nei33 su33 pʰɯ21.[4]
Classification
Ethnologue classifies Ache as a Southeastern Loloish language, and lists 35,000 speakers as of 2003. Ache has not been analyzed in classifications of Southeastern Loloish by Pelkey (2011) and Lama (2012), and hence remains unclassified within the Loloish branch.
References
- ↑ Ache at Ethnologue (18th ed., 2015)
- ↑ Hammarström, Harald; Forkel, Robert; Haspelmath, Martin, eds (2017). "Ache". Glottolog 3.0. Jena, Germany: Max Planck Institute for the Science of Human History. http://glottolog.org/resource/languoid/id/ache1244.
- ↑ "China". http://asiaharvest.org/index.php/people-group-profiles/china/.
- ↑ 雲南省民族事務委員會研究室印 (1955) (in zh). p. 40. http://www.doc88.com/p-97281176367.html.
- Lama, Ziwo Qiu-Fuyuan (2012). Subgrouping of Nisoic (Yi) Languages: A Study from the Perspectives of Shared Innovation and Phylogenetic Estimation (PhD thesis). University of Texas at Arlington. hdl:10106/11161.
- Pelkey, Jamin (2011). Dialectology as Dialectic: Interpreting Phula Variation. Berlin: De Gruyter Mouton.