Kiranti languages
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
| Kiranti | |
|---|---|
| Geographic distribution: |
Nepal |
| Genetic classification: |
Sino-Tibetan (Tibeto-Burman) Mahakiranti Kiranti |
| Subdivisions: |
Eastern
Central
Western
|
The Kiranti languages (also called Bahing-Vayu in the terminology of Benedict (1972)) are a major family of Tibeto-Burman languages spoken in Nepal by the Kirat people.
[edit] Classification
The Kiranti languages are frequently posited to form part of a Maha-Kiranti family.
Starostin's "Sino-Kiranti" hypothesis posits that Kiranti is quite divergent, outside of Tibeto-Burman, so that the Sino-Tibetan family would be divided into Tibeto-Burman and Sino-Kiranti, or into Tibeto-Burman, Sinitic, and Kiranti. (He did not consider other Maha-Kiranti languages.)
[edit] The languages
There are about two dozen Kiranti languages. The better known are Bahing, Limbu, Vayu, and Kulung (Rai). Over all, they are:
- Limbu
- Limbu (affinities to Eastern Kiranti)
- Eastern Kiranti
- Greater Yakkha: Yakha, Belhare, Athpare, Chintang, Chulung
- Upper Arun River: Yamphu, Lorung, Meohang
- Central Kiranti
- Western Kiranti
- Midwestern: Thulung (perhaps a primary branch of Kiranti)
- Chaurasiya: Wambule, Jerung
- Upper Dudhkosi River: Khaling, Dumi, Kohi
- Northwestern (Sunwari): Bahing, Sunwar, Wayu
[edit] References
- George van Driem (2001) Languages of the Himalayas: An Ethnolinguistic Handbook of the Greater Himalayan Region. Brill.
- Bickel, Balthasar, G. Banjade, M. Gaenszle, E. Lieven, N. P. Paudyal, & I. Purna Rai et al. (2007). Free prefix ordering in Chintang. Language, 83 (1), 43β73.
- James A. Matisoff: Handbook of Proto-Tibeto-Burman. University of California Press 2003.

