Taman Language (Sino-Tibetan)
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Taman is an extinct
Sino-Tibetan language Sino-Tibetan, also cited as Trans-Himalayan in a few sources, is a family of more than 400 languages, second only to Indo-European in number of native speakers. The vast majority of these are the 1.3 billion native speakers of Chinese languages. ...
that was spoken in
Htamanthi Tamanthi, Htamanthi or Tamanthe is a village on the Chindwin River in Homalin Township in Hkamti District in the Sagaing Region of northwestern Burma. It is located near the Tamanthi Wildlife Reserve. It is near the planned multi-purpose Tamanthi ...
village in
Homalin Township Homalin Township ( my, ဟုမ္မလင်း မြို့နယ် ) is a township in Hkamti District in the Sagaing Region of Burma. The principal town is Homalin.
,
Sagaing Region Sagaing Region ( my, စစ်ကိုင်းတိုင်းဒေသကြီး, ; formerly Sagaing Division) is an administrative region of Myanmar, located in the north-western part of the country between latitude 21° 30' north and lon ...
, northern
Myanmar Myanmar, ; UK pronunciations: US pronunciations incl. . Note: Wikipedia's IPA conventions require indicating /r/ even in British English although only some British English speakers pronounce r at the end of syllables. As John C. Wells, Joh ...
. It was documented in a list of 75 words in Brown (1911). Keisuke Huziwara (2016) discovered an elderly rememberer of Taman in Htamanthi who could remember some Taman phrases as well as a short song, but was not fluent in the Taman language. However, no fluent speakers of Taman remained in the area.


Language shift

Taman speakers have since shifted to Burmese and Tai Naing (Red Shan), a Tai language spoken in northern Myanmar. Matisoff (2013:25) surmises that pressure from the formerly widespread
Kadu language Kadu or Kado is a Sino-Tibetan language of the Sal branch spoken in Sagaing Region, Myanmar. Dialects are Settaw, Mawkhwin, and Mawteik xtinct with 30,000 speakers total. Names Alternate names for Kadu listed in '' Ethnologue'' are Gadu, Ka’ ...
had caused Taman to become marginalized. The descendants of Taman speakers have since been assimilated into Shan society.


Classification

Benedict (1972) and Shafer (1974) classified Taman as part of the Luish branch of languages. Words and affixes shared exclusively between Luish and Taman are (Huziwara 2016): *negative prefix (Proto-Luish *a-, Taman ''ʔə''-) *‘put’ (Proto-Luish *péy, Taman ''pe'') *‘go, walk’ (Proto-Luish *ha, Taman ''hɔ'') *‘sun’ as a compound word that includes ‘eye’ However, Huziwara (2016) notes that despite Taman sharing some similarities with Luish, Taman cannot be securely classified within the Luish branch itself, and its place in Tibeto-Burman remains uncertain. Taman also shares various similarities with many nearby non-Luish languages, including various
Sal languages The Sal languages are a branch of Sino-Tibetan languages spoken in northeast India, parts of Bangladesh, and Burma. Alternative names ''Ethnologue'' calls the group "Jingpho–Konyak–Bodo", while Scott DeLancey (2015) refers to it as "Bodo-Ko ...
. Huziwara (2016) concludes that Taman is part of a
linkage Linkage may refer to: * ''Linkage'' (album), by J-pop singer Mami Kawada, released in 2010 *Linkage (graph theory), the maximum min-degree of any of its subgraphs *Linkage (horse), an American Thoroughbred racehorse * Linkage (hierarchical cluster ...
of Tibeto-Burman languages spanning across northeast India and northern Myanmar (i.e., comparable to Scott DeLancey's
Central Tibeto-Burman languages Central Tibeto-Burman or Central Trans-Himalayan is a proposed branch of the Sino-Tibetan language family proposed by Scott DeLancey (2015) on the basis of shared morphological evidence. DeLancey (2018)DeLancey, Scott (2018). ''Internal and exte ...
), but does not recognizably fit into any known Tibeto-Burman branch.


Phonology

Taman has the following phonemes. *Vowels: a, e, ɛ, i, ɨ, ɐ, o , ɑ u, ə *Consonants: p, ph, t, th, c
s, tʃ S-comma (majuscule: Ș, minuscule: ș) is a letter which is part of the Romanian alphabet, used to represent the sound , the voiceless postalveolar fricative (like ''sh'' in ''shoe''). History The letter was proposed in the ''Buda Lexicon' ...
k, m, n, ŋ, r, l, s (sʰ), ʃ, x, h, w (v), y


Sound changes

Below are five innovations from
Proto-Tibeto-Burman Proto-Tibeto-Burman (commonly abbreviated PTB) is the reconstructed ancestor of the Tibeto-Burman languages, that is, the Sino-Tibetan languages, except for Chinese. An initial reconstruction was produced by Paul K. Benedict and since refined by ...
(PTB) to Taman identified by Huziwara (2016). *raising of low vowels ( PTB *-a > Taman -''ɔ'') *fricativization of velar stops in word-initial positions (PTB *k- > Taman ''x''-) *loss of velar stops in word-final positions (PTB *-ak > Taman -''a'') *addition of velar stops after high vowels (PTB *-i/-u > Taman -''ek''/-''ouk'') *affrication of *gry- (PTB *gry- > Taman ''c''-)


Lexicon

Below is Brown's (1911) Taman word list as cited and re-transcribed in Huziwara (2016:19–29), and Brown's (1911) Taman list re-transcribed by Luce (1985), as cited and re-transcribed in Huziwara (2016). The Taman word for 'river' is the same as the word for 'water'.


Phrases and transcribed song

On March 2, 2015, Keisuke Huziwara discovered an 83-year-old woman in
Htamanthi Tamanthi, Htamanthi or Tamanthe is a village on the Chindwin River in Homalin Township in Hkamti District in the Sagaing Region of northwestern Burma. It is located near the Tamanthi Wildlife Reserve. It is near the planned multi-purpose Tamanthi ...
who remembered some words and phrases of the Taman language, as well as a short song. The woman was born in a village just outside Htamanthi. The elicited words and phrases are (Huziwara 2016:14–16): *''hɔ əna, hɔ təyauŋ'' '(I) went over there.' (''hɔ'' 'to go') *''kʰam sɔ-nə-kɔ'' 'Did (you) eat?' (''kʰam'' 'food, cooked rice'; ''sɔ'' 'to eat') *''sɔ-kɛʔ'' 'already ate' *''ʔə-sɔ-wɛʔ'' 'did not eat (yet)' (''ʔə''- 'negative prefix') *''sɔ-nə-kɔ-ya'' 'ate; finished eating' (-''nə'' '
desiderative In linguistics, a desiderative (abbreviated or ) form is one that has the meaning of "wanting to X". Desiderative forms are often verbs, derived from a more basic verb through a process of morphological derivation. Desiderative mood is a kind of ...
suffix') *''tʰitum ŋɔ lɔ'' 'Where is the water?' (''tʰi'' 'water'; ''tum'' 'container'; ''ŋɔ'' 'where'; ''lɔ'' 'interrogative') *''ʔəyɔ pe'' 'Where did I put it?' (''pe'' 'to place'; ''ʔəyɔ'' 'where?') *''wa dɔ'' 'Come!' (''wa'' 'to come') *''pi'' 'firewood' (cf. Meithei ''upi'' 'firewood') *''məla'' 'tea' *''məla sɔ nɔ'' 'Please drink tea.' (''məla'' 'tea'; ''sɔ'' 'to eat') The song is transcribed as follows. :ʔi ʔələyaŋ ʔi ʔələyaŋ :nənum təhɔ ʔinahɔ :məceiʔ cɔ he lɔcɔ ci :məceiʔ cɔ ʔi na :nam ha mina :hɔ pi cɔ Huziwara (2016:15–16) analyzes the song as follows. *''ʔi ʔələyaŋ ʔi ʔələyaŋ'': exclamation introducing the song *''nənum təhɔ ʔina hɔ'': 'The child went.' *''məceiʔcɔ he'': 'Where is the child?' (Taman ''məceiʔcɔ'' 'child' < PTB *tsa-n) *''lɔcɔ ci'': eaning unclear*''məceiʔcɔ, ʔina'': 'I told the child' *''nam ha mina'': 'Where did you go?' *''hɔ pi cɔ'': 'I went outside.' Altogether, the nouns, verbs, and prefixes elicited from Huziwara's (2016) Taman informant are: *''kʰam'' 'food, cooked rice' *''tʰi'' 'water' *''məla'' 'tea' *''pi'' 'firewood' *''tum'' 'container' *''məceiʔcɔ'' 'child' *''ʔə''- 'negative prefix' *''sɔ'' 'to eat' *''hɔ'' 'to go' *''wa'' 'to come' *''pe'' 'to place, put'


Notes


References

* * * * * * {{Sino-Tibetan branches Languages of Myanmar Unclassified Sino-Tibetan languages