Shö is a Kuki-Chin language dialect cluster of Burma and Bangladesh. There are perhaps three distinct dialects, Asho (Khyang), Chinbon, and Shendu.
Shö | |
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Native to | Burma, Bangladesh |
Ethnicity | Asho Chin |
Native speakers | (50,000 cited 1983–2011)[1] plus an unknown number of Shendu |
Language family | Sino-Tibetan
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Language codes | |
ISO 639-3 | Variously:cnb – Chinbon Chincsh – Asho Chinshl – Shendu |
Glottolog | chin1478 Chinbon Chinasho1236 Asho Chinshen1247 Shendu |
Mayin and Longpaw are not mutually intelligible, but have been subsumed under the ISO code for Chinbon because Mayin-Longpaw speakers generally understand Chinbon.[2] Minkya is similarly included because most Minkya speakers understand Mayin.[3]
Chinbon (Uppu) is spoken in the following townships of Myanmar.[4]
Asho is spoken in Ayeyarwady Region, Bago Region, and Magway Region, and Rakhine State, Myanmar.
VanBik (2009:38)[5] lists the following Asho dialects.
Shendu is spoken in Mizoram, India.
The Asho dialect (K’Chò) has 26 to 30 consonants and ten to eleven vowels depending on the dialect.[6]
Labial | Dental/ Alveolar |
Palatal | Velar | Glottal | ||
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Plosive | plain | p pʰ b | t̪ t̪ʰ d | k kʰ ɡ | ʔ | |
implosive | ɓ | ɗ | ||||
Nasal | m m̥ | n n̥ | ɲ ɲ̊ | ŋ ŋ̊ | ||
Fricative | s sʰ z | ʃ | h ɦ | |||
Lateral | l ɬ | |||||
Approximant | w | j |
Front | Center | Back | |||
---|---|---|---|---|---|
Close | i / ˠi | ʉ | u | ||
Near-close | ɪ | ʏ | ʊ | ||
Close-mid | e | (ə̆) | ɤ | o | |
Open-mid | ɛ | ɔ | |||
Open | a |
Diphthongs: ei, ai, au
Similar to other Kukish languages, many Asho verbs have two distinct stems. This stem alternation is a Proto-Kukish feature, which has been retained to different degrees in different Kukish languages.[7]
Sino-Tibetan branches | |||||
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Western Himalayas (Himachal, Uttarakhand, Nepal, Sikkim) |
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Eastern Himalayas (Tibet, Bhutan, Arunachal) | |||||
Myanmar and Indo-Burmese border |
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East and Southeast Asia |
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Dubious (possible isolates) (Arunachal) |
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Proposed groupings |
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Proto-languages |
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Italics indicates single languages that are also considered to be separate branches. |
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Kuki-Chin |
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Naga |
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Meitei | |||||||||||||
Karbic |
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Indo-European | |
Sino-Tibetan | |
Austroasiatic | |
Dravidian |
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Sign languages |
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