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Situ (Chinese: 四土话; pinyin: Sìtǔhuà) is a Rgyalrong language spoken in Sichuan, China. The name "Situ", literally "four Tusi", comes from a historical name of the Ma'erkang region.[1]

Situ
Eastern rGyalrong
Native toChina
RegionSichuan
Language family
Sino-Tibetan
Language codes
ISO 639-3(included in jya)
Glottologsitu1238

Distribution


Gates (2012: 102-103)[2] lists the following locations where Zbu is spoken. It is spoken by over 35,000-40,000 people in 57 villages.


Dialects


Gates (2012: 103)[2] lists 7 dialects of Situ.


Phonology


Consonants of Brag-dbar Situ
Labial Alveolar Retroflex Alveolo-
palatal
Palatal Velar/
Uvular
Nasal m n ɲ ŋ
Plosive voiceless p t c k
aspirated
voiced b d ɟ ɡ
prenasalized ᵐb ⁿd ᶮɟ ᵑɡ
Affricate voiceless t͡s t͡ʂ t͡ɕ
aspirated t͡sʰ t͡ʂʰ t͡ɕʰ
voiced d͡z d͡ʑ
prenasalized ⁿd͡z ⁿd͡ʐ ⁿd͡ʑ
Fricative voiceless (f) s ɕ χ
voiced v z ʑ
Lateral l
Sonorant w r j
Vowels
Front Central Back
Close i u
Mid e ə o
Near-open ɐ
Open a

Grammar



Verbal agreement


Data adapted from Lin (1993).[5] Columns indicate the patient, and rows the agent. For example, the item tə-no-n in row "2sg" and column "3" means "you(singular) drive him/her/it/them.two/them".

1sg1du1pl2sg2du2pl3
1sg ta-nota-no-ntʃta-no-ɲno-ŋ
1du ta-nota-no-ntʃta-no-ɲno-tʃ
1pl ta-nota-no-ntʃta-no-ɲno-i
2sg kə-w-no-ŋkə-w-no-tʃkə-w-no-itə-no-n
2du kə-w-no-ŋkə-w-no-tʃkə-w-no-itə-no-ntʃ
2pl kə-w-no-ŋkə-w-no-tʃkə-w-no-itə-no-ɲ
3sg wə-no-ŋwə-no-tʃwə-no-itə-w-notə-w-no-ntʃtə-w-no-ɲno-u
3du wə-no-ŋwə-no-tʃwə-no-itə-w-notə-w-no-ntʃtə-w-no-ɲno-ntʃ
3pl wə-no-ŋwə-no-tʃwə-no-itə-w-notə-w-no-ntʃtə-w-no-ɲno-ɲ

Stem alternation


Some Situ dialects have rich stem changes. For example, stem alternations is quasi-ubiquitous in Brag-bar, observed in both inflectional and derivational morphology.


Inflectional stem changes

Inflectional stem alternations in Brag-bar occur in different TAME and argument indexation categories.[6] Generally speaking, stem I is used in most non-past categories as well as inferential past, and stem II in non-inferential past and egophoric present contexts. In most cases, stem II is derived from stem I by tonal inversion between a high and falling tones, sometimes with vowel alternations between the central grade (ə, ɐ, a) and non-central grade (i/u, e/o, iɛ).

Verbs with particular syllable structures distinguish stem I’ or stem II’, sensitive to phonological environment. Verbs with an open syllable and a high tone, as well as those with a closed syllable ending in a stop, distinguish stem I’ from stem I, occurring in non-suffixing non-past and inferential forms; verbs with an open syllable and a falling tone may distinguish stem II’ from stem II in non-suffixing non-inferential past and egophoric present forms. Stem I’ and stem II’ are formed by a unidirectional vowel shift to the non-central grade.

Inflectional stem alternations in Brag-bar
Citation formStem I-suffixStem I’-øStem II-suffixStem II’-ø
ka-phô 'to flee'phôphó
ka-lát 'to release'látliɛ̂t
ka-siɛ́t 'to kill'sátsiɛ́tsiɛ̂t
ka-viɛ̂ 'to do'viɛ̂viɛ́

Derivational stem changes

Stem changes are also observed in Brag-bar derivational morphology, governed by a unidirectional tonal alternation rule, either to a high or to falling tone. Tonal alternations are often accompanied with vowel changes, of which the direction is likely to be correlated with the verb stem’s syllable structure. For open syllable verb stems, alternations to high tone happens with vowel shift to the non-central grade, whereas that to falling tone co-exists with vowel shift to the central grade.


Kinship terminology


Zhang and Fan (2020)[7] show that the Brag-bar terminology preserves indirect traces of the Omaha kinship terminology, characterized by a cross-parallel distinction and skewing rules. Omaha skewing is directly observed in the Japhug terminology and might once have existed in Tangut.[8]


References


  1. "Jiāróng rénwén" 嘉绒人文 [Rgyalrong Culture]. Ma'erkang City Government website.{{cite web}}: CS1 maint: url-status (link)
  2. Gates, Jesse P. (2012). Situ in Situ: Towards a Dialectology of Jiāróng (rGyalrong) (MA thesis). Trinity Western University via Academia.edu.
  3. Zhang (2016).
  4. Zhang, Shuya (2020). Le rgyalrong situ de Brag-bar et sa contribution à la typologie de l'expression des relations spatiales: l'orientation et le mouvement associé (PhD thesis). INALCO.
  5. Lin, Xiangrong 林向荣 (1993). Jiāróngyǔ yánjiū 嘉戎语研究 [A Study on the rGyalrong Language] (in Chinese). Chengdu: Sichuan minzu chubanshe.
  6. Zhang, S. (2018). "Stem alternations in the Brag-bar dialect of Situ Rgyalrong". Linguistics of the Tibeto-Burman Area. 42 (2): 294–330. doi:10.1075/ltba.18009.zha.
  7. Zhang, Shuya; Fan, Jingming (2020). "Brag-bar kinship system in synchronic and diachronic perspectives". Bulletin of SOAS. 83 (3): 479–503. doi:10.1017/S0041977X2000261X.
  8. Jacques, Guillaume (2012). "The Tangut Kinship System in Qiangic Perspective". In Hill, Nathan (ed.). Medieval Tibeto-Burman Languages IV. Leiden: Brill. pp. 211–257.

На других языках


- [en] Situ language

[fr] Gyalrong de l'est

Le rgyalrong de l'est ou gyalrong de l'Est (du tibétain : རྒྱལ་རོང, Wylie : rgyal rong, THL : gyalrong ou parfois jiarong (du chinois 嘉绒, jiāróng) ou encore Situ (du chinois 四土话, sìtǔ huà, « langue des quatre tusi »[2]) est une langue tibéto-birmane parlée au centre-nord du Sichuan, en Chine, dans le territoire traditionnel de quatre chefferies : Zhuokeji (卓克基), Suomo (梭磨), Songgang (松岗) et Dangba (党坝), situés sur le xian de Barkam.



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