Greater Siangic languages

This article will address the topic of Greater Siangic languages, which has sparked widespread interest and debate in various areas. Greater Siangic languages is a concept that has gained relevance in recent years and that has generated great curiosity in today's society. Along these lines, the different edges and perspectives surrounding Greater Siangic languages will be explored, as well as its impact in different contexts and situations. Both its positive and negative aspects will be analyzed, in order to offer a complete and balanced vision of this topic. In addition, opinions from experts in the field will be presented and specific cases that exemplify the importance of Greater Siangic languages today will be examined.
Greater Siangic
(proposed)
Geographic
distribution
Arunachal Pradesh
Linguistic classificationSino-Tibetan? or an independent family
Subdivisions
Language codes
ISO 639-3
GlottologNone

Greater Siangic is a language grouping that includes the Siangic languages, Digaro languages (Idu Mishmi and Taraon) and Pre-Tani, the hypothetical substrate language branch of Tani before it became relexified by Sino-Tibetan. The Greater Siangic grouping was proposed by Roger Blench (2014), based on exclusively shared lexical items that had been noted by Modi (2013).[1] Blench (2014) argues that Greater Siangic is an independent language family that has undergone areal influences from Sino-Tibetan languages, and is not a branch of the Sino-Tibetan language family itself.

Various lexical items exclusively shared by Milang, Koro, Taraon, and Idu have also been noted by Modi (2013).[1] Modi (2013) suggests that Taraon could be closer to Milang than Idu is.

Languages

Blench (2014) lists the following languages in Greater Siangic.

Sound correspondences

Modi (2013: 20-22)[1] notes the following sound correspondences among Milang, Taraon, Idu, and Proto-Tani.

Milang Taraon Idu Proto-Tani
-u -a -a *-o
h- s-
C- Cl- Cr-
c- t- t-

See also

References

  1. ^ a b c Modi, Yankee. 2013. The nearest relatives of the Tani group. Paper presented at the 19th Himalayan Languages Symposium, Canberra, Australia.