Daur language

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Daur
Spoken in China
Region Inner Mongolia, Hailar Prefecture; Heilongjiang Province, Qiqihar Prefecture; Xinjiang, Tacheng Prefecture
Total speakers 96,085 (as of 1999)
Language family Altaic[1] (controversial)
Language codes
ISO 639-1 None
ISO 639-2 tut
ISO 639-3 dta

The Daur or Dagur language is a Mongolic language primarily spoken by members of the Daur ethnic group.

Contents

[edit] Distribution

Daur is a Mongolic language consisting of four dialects: Amur Daur in the vinicity of Heihe, the Nonni Daur on the west side of the Nonni River from south of Qiqihaer up to the Morin Dawa Daur Autonomous Banner, Hailar Daur to the south-east of Hailar and far off in Xinjiang in the vinicity of Tacheng.[3] There is no written standard in use, although a Pinyin-based orthography has been devised; instead the Daur make use of Mongolian or Chinese, as most speakers know these languages as well.[4]

[edit] Phonology

Daur phonology is peculiar in that some of its dialects have developed a set of labialized consonants (eg /sʷar/ 'flea' vs. /sar/ 'moon')[5], while it shares palatalized consonants[6] with most Mongolian dialects that have not been developed in the other Mongolic languages. It also has /f/, which is, however, limited to loan words.[7] Word-final short vowels were lost[8] and historically short vowels in non-initial syllables have lost phoneme status.[9] Daur is the only Mongolic language to share this development with Mongolian (i.e. Mongolian proper, Oirat, Buryat). Due to the merger of /ɔ/ and /ʊ/ with /o/ and /u/, vowel harmony was lost.[10]

[edit] Grammar

Daur has a pronominal system that distinguishes between first person plural inclusive /bed/ and exclusive /baː/ and, even more archaic, it distinguishes between third person singular /iːn/ and plural /aːn/.[11] While the phoneme /t͡ʃ/ (<*t͡ʃʰ) has been retained, the second person singular pronoun has become /ʃiː/ nevertheless,[12] resembling a more thorough sound change in the Khorchin dialect. The second person plural is retained as /taː/.[12]

The genitive and accusative have fused in some variants, becoming –ji, and the ablative may assume the form of the instrumental case. The old comitative has been lost, while the innovated comitative is the same as in Mongolian.[13] In addition, several other cases have been innovated that are not shared by Mongolian, including a new allative, -maji. [14]

Daur has a fairly simple tense-aspect system consisting of the nonpast markers -/bəi/ and (marginally) -/n/ and the past forms -/sən/ and (marginally) /la/ and the non-finite imperfective marker -/d͡ʒa/-. These may be inflected for person. The attributive particle forms are limited to –/ɡʷ/ (< Written Mongolian -γ-a) for imperfective aspect and future tense, -sən (< -γsan) for perfective aspect, -/ɡat͡ʃ/ (<-gči) for habituality (instead of -daγ which used to fulfil this function) and -/mar/ for potential and probable actions. It has acquired a highly complex converbal system containing several innovations. Notably, -mar which is a participle in Mongolian serves as a converb as well.[15]

[edit] Lexicon

Daur has 50% common Mongolic vocabulary, while it has borrowed 5[16] to 10% of its words from Chinese, 10% of its words from Manchu and also some vocabulary from Evenki and Russian – leaving about 20% vocabulary that is specific to Daur only.[17]

[edit] Notes

  1. ^ Ethnologue report on Daur language
  2. ^ [1]
  3. ^ Tsumagari 2003: 129, Sengge 2004: 616
  4. ^ Tsumagari 2003: 129
  5. ^ Chuluu 1994: 5, but for example not the Tacheng dialect, see Yu et al. 2008: 25-26
  6. ^ Sengge 2004a, Tsumagari 2003: 133
  7. ^ Namcarai and Qaserdeni 1983: 66-67, cp. Tsumagari 2003: 131
  8. ^ Tsumagari 2003: 131
  9. ^ cp. Namcarai and Qaserdeni 1983: 84
  10. ^ Tsumagari 2003: 131 basically in agreement with Sengge 2004a; in contrast, Namcarai and Qaserdeni 1983: 37 give a pretty standard Mongolian vowel harmony system with the pharyngeal vowels /ɑ/, /ɔ/, /ʊ/ contrasting with the non-pharyngeal vowels /ə/, /o/, /u/, while /i/ is neutral.
  11. ^ Namcarai and Qaserdeni 1983: 211-126, cp. Tsumagari 2003: 141
  12. ^ a b Sengge 2004c: 621
  13. ^ Namcarai and Qaserdeni 1983: 110-121, Sengge 619-620
  14. ^ Sengge 2004c: 620
  15. ^ Tsumagari 2003: 144-148 supplemented with Sengge 2004c. The exact form of the plosive in -/ɡat͡ʃ/ is unclear as these two sources and Namcarai and Qaserdeni 1983 give different phones.
  16. ^ Sengge 2004b
  17. ^ Tsumagari 2003: 151-152

[edit] Bibliography

[edit] External links