- Source: Caijia language
Caijia (Chinese: 蔡家话) is an endangered Sino-Tibetan language spoken in an area centred on Bijie, in the west of the Chinese province of Guizhou. It was first documented by Chinese researchers in the 1980s. It has been described by different authors as a relative of Bai or an early split from Old Chinese. The autonym is men³¹ni³³. According to Lu (2022), Caijia speakers in Xingfa 兴发乡, Hezhang County refer to their language as meŋ²¹ni³³ŋoŋ³³.
Classification
Similarities among Old Chinese, Waxiang, Caijia, and Bai have been pointed out by Wu & Shen (2010) and others.
Zhengzhang Shangfang (2010) argued that Bai and Caijia formed a Macro-Bai subgroup of Sino-Tibetan.
Caijia also appears to be related to the extinct Longjia and Luren languages, but they are too poorly documented for definitive classification.
In contrast, Sagart (2011) groups Caijia with Waxiang, a divergent Chinese variety spoken in northwestern Hunan, as the earliest group to split off from Old Chinese.
Sagart (2011) lists the following features of Old Chinese retained by both Caijia and Waxiang:
OC *lˤ- and *lr- > Caijia and Waxiang l- (where Middle Chinese has d-), as in OC *lˤiŋ (田) > Caijia len31, Waxiang lɛ13 'field'
OC *r- > Caijia ɣ- and Waxiang z- (where Middle Chinese has l-), as in OC *mə.rˤək (來) > *rˤə > Caijia ɣɯ31, Waxiang zɛ13 'to come'
Sagart identifies two words as shared innovations:
'two': Caijia ta55, Waxiang tso53, from OC *tsˤə(ʔ)-s 'twice' (再)
'milk': Caijia mi55, Waxiang mi55, which Sagart (2011) suggests is a non-Sinitic word
Distribution
Bijie (1983) reports the Caijia people are found in the seven counties of Bijie prefecture – Qixingguan, Dafang, Qianxi, Zhijin, Nayong, Weining, and Hezhang – comprising a total of over 3,100 households and over 18,000 individuals. Bijie (1983) reports that smaller populations of Caijia people are found in Anshun (with over 400 people) and Liupanshui (with over 3,500 people) prefectures (to the southeast and southwest respectively), as well as Zhaoyang, Yiliang, and Zhenxiong counties in Zhaotong prefecture, Yunnan (to the northwest). Bijie (1983) also contains linguistic data for the Caijia language of Hezhang County.
Caijia speakers are distributed in the following locations in Bijie prefecture (Bo Wenze 2004).
Lijiazhai 李家寨, Xinying Village 新营村, Xingfa Township 兴发乡, Hezhang County
Caijiayuan 蔡家园, Yakou Village 垭口村, Songlinpo Township 松林坡乡, Hezhang County
Lijiagou 李家沟, Kele Township 可乐乡, Hezhang County
Xinfa Township 新发布依族乡, Weining County (not to be confused with Xingfa Township 兴发乡 in Hezhang County)
Yinajia District 以那架区 has the most ethnic Caijia in Zhijin County. Bijie (1983) also reports the location of Baiyanjiao 白岩脚, Puweng Township 普翁公社, Guiguo District 桂果区, Zhijin County.
The Liupanshui City Ethnic Gazetteer 六盘水市志:民族志 (2003:182–183) lists ethnic Caijia populations for the following counties in the prefecture, with a total of 4,061 (1982):
Liuzhi: 1,720 (1981), in Niuchang 牛场, Xinchang 新场, Heitang 黑塘
Shuicheng: 2,296 (1982), in Bide 比德, Huale 化乐, Qinglin 青林, Jinpen 金盆
Zhongshan District: in Dewu 德坞乡
In Shuicheng County, the Caijia language is still spoken in:
Chahe 叉河, Jinpen Township 金盆乡
Caijiapo 蔡家坡, Tujiao Township 土角乡
Caijiayuan 蔡家园, Shuchang Township 鼠场乡
In Zhenxiong County, Yunnan, the Caijia people are scattered in the village cluster of Sumu 苏木村, and in Chuanjiu 串九, Qinggang 青杠, Liangshui 凉水, Poji 泼机, Nantai 南台, Wugu 五谷 (Zhenxiong County Gazetteer 1986).
Phonology
Lee (2021) gives the following consonants and vowels for the phononology of Caijia:
Lee (2021) also notes that vowels can have three additional forms: long ⟨(double letter)⟩, nasal ⟨-nn⟩, and r-colored ⟨-r⟩. Although sources conflict, consonants can additionally be glottalized or pharyngealized, which of the two it is actually unclear. This is presumably marked with their respective IPA symbols.
Dialects
Guizhou (1982) lists the following two dialects of the Caijia language. The Caijia dialect documented in Guizhou (1982) is that of Yangjiazhai 杨家寨, Liangyan Village 亮岩公社, Xingfa District 兴发区, Hezhang County.
Xingfa District 兴发区, Hezhang County: Liangyan Village 亮岩公社 (including the main datapoint of Yangjiazhai 杨家寨), Yeli Village 野里公社, and Wocun Village 窝皮寸
Kaiping Village 开坪公社, Longchang District 龙场区, Weining County (located near Xinfa Township 新发布依族乡)
Guizhou (1982) notes that the -an rime in Caijia of Xingfa 兴发 corresponds to the -aŋ rime in Caijia of Longchang 龙场.
Hsiu (2018) reports the discovery of a previously undocumented Caijia dialect that is spoken in Niujiaojing 牛角井村, Yangjie Town 羊街镇, Weining County. This Caijia dialect is also spoken in the villages of Xinglongchang 兴隆场村, Niuchishui 牛吃水, and Fadi 发地.
Names and ethnic subdivisions
The Caijia people are ethnoculturally related to the Lu (卢) people (Luren 卢人), who are classified as Manchu by the Chinese government. Luren (Lu) and Caijia are also closely related to Longjia (龙家). Caijia, Longjia, and Lu are all spoken in western Guizhou.
In Weining County, Caijia speakers are officially classified by the Chinese government as ethnic Gelao (Hsiu 2017), while in Hezhang County they are classified as Bai (Bo 2004).
Caijia people with the autonym "Menni" (门尼 or 门你) have also been reported in Puding County, Guizhou, where they were classified as ethnic Gelao during the 1980s (Zhou Guoyan 2004).
In Zhijin County, Guizhou, Caijia people are called Silie 斯列 by the local Miao and Awuna 阿乌纳 by the local Yi (Zhijin County Gazetteer 1997:166).
Ethnic subdivisions of the Caijia people include the Black 黑, White 白, Qingshangshui 青上水, Xiashui 下水, Hanzhan 捍毡, Zhuazhua 抓抓, Datou 大头, Qianqiaoba 乾乔巴, Laohu 老虎, Luoluo 倮倮, Xuejiao 削角 (Xieguo 写果), and Jiandao 剪刀.
Historically recorded names for the Caijia include Caijiazi 蔡家子 and Gantan Caijia 擀毡蔡家. The Yi call the Caijia "Sha'awu 沙阿乌", the Miao call them "Sini 斯你", and other ethnic groups also call them "Xieguo 写果".
Bijie (1983:2–3) lists the following autonyms and exonyms for the Caijia people.
Autonym: Menni 门你 (IPA: men31 ȵen33)
Yi (in Dafang County and Zhijin County) exonym: Xieguo, Awuna 阿武哪
Yi (in Shuicheng County) exonym: Awuna 阿乌纳
Yi (in Weining County and Weining County) exonym: Awu 阿武
Miao (in Weining County and Weining County) exonym: Awu 阿乌
Miao (in Nayong County) exonym: Sinie 斯聂
Shui (in Puding County and Zhijin County) exonym: Louman 楼慢
Buyi exonym: Buman 布慢
Buyi (in Weining County) exonym: Bu'awu 布阿武
Grammar
Lü (2022) is a comprehensive grammar of Caijia.
See also
List of unrecognized ethnic groups of Guizhou
Longjia people
Qixingmin people
Bo people (China)
Macro-Bai comparative vocabulary list (Wiktionary)
Notes and references
https://web.archive.org/web/20110512204947/http://lingweb.eva.mpg.de/numeral/Caijia.htm
Bo Wenze [薄文泽]. 2004. "A Brief Introduction of Caijia Speech [蔡家话概况]". Minzu Yuwen. http://d.wanfangdata.com.cn/periodical_mzyw200402012.aspx
Further reading
Bijie Prefecture Ethnic Classification Office [贵州省毕节地区民族识别办公室]. 1983. "Caijia" minzu chengfen diaocha baogao ["蔡家"民族成分调查报告]. m.s.
Guizhou provincial ethnic classification commission, linguistic division [贵州省民族识别工作队语言组]. 1982. The language of the Caijia [Caijia de yuyan 蔡家的语言]. m.s.
Guizhou provincial ethnic classification commission [贵州省民族识别工作队]. 1984. Report on ethnic classification issues of the Nanlong people (Nanjing-Longjia) [南龙人(南京-龙家)族别问题调查报告]. m.s.
Hsiu, Andrew. 2013. New endangered Tibeto-Burman languages of southwestern China: Mondzish, Longjia, Pherbu, and others. Presented at ICSTLL 46, Dartmouth College. doi:10.5281/zenodo.1127796
Hsiu, Andrew. 2018. The Niujiaojing dialect of Caijia in Weining County, Guizhou, China. Manuscript draft. doi:10.5281/zenodo.1249165
Lee, Man Hei (2022-09-26). "Phonological features of Caijia that are notable from a diachronic perspective". Journal of Historical Linguistics. 13 (1). John Benjamins Publishing Company: 82–114. doi:10.1075/jhl.21025.lee. ISSN 2210-2116. S2CID 252558124.
Lee, Man Hei. 2021. Supplementary material: Sagart 250 concept list for Caijia (Data set). In Journal of Historical Linguistics (1.0). doi:10.5281/zenodo.5544121
Zhao Weifeng [赵卫峰]. 2011. History of the Bai people of Guizhou [贵州白族史略]. Yinchuan, China: Ningxia People's Press [宁夏人民出版社]. ISBN 978-7-227-04678-3
External links
Caijia people
沅陵乡话(船溪)与白语蔡家话个别读音对比
Kata Kunci Pencarian:
- Bahasa Caijia
- Rumpun bahasa Bai Raya
- Bahasa Waxiang
- Rumpun bahasa Cai–Long
- Bahasa Luren
- Bahasa Longjia
- Caijia language
- Macro-Bai languages
- Waxiang Chinese
- Bo people (China)
- Luren language
- Longjia language
- Cai–Long languages
- Languages of China
- Standard Chinese
- Chinese language