Austro-Asiatic languages

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Austro-Asiatic
Austroasiatic
Geographic
distribution:
South and Southeast Asia
Genetic
classification
:
One of the world's major language families
Subdivisions:
Austro-Asiatic languages

The Austro-Asiatic languages are a large language family of Southeast Asia, and also scattered throughout India and Bangladesh. The name comes from the Latin word for "south" and the Greek name of Asia, hence "South Asia". Among these languages, only Vietnamese, Khmer, and Mon have a long recorded history, and only Vietnamese and Khmer have official status (in Vietnam and Cambodia, respectively). The rest of the languages are spoken by minority groups.

Austro-Asiatic languages have a disjunct distribution across India, Bangladesh and Southeast Asia, separated by regions where other languages are spoken. It is widely believed that the Austro-Asiatic languages are the autochthonous languages of Southeast Asia and the eastern Indian subcontinent, and that the other languages of the region, including the Indo-European, Tai-Kadai, Dravidian, and Sino-Tibetan languages, are the result of later migrations of people. (There are, for example, Austro-Asiatic words in the Tibeto-Burman languages of eastern Nepal.) Some linguists have attempted to prove that Austro-Asiatic languages are related to Austronesian languages, thus forming the Austric superfamily.

Contents

Linguists traditionally recognize two primary divisions of Austro-Asiatic: the Mon-Khmer languages of Southeast Asia, Northeast India and the Nicobar Islands, and the Munda languages of East and Central India and parts of Bangladesh. Ethnologue identifies 168 Austro-Asiatic languages, of which 147 are Mon-Khmer and 21 are Munda. However, no evidence for this classification has ever been published, and it is possible that the linguistic classification has been influenced by researchers' subjective perception of a racial dichotomy between the speakers of languages that have traditionally been classified as Mon-Khmer and those that have traditionally been classified as Munda.

Each of the families that is written in boldface type below is accepted as a valid clade. However, the relationships between these families within Austro-Asiatic is debated; in addition to the traditional classification, two recent proposals are given, neither of which accept traditional Mon-Khmer as a valid unit. It should be noted that little of the data used for competing classifications has ever been published, and therefore cannot be evaluated by peer review.

This is the widely cited classification used in the Encyclopædia Britannica. Several languages that were not known of at the time are missing.

Peiros is a lexicostatistic classification, based on percentages of shared vocabulary. This means that a language may appear to be more distantly related than it actually is due to language contact, so it is only a starting point for a proper genealogical classification.

Rather than counting cognates, Diffloth compares reconstructions of various clades, and attempts to classify them based on shared innovations.

  • Koraput: 7 languages
  • Core Munda languages
  • Kharian-Juang: 2 languages
  • North Munda languages
Korku
Kherwarian: 12 languages
  • Khasi-Khmuic languages
  • Palaungo-Pakanic languages
Pakanic or Palyu: 2 languages of southern China
Palaungic: 21 languages of Myanmar, southern China, and Thailand, plus Mang of Vietnam.
  • Khmero-Vietic languages
  • Vieto-Katuic languages
Vietic: 10 languages of Vietnam and Laos, including the Vietnamese language, which has the most speakers of any Austro-Asiatic language. These are the only Austro-Asiatic languages to have highly developed tone systems.
Katuic: 19 languages of Laos, Vietnam, and Thailand.
  • Khmero-Bahnaric languages
The Khmer dialects of Cambodia, Thailand, and Vietnam.
Pearic: 6 languages of Cambodia.
  • Nico-Monic languages
  • Asli-Monic languages
Aslian: 19 languages of peninsular Malaysia and Thailand.
Monic: 2 languages, the Mon language of Myanmar and the Nyahkur language of Thailand.

There are in addition several unclassified languages of southern China.

  • Peck, B. M., Comp. (1988). An Enumerative Bibliography of South Asian Language Dictionaries.
  • Peiros, Ilia. 1998. Comparative Linguistics in Southeast Asia. Pacific Linguistics Series C-142. Canberra, Australian National University.
  • Zide, Norman H., and Milton E. Barker. Studies in Comparative Austroasiatic Linguistics. Indo-Iranian monographs, v. 5. The Hague: Mouton, 1966.
  • Byomkes Chakrabarti,A Comparative Study of Santali and Bengali, 1994

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