Tai Ya language


Tai Ya, also known as Tai Cung, Tai Chung and Dai Ya, is a Southwestern Tai language of southern China. It has one dialect, Tai Hongjin ; Red Tai.
Speakers of Tai Hongjin live in the Red River and Jinsha River watershed regions of south-central Yunnan. Most are Buddhists, but few are Theravada. It is also spoken by around 5,000–6,000 people in Chiang Rai Province, Thailand.
Unlike other more widely studied Dai languages, Tai Ya has no traditional orthography, though it has a rich oral tradition. Papers have noted that this lack of orthography may endanger the survival of Tai Ya in future generations in Thailand, as the Tai Ya people shift towards the use of Northern Thai and Central Thai, due to the lack of literature in Tai Ya. However, it has been attested that language vitality as a whole is high and "likely to be spoken by future generations".

Dialects

Tai Hongjin can be split into five dialects, which are often mutually unintelligible.
The total number of Tai Hongjin speakers combined is 136,000. A related but separate Tai language called Dǎi Jīnpíng is spoken in Jinping County, Honghe Prefecture, which Zhou reports as having 15,400 speakers. This language has its own traditional script as well.

Heipu

Heipu 黑蒲 is a variety of Tai Ya spoken by 118 people in the two villages of Shitouzhai and Xiaomiao in Panlong Township, District 5, Xinping County, Yunnan. Heipu is a Han Chinese exonym referring to their practice of teeth blackening. In Xinping County, the Heipu also refer to themselves as the Tai Kha . It is mutually intelligible with Tai Ya as spoken in District 4 of Xinping County. However, Heipu is unique in that it has only four tones, and has lost the final stops -p, -t, -k. Heipu is not to be confused with two other groups of the same name:
  • Heipu 黑蒲, an ethnic Zhuang group in Lijiang County, Yunnan with a population of 675.
  • Heipu 黑蒲, an ethnic Bulang group in Mojiang County, Yunnan with the autonym Wa 娃.

    Phonology

Consonants

Yuanyang Dialect

Maguan Dialect

Wuding Dialect

Mosha (漠沙镇) Dialect

Yuanjiang Dialect