Kensiu
[别称 Mos, Mengo, Tiong]语系:Austro-Asiatic
·濒危
语系:Austro-Asiatic
·濒危
Mos, Mengo, Tiong, Mawas, Belubn, Kenseu, Kensieu, Kensiw, Moniq, Monik, Mendi, Ngok Pa, Orang Bukit, Orang Liar, Kense, Sakai, Maniq, Moni, Menik, Meni, Jarum, Semang Proper (of Ulu Krian), Semang, Semang-Dialekte |
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Austro-Asiatic, Aslian, North Aslian, Maniq |
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ISO 639-3 |
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kns |
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文件格式: csv |
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信息不完整 “East and Southeast Asia” (349-424) . David Bradley (2007) , C. Moseley · London & New York: Routledge
Malay
Southern Thai
other Aslian languages
Close contact and intermarriage between dialects and with adjacent Jehai, Lanoh and Temiar; speakers accommodate readily to other Aslian languages and dialects.
Thailand: southern, Betong; Malaysia: northwest peninsular, near Baling.
About 500 group members, about half each in Thailand and Malaysia, four distinct dialects (Batuq, Siong, Nakil, Bong) of hunter-gatherer bands. Numerous other extinct dialects further west, formerly extending to the coast across from Penang.
信息不完整 “Dokumentation Bedrohter Sprachen (DoBeS)” . Dokumentation Bedrohter Sprachen
The number of speakers of each language ranges between around 150 (Menriq) and 1,000 (Jahai). Some dialect varieties (especially of Lanoh) are close to extinction.
信息不完整 “ Contact and isolation in hunter-gatherer language dynamics: Evidence from Maniq phonology (Aslian, Malay Peninsula) ” (956–981) . Wnuk, Ewelina and Niclas Burenhult (2014)
Southern Thai
"Almost all Maniq speakers are fluent in Southern Thai, which they use in contact situations with Thai villagers and forestry officials."
Banthad mountain range of southern Thailand
"at the intersection of Trang, Satun, and Phatthalung provinces" "... speakers are hunter-gatherers traditionally leading a nomadic or a semi-nomadic lifestyle ..."