Northern Tujia
[别称 Tuchia, Tudja, Tujia]语系:Sino-Tibetan
·高危
语系:Sino-Tibetan
·高危
Tuchia, Tudja, Tujia, Tujia, Northern, Biji, Bizhi, Bizhika, 土家語, 北部土家語 |
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Sino-Tibetan, Tujia |
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ISO 639-3 |
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tji |
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文件格式: csv |
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Northern Tujia [tji] and Southern Tujia [tjs] are not mutually intelligible. |
信息不完整 “Diachronic and synchronic overview of the Tujia language of Central South China” (75–97) . Brassett, Philip R. and Cecilia Brassett (2005)
8000000 (people listed under the Tujia nationality)
less than 1% of the Tuija population
The use of the Tujia language varies from place to place. In the heartlands, even children are able to speak Tujia to some degree though young parents tend to raise their children in Chinese due to the socio-economic pressure. Few bilinguals.
Mandarin or other Chinese languages
no established written forms
the border regions of Hunan, Hubei and Guizhou Provinces and Chongqing Municipality
mainly in the southern half of Longshan County, particularly in the areas bordering the Youshui River and its tributaries; some in Yongshun, Guzhang and Baojing counties
信息不完整 “East and Southeast Asia” (349-424) . David Bradley (2007) , C. Moseley · London & New York: Routledge
8,028,133 members of the Tujia nationality
~30,000
In rapid decline; reported to have been spoken by as many as 170,000 people twenty years ago, but now perhaps 60,000 speakers, plus about half as many with passive knowledge. There are nineteen village clusters on the borders where Longshan, Baoqing, Guzhang and Yongshun counties meet; there, the language is still spoken, in some places mainly by old people but in a few also by some children; all are bilingual in varieties of Chinese. Recently extinct in southeastern Sichuan, northeastern Guizhou and southwestern Hubei provinces, extinct or moribund in most of northwestern Hunan, severely endangered in the remaining areas.
Chinese
Northwestern Hunan
信息不完整 “Ethnologue: Languages of the World, 16th Edition (2009)” . M. Paul Lewis · SIL International
8,028,133
Speaker number data: (Brassett and Brassett 2005). 100 monolinguals. 60% older than 50 years, 30% between 20 and 50, 10% under 25.
Regularly used but increasingly the young prefer to speak Chinese and are encouraged by their parents.
Also use Mandarin Chinese or Hmong Njua [hnj].
Northwest Hunan, Yingjiang and Yanhe counties, Hubei, Guizhou, Wuling Mt. range