Nung language (Sino-Tibetan)

Sino-Tibetan language spoken in China and Myanmar From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Southern Anung (autonym: [ɑ˧˩ nuŋ˧˥]; Chinese: 阿侬语; pinyin: Ānóngyǔ;[a] Lisu: Fuche Naw[citation needed]) is a Sino-Tibetan language spoken by the Nung people in Fugong County, China, and Kachin State, Myanmar. The Anung language is closely related to the Derung and Rawang languages. Most of the Anung speakers in China have shifted to Lisu, although the speakers are classified as Nu people. The Northern Anung people speak a dialect of Derung, which is also called Anung ([ə˧˩ nuŋ˥˧]), but is not the same Anung discussed in this article.

Pronunciation[ɑ˧˩ nuŋ˧˥]
NativetoChina, Myanmar
Ethnicity(Southern) Anung of Nu nationality
Quick facts Anung, Pronunciation ...
Anung
Anong, Nung
Anung
Pronunciation[ɑ˧˩ nuŋ˧˥]
Native toChina, Myanmar
RegionFugong County
Ethnicity(Southern) Anung of Nu nationality
Native speakers
(450 cited 2000–2007)[1]
7,000 in China
Language codes
ISO 639-3nun
Glottolognung1282
ELPAnong
This article contains IPA phonetic symbols. Without proper rendering support, you may see question marks, boxes, or other symbols instead of Unicode characters. For an introductory guide on IPA symbols, see Help:IPA.
Close

The Burmese and Chinese dialects of Anung have 87% lexical similarity with each other.[2] Anung has 73-76% lexical similarity with Derung, and 77-83% lexical similarity with the Matwang dialect of Rawang.[2]

Demographics

Besides China and Myanmar, there are Anong people in Thailand and India.

China

Anong is spoken by over 7,000 people in China in the following townships.[3]

  • Shangpa (上帕镇): 2,200 people
  • Lijia (里甲乡): 1,100 people
  • Lumadeng (鹿马登乡): 2,100 people
  • Lishadi (利沙底乡): 2,200 people

Myanmar

The majority of Anong speakers in Myanmar are found in Kachin State, specifically Myitkyina, Putao, Naungmun, Machanbaw, Tannai, and Khaunglangphu. There are over 5000 Naw (Anong) people in Kachin State, Myanmar.

In Myitkyina and Putao, there are literacy and language trainings every year.

Some Naw people live in Shan State, but it is not clear whether they still use Anong or not. There are also many living in cities such as Yangon, Khamti, and Taunggyi. Naw people are still mixed with the Lisu population.

Phonology

Notes

  1. Sometimes misread as Āyī 阿依

References

Related Articles

Wikiwand AI