Katana VentraIP

Shan language

The Shan language is the native language of the Shan people and is mostly spoken in Shan State, Myanmar. It is also spoken in pockets in other parts of Myanmar, in Northern Thailand, in Yunnan, in Laos, in Cambodia, in Vietnam and decreasingly in Assam and Meghalaya. Shan is a member of the Kra–Dai language family and is related to Thai. It has five tones, which do not correspond exactly to Thai tones, plus a sixth tone used for emphasis. The term Shan is also used for related Northwestern Tai languages, and it is called Tai Yai or Tai Long in other Tai languages. Standard Shan, which is also known as Tachileik Shan, is based on the dialect of the city of Tachileik.

"Tai Yai language" redirects here. Not to be confused with Tai Ya language or Tayal language.

Shan

4.7 million (2017)[1]

Kra–Dai

The number of Shan speakers is not known in part because the Shan population is unknown. Estimates of Shan people range from four million to 30 million, with about half speaking the Shan language. Ethnologue estimates that there are 4.6 million Shan speakers in Myanmar; the Mahidol University Institute for Language and Culture gave the number of Shan speakers in Thailand as 95,000 in 2006,[1] though including refugees from Burma they now total about one million.[2] Many Shan speak local dialects as well as the language of their trading partners.

In Shan, the spoken language is commonly called kwam tai (ၵႂၢမ်းတႆး, , lit.'Tai language'). The written language is called lik tai (လိၵ်ႈတႆး, [lik táj]).

[kwáːm.táj]

In , it is called hram: bhasa (ရှမ်းဘာသာ, [ʃáɰ̃ bàðà]), whence the English word "Shan". The term "Shan," which was formerly spelt hsyam: (သျှမ်း) in Burmese, is an exonym believed to be a Burmese derivative of "Siam" (an old term for Thailand).

Burmese

In and Southern Thai, it is called phasa thai yai (ภาษาไทใหญ่, [pʰāː.sǎː.tʰāj.jàj], lit.'big/great Tai language') or more informally or even vulgarly by some phasa ngiao (ภาษาเงี้ยว, [pʰāː.sǎː.ŋía̯w], an outdated term that now sounds like the word for "snake").

Thai

In , it is called kam tai (กำไต, [kām.tāj], literally "Tai language") or more informally or even vulgarly by some kam ngiao (กำเงี้ยว, [kām.ŋía̯w]), lit.'Shan language').

Northern Thai

In , it is called phasa tai yai (ພາສາໄທໃຫຍ່, [pʰáː.sǎː.tʰáj.ɲāj], lit.'big/great Tai language') or more informally or even vulgarly by some phasa ngiao (ພາສາງ້ຽວ, [pʰáː.sǎː.ŋîa̯w]).

Lao

In , it is called kam ngio (ᦅᧄᦇᦲᧁᧉ, [kâm.ŋìw]).

Tai Lü

The Shan language has a number of names in different Tai languages and Burmese.

Phonology[edit]

Consonants[edit]

Shan has 19 consonants. Unlike Thai and Lao (Isan) there are no voiced plosives /d/ and /b/.

Resources[edit]

Given the present instabilities in Burma, one choice for scholars is to study the Shan people and their language in Thailand, where estimates of Shan refugees run as high as two million, and Mae Hong Son Province is home to a Shan majority. The major source for information about the Shan language in English is Dunwoody Press's Shan for English Speakers. They also publish a Shan-English dictionary. Aside from this, the language is almost completely undescribed in English.

Sai Kam Mong. The History and Development of the Shan Scripts. Chiang Mai, Thailand: Silkworm Books, 2004.  974-9575-50-4

ISBN

The Major Languages of East and South-East Asia. (London, 1990).

Bernard Comrie

A Guide to the World's Languages. (Stanford, 1991).

Merritt Ruhlen

Shan for English Speakers. Irving I. Glick & Sao Tern Moeng (Dunwoody Press, Wheaton, 1991).

Shan – English Dictionary. Sao Tern Moeng (Dunwoody Press, Kensington, 1995).

Shan phonology and morphology. Aggasena Lengtai. (MA thesis, Mahidol University, 2009).

An English and Shan Dictionary. H. W. Mix (American Baptist Mission Press, Rangoon, 1920; Revised edition by S.H.A.N., Chiang Mai, 2001).

Grammar of the Shan Language. J. N. Cushing (American Baptist Mission Press, Rangoon, 1887).

Myanmar – Unicode Consortium

[1]

An English-Shan dictionary translator

(from Wiktionary's Swadesh-list appendix)

Shan-language Swadesh vocabulary list of basic words

Shan Alphabet

Basic Shan phrases

SIL Padauk Font (Shan Unicode)

SEAlang Library Shan Dictionary

Titles of Shan-foreign language dictionaries