Mnong | |
---|---|
Bunong (ឞូន៝ង) | |
Native to | Vietnam, Cambodia and United States |
Region | throughout Tây Nguyên region, especially in Đắk Lắk, Lâm Đồng, Đắk Nông and Bình Phước provinces; Mondulkiri in Cambodia |
Native speakers
|
130,000 (2002–2008) |
Austroasiatic
|
|
Khmer script, Vietnamese alphabet | |
Language codes | |
ISO 639-3 | Variously: – Central Mnong – Eastern Mnong – Southern Mnong – Kraol |
Glottolog | mnon1259 |
The Mnong language (also known as Pnong or Bunong) (Bunong:ឞូន៝ង) belongs to the Mon–Khmer language family. It is spoken by the different groups of Mnong in Vietnam and a Mnong group in Cambodia.
In Vietnam, Mnong is spoken in the districts of Đăk Song, Đăk Mil, Đăk R'Lấp, Krông Nô, Gia Nghĩa, and other nearby locations in Đắk Nông Province (Nguyễn & Trương 2009).
According to Ethnologue, four major dialects exist: Central, Eastern and Southern Mnong (all spoken in Vietnam), and Kraol (spoken in Cambodia). Within a dialect group, members do not understand other dialects. The Mnong language was studied first by the linguist Richard Phillips in the early 1970s.
Lê, et al. (2014:234-235) lists the following subgroups of Mnong and their respective locations.
Other minor Mnong ethnic groups include the Mnông Rơ Đe, Mnông R’Ông, and Mnông K’Ziêng.
Nguyễn & Trương (2009) cover the following M'Nông dialects.
The following comparative numerals from various Mnong dialects are from Nguyễn & Trương (2009).