Northern Loloish | |
---|---|
Northern Ngwi Yi |
|
Ethnicity: | Yi people |
Geographic distribution: |
Southern China, Vietnam |
Linguistic classification: |
Sino-Tibetan
|
Glottolog: | None |
The Northern Loloish languages, also known as Northern Ngwi, are a traditional branch of the Loloish languages that includes the literary standard of the Yi people. It has been abandoned in Lama's (2012) classification.
Thurgood & LaPolla (2003) list four Northern Loloish (Northern Yi) languages, with no internal subclassification: Nusu, Nasu, Nosu, Nisu.
The Nisu languages, however, are apparently Southeastern Loloish; Lama (2012) includes Nasu and Nosu and well, leaving only Nusu on its own.
Bradley (1997) also lists the endangered Kathu and Mo'ang languages of Wenshan Prefecture, Yunnan, China as Northern Loloish languages. These two languages had first been documented in the early 1990s by Wu Zili (武自立), a Chinese linguist specializing in Yi (Loloish) languages.
Pelkey (2011:368) lists the following as Northern Ngwi innovations that had developed from Proto-Ngwi.