Abstract
The Miao language is spoken in southwest China and adjacent countries by some 10 million people. This article focuses on the treatment of Chinese loanwords in the Hmu dialect of Miao. In the 1950s, the script earlier used by missionaries was replaced by a Latin-based script. In 1956, a written form for Hmu was elaborated, with detailed prescriptions for the spelling of Chinese loanwords. After 1949, the amount of Chinese loanwords in Hmu increased drastically, and by 1959 already reached around one third of the words in the colloquial language. After 1959, the new Hmu script ceased to be used in education; however, in 1981, Hmu writing was reintroduced on a trial basis in primary schools and the spelling of Chinese loanwords was changed in accordance with local Chinese pronunciation. Since the 1980s, the use of Putonghua has spread rapidly in the Hmu communities. The spelling principles for Chinese loanwords have, however, been retained, although an increasing number of Hmu tend to pronounce these words according to the Putonghua standard.
©[2012] by Walter de Gruyter Berlin Boston
Articles in the same Issue
- Masthead
- Introduction
- Contact-induced change in status planning: a case study of Zhuang Putonghua
- Language contact between Uyghur and Chinese in Xinjiang, PRC: Uyghur elements in Xinjiang Putonghua
- Language and power: Tuanjie hua, an Yi-Han mixed language
- The influence of Mandarin Chinese on minority languages in rural southwest China: a sociolinguistic study of tones in contact
- The Mongghul experience: consequences of language policy shortcomings
- Conflicting tendencies in the influence of Putonghua on Hmu (Black Miao): orthography versus changing speech habits
- Language contact as language ideology: the case of Pǔtōnghuà and Bái
- Book review
- Small languages and small language communities 71
Articles in the same Issue
- Masthead
- Introduction
- Contact-induced change in status planning: a case study of Zhuang Putonghua
- Language contact between Uyghur and Chinese in Xinjiang, PRC: Uyghur elements in Xinjiang Putonghua
- Language and power: Tuanjie hua, an Yi-Han mixed language
- The influence of Mandarin Chinese on minority languages in rural southwest China: a sociolinguistic study of tones in contact
- The Mongghul experience: consequences of language policy shortcomings
- Conflicting tendencies in the influence of Putonghua on Hmu (Black Miao): orthography versus changing speech habits
- Language contact as language ideology: the case of Pǔtōnghuà and Bái
- Book review
- Small languages and small language communities 71