Sui language


The Sui language is a Kam–Sui language spoken by the Sui people of Guizhou province in China. According to Ethnologue, it was spoken by around 300,000 people in 2007. Sui is also unique for its rich inventory of consonants, with the Sandong dialect having as many as 70 consonants. The language also has its own script, known as "Shuishu" in Chinese, which is used for ritual purposes.
Some regionally atypical features of the Sui language include voiceless nasals, palatal stops, postvelar stops, prenasalized stops, and pre-glottalized stops and nasals.

Dialects

China

The Sui language is divided into three dialects with minor differences.
In Guangxi, Sui is spoken by about 7,000 people in Hechi and 1,900 in Nandan County.
However, proposes that the Sandong dialect is divided further into two more subdialects, Central and Southern. Southern Sui speakers are also culturally distinguished by their celebration of the Maox festival instead of the Dwac festival, which is celebrated by all other Sui groups. Below are some villages representative of Central and Southern Sui. Castro & Pan add two more dialects to the Sandong cluster, namely Eastern and Western.
Castro & Pan consider Sandong to consist of four subdialects, namely Eastern, Western, Central, and Southern, giving the following datapoints.
Using computational phylogenetics, Castro & Pan classify the Sui dialects as follows. Pandong was the first branch to split off from Proto-Sui, followed by Yang'an and then Sandong. Within Sandong, the Southern dialect is the most divergent.
Sui is also spoken in Hồng Quang Village, Chiêm Hoá District, Tuyên Quang Province. In Vietnam, the Sui are known as Thủy, but are officially classified with the Pà Thẻn people. The Sui numbered only 55 people as of the 1982 Vietnamese census, and numbered about 100 people as of 2001. Since Pa-Hng and Tày are also spoken in Hồng Quang Village, many Sui are also fluent in those two languages.
The elderly Sui people of Hồng Quang claim that 8 Sui families had migrated to Vietnam from China 100 to 200 years ago, 2 of which have now already assimilated into other ethnic groups. Edmondson & Gregerson have found that the Sui dialect of Hồng Quang is most similar to the Sandong 三洞 dialect of Sui as spoken in Shǔilóng 水龙, Sandu Shui Autonomous County, Guizhou, China.

Phonology

Sui has seven vowels,. Diphthongs are. There are six or seven tones, reduced to two in checked syllables. The tones of the Sandu Sui Autonomous County, Guizhou, listed by conventional tone numbers, are:
The alternate checked tone 7 is found on the long vowel. Tone 8 is somewhat variable on a long vowel, appearing in different locations either higher or lower than the short allophone, but always falling, as in tones 2 and 4.
In some villages, tone 6 is two phonemes, in native words and in Chinese loanwords. In the village of Ngam, Libo county, tone 1 is low, the others as above.
Consonants in parentheses were reported by the 1956 dialectology study Shuiyu diaocha baogao, but not in Li Fang Kuei's 1942 research in Libo County.
The laminal postalveolar affricates are not palatalized like the Mandarin postalveolars,. is classed as a labial because it can be followed by a glide. The prenasalized stops have very short nasalization. The voiceless nasals are actually voiced at the end, as most voiceless nasals are around the world. The preglottalized stops are truly preglottalized, not ejective or creaky voiced. The gammas have been described as fricatives, but here have been placed in the approximant row because of the preglottalized phone and the frequent ambiguity between dorsal fricatives and approximants.
In several locations in the Sandu Sui Autonomous County, the preglottalized consonants and the voiceless sonorants do not exist, having merged with the other consonants.
Syllable structure is CjVCT, where /j/ may follow one of the labial or coronal consonants, other than and the affricates. All syllables start with a consonant, unless initial is analyzed as phonetic detail of an initial vowel. The final C is one of. Final plosives are both unphonated and are unreleased; the coronal is apical alveolar:. They reduce the tonic possibilities to two, "tones" 7 or 8.

Script

The Sui script is a logographic writing system with some pictographic characters that can be used to write the Sui language. However, traditionally only shamans were familiar with the writing system, and it is not utilized for everyday use by ordinary Sui people. This system is used for geomancy and divination purposes. There are at least 500 different Sui characters, known as le1 sui3 in the Sui language. According to tradition, these characters were created by ljok8 to2 qong5''. Some of these characters are pictoral representations, such as of a bird or a fish, and a few are schematic representations of a characteristic quality, such a snail represented by a drawing of an inward curving spiral. Many of these characters appear to be borrowings from Chinese characters and are written backwards, apparently for increased supernatural power. Today, the Sui people use written Chinese for their daily activities.
The Sui script is in acute danger of extinction, although the Chinese government is currently attempting to preserve it. In 2006, Shuishu was placed on the Chinese intangible cultural heritage list. In 2018, discussion on Shuishu integration into Unicode were ongoing.