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The fifteen Katuic languages form a branch of the Austroasiatic languages spoken by about 1.5 million people in Southeast Asia. People who speak Katuic languages are called the . Paul Sidwell is the leading specialist on the Katuic languages . He notes that Austroasiatic/Mon–Khmer languages are lexically more similar to Katuic and Bahnaric the closer they are geographically. He says this geographic similarity is independent of which branch of the family each language belongs to. He also says Katuic and Bahnaric do not have any shared innovations, so they do not form a single branch of the Austroasiatic family, but form separate branches.


Classification
In 1966, a lexicostatistical analysis of various Austroasiatic languages in Mainland Southeast Asia was performed by Summer Institute of Linguistics linguists David Thomas and Richard Phillips. This study resulted in the recognition of two distinct new subbranches of Austroasiatic, namely Katuic and Bahnaric (Sidwell 2009). Sidwell (2005) casts doubt on Diffloth's Vieto-Katuic hypothesis, saying that the evidence is ambiguous, and that it is not clear where Katuic belongs in the family. Sufficient data for use in the sub-classification of the Katuic languages only become available after the opening of to foreign researchers in the 1990s.


Sidwell (2005)
The sub-classification of Katuic below was proposed by Sidwell (2005). Additionally, Sidwell (2009) analyzes the Katu branch as the most conservative subgroup of Katuic.


Gehrmann (2019)
Gehrmann (2019)Gehrmann, Ryan. 2019. On the Origin of Rime Laryngealization in Ta’oiq: A Case Study in Vowel Height Conditioned Phonation Contrasts. Paper presented at the 8th International Conference on Austroasiatic Linguistics (ICAAL 8), Chiang Mai, Thailand, August 29–31, 2019. proposes the following classification of the Katuic languages.
Proto-Katuic
  • Proto-West Katuic
  • Proto-Pacoh-Ta'oi
    • Ta'oi languages

Ethnologue also lists Kassang (the ), but that is a Bahnaric language (Sidwell 2003). Lê, et al. (2014:294)Lê Bá Thảo, Hoàng Ma, et al.; Viện hàn lâm khoa học xã hội Việt Nam - Viện dân tộc học. 2014. Các dân tộc ít người ở Việt Nam: các tỉnh phía nam. Ha Noi: Nhà xuất bản khoa học xã hội. reports a Katu subgroup called Ba-hi living in mountainous areas of Phong Điền District, Vietnam, but Watson (1996:197)Watson, Richard L. 1996. Why three phonologies for Pacoh? Mon-Khmer Studies 26: 197-205 speaks of "Pacoh Pahi" as a variety.

Kuy and Bru each have around half a million speakers, while the Ta’Oi cluster has around 200,000 speakers.


Proto-language
Reconstructions of Proto-Katuic, or its sub-branches, include:
  • Thomas (1967): A Phonology Reconstruction of Proto-East-Katuic
  • Diffloth (1982): Registres, devoisement, timbres vocaliques: leur histoire en katouique
  • Efinov (1983): Problemy fonologicheskoj rekonstrukcii proto-katuicheskogo jazyka
  • Peiros (1996): Katuic Comparative Dictionary
  • Therapahan L-Thongkum (2001): Languages of the Tribes in Xekong Province, Southern Laos
  • Paul Sidwell (2005): The Katuic languages: classification, reconstruction and comparative lexicon

Sidwell (2005) reconstructs the consonant inventory of proto-Katuic as follows:

This is identical to reconstructions of proto-Austroasiatic except for , which is better preserved in the Katuic languages than in other branches of Austro-Asiatic, and which Sidwell believes was also present in Proto-Mon Khmer.


Lexical isoglosses
(2015:185–186)Sidwell, Paul. 2015. "Austroasiatic classification." In Jenny, Mathias and Paul Sidwell, eds (2015). The Handbook of Austroasiatic Languages. Leiden: Brill. lists the following lexical innovations unique to Katuic that had replaced original Proto-Austroasiatic forms.

*kdɔːr
*cnam
*ɟaːt
*psit
*cʔaːŋ
*tpraw
*thaːm
*b/ɓuːk; *kuːj

Sidwell (2015:173) lists the following lexical shared between Katuic and Bahnaric.

*kɗuh
cf. kiəh 'to scratch'
*ʔəkaːr
may be borrowed from
cf. Proto- *cʔɔːŋ
cf. Old pnaɲ 'army'
*-paːŋ

Furthermore, (1992)Diffloth, Gérard. 1992. " Vietnamese As a Mon-Khmer Language." In Papers from the First Annual Meeting of the Southeast Asian Linguistics Society, edited by Martha Ratliff and Eric Schiller. 125-139. Arizona State University, Program for Southeast Asian Studies. lists the words 'centipede', 'bone', 'to cough', 'to fart', 'to breathe', and 'blood' as shared between Katuic and . A Vieto-Katuic connection has also been proposed by Alves (2005).Alves, Mark. 2005. " The Vieto-Katuic Hypothesis: Lexical Evidence." In SEALS XV: Papers from the 15th Annual Meeting of the Southeast Asian Linguistics Society 2003, edited by Paul Sidwell. 169-176. Pacific Linguistics, Research School of Pacific and Asian Studies, The Australian National University.


See also
  • (Wiktionary)


Further reading


External links

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