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Sino-Tibetan Language Family

Sino-Tibetan Language Family

The Sino-Tibetan language family is one of the largest in the world. It is second only to the Indo-European language family in terms of number of speakers. The family consists of 403 highly differentiated languages with a vast geographical spread, great linguistic complexity, and a long historical record.

As the name itself implies, this family consists of two main branches:

The Sino– part of the name refers to the various Chinese (Sinitic) languages sometimes referred to as dialects. The Chinese (or Sinitic) branch has over 1.3 billion speakers, the largest number of speakers of any language branch in the world.

The Tibeto-Burman part of the name refers to 389 languages spoken over a wide area from the Tibetan plateau in the north to the Malay peninsula in the south, and from northern Pakistan in the west to northeastern Vietnam in the east.

The ancestral Proto-Sino-Tibetan language is thought to have originated somewhere in the Himalayan plateau, the source of the great rivers of East and Southeast Asia, including the Yellow, Yangtze, Mekong, Brahmaputra, and Irrawaddy. Scholars hypothesize that this ancestral language split into Proto-Chinese and Proto-Tibeto-Burman around 4,000 BC.

While the Chinese branch is fairly well established, the Tibeto-Burman branch remains relatively under-explored, and there is no reliable classification for the genetic relationships among its various sub-branches. It is not possible to say exactly how many Tibeto-Burman languages there are, how many of them are separate languages or dialects of one language, or even if there are still languages belonging to that branch which have yet to be discovered and described.
Click here to view the Sino-Tibetan family tree.

The languages in the Chinese branch have a large number of speakers, while languages in the Tibeto-Burman branch include many with a small number of speakers. Over one hundred Tibeto-Burmese languages, all spoken by fewer than 1,000 people, are endangered or on the brink of extinction. Several are already extinct.

The largest languages of the Sino-Tibetan family are listed In the table below, based on Ethnologue.

Chinese branch (14)

Mandarin 874 million China
Wu (Shanghainese) 77 million China
Yue (Cantonese) 71 million China
Min Nan (Taiwanese) 46 million China, Taiwan
Jinyu 45 million China
Xiang 36 million China
Hakka 30 million China
Gan 21 million China
Min Bei 10.3 million China
Ming Dong 9.1 million China
Pu-Xian 2.6 million China
Tibeto-Burman Branch (389)
Bai (3)
Bai Central, Bai Northern, Bai Southern 1.2 million China


Himalayish (144)

Mahakiranti (51)
Magar (3) 500,000 Nepal
Kham (4) 69,500 Nepal
Chepang (3) 44,000 Nepal
Sunwari (2) 29,000 Nepal
Eastern (27) 932,000 Nepal, India
Western (9) 52,000 Nepal
Newari (1) 825,500 Nepal
Lepcha (1) 76,000 India
Bodish (1) 143,000 Bhutan
Dhimal (2) 37,000 Nepal, Darjeeling District of West Bengal, India
Tamangic (15) 1.4 million Nepal
Central (19) 1.99 million China, Nepal, India
Eastern (8) 93,000 Bhutan
Northern (4) 2.3 million China
Southern (12) 362,000 Bhutan, China, Nepal, India
Western (6) 538,000 India, China, Pakistan
Almora (4) 6,600 India
Eastern (2) 21,000 Nepal
Janggali (1) 23,000 Nepal
Kanauri (12) 81,000 Nepal, India

Jingpho-Konyak-Bodo
(25)
Jingpho (3) 940,000 Myanmar, India
Luish (1) 129,000 Myanmar
Bodo (7) 1.6 million India
Garo (2) 582,000 India, Bangladesh
Koch (4) 162,000 India
Konyak (8)
355,000 India, Myanmar

Karen
(20)
Pa’o (1) 561,000 Myanmar
Pwo (4) 1.3 million Myanmar, Thailand
Bghai (5) 77,500 Myanmar
Brek (1) 16,600 Myanmar
Kayah (5) 499,000 Myanmar
Sgaw (3) 1.3 million Myanmar
Central (10) 782,000 India, Myanmar, Bangladesh
Northern (26) 862,00 India, Myanmar
Southern (13) 396,000 India, Myanmar, Bangladesh

Naga
(25)
Angami-Pochuri (9) 467,000 India
Ao (4) 297,000 India
Tangkhul (3) 153,000 India
Zeme (8) 201,000 India
Burmish (14)
Northern (6) 239,000 China, Myanmar
Southern (7) 34.5 million Myanmar
Northern (27) 4.8 million China
Southern (19) 1.3 million China, Laos, Myanmar, Thailand
Naxi (1)
309,000
China
Meitei (1) 1.3 million India
Mikir (2) 603,000 India
Mru (1) 81,000 Bangladesh
Deng (2) 1,000 China
Tani (11) 978,000 India
139,000
China, Myanmar
Qiangic (11) 242,000 China
Gyarong (4) 175,000 China

Tujia
(2)
71,500
China

Status
The following Sino-Tibetan languages enjoy official status.

Mandarin People’s Republic of China, Republic of China (Taiwan), and Singapore
Burmese Myanmar
Tibetan Tibetan Autonomous Region and Tibetan Autonomous Prefectures in People’s Republic of China along with Mandarin.
Dzongka Bhutan
Tamang One of tne official languages of Nepal.

 

Dialects

Sino-Tibetan languages have a complex dialect picture. Much of the difficulty is in deciding whether the varieties are separate languages or dialects of the same language. For instance, some consider varieties of Chinese dialects, while others call them languages. Tibetan has several distinct spoken varieties that are in many instances not mutually comprehensible but that have over the centuries maintained a common literary tradition, much like Chinese. Moreover, the boundaries between Tibetan and certain other Himalayan languages are sometimes unclear. In general, the dialects of central Tibet and nearby areas are considered Tibetan dialects, while other varieties such as Dzongkha, Sikkimese, Sherpa, and Ladakhi, are considered closely-related but separate languages. In practice, however, as with all languages, making a clear distinction between languages versus dialects is extremely difficult.

Structure

Sound system

The sound systems of Sino-Tibetan languages share several common features. On the whole, they have a relatively simple syllabic structure, although Chinese languages generally have a relatively simply syllabic structure, than Tibeto-Burmese languages. There are no consonant clusters, and only a few consonants, mostly nasals, can occur in syllable-final position.

Vowels

Most Sino-Tibetan languages have between six and eight vowels. Many have a contrast between unrounded and rounded front vowels, e.g., /i/ (as in bit) and /y/ (as the second vowel in statue).

Consonants


The consonant systems of Sino-Tibetan languages are characterized by a contrast between unaspirated and aspirated voiceless stops and affricates, e.g., /p – pʰ/, ts – tsʰ/.

Tones

Many Sino-Tibetan languages are tonal. The number of tones varies from language to language. There are two tones in Tibetan, three tones in Burmese, four in Mandarin Chinese, and up to nine in Cantonese. There are also many non-tonal Tibeto-Burmese languages.

Grammar

Chinese branch

Tibeto-Burman branch

Vocabulary

Chinese branch

Most Chinese words are made up of one or two morphemes. The most common morphological devices in Chinese is use of compounds and derivational morphemes. Chinese tends not to borrow words from other languages. Instead, it uses native elements to create words for expressing new concepts, e.g., telephone is dyàn-huà ‘electricity + speech,’ airplane is fēi-jī ‘fly + machine,’ radio is shòu-yīn-jī ‘receive + sound + machine.’

Tibeto-Burmese branch

The majority of Burmese vocabulary is of Tibeto-Burmese stock. Different languages show different influences, depending on the country in which they are spoken and their history. For instance, Burmese has been influenced by Pali, English, and Mon, and to a lesser extent, by Chinese. Dungan has many Russian loanwords. Bodo has borrowed words from Assamese. Garo has many Bengali loanwords.

Writing

Sino-Tibetan languages are written with a variety of scripts. Below are some examples.

Chinese Characters
Burmese Myanmar script
Tibetan Tibetan script
Lepcha Lepcha script
Newar Ranjana script x

Difficulty

Language Difficulty
How difficult is it to learn Sino-Tibetan languages?
Mandarin and Cantonesebelong to Category III, Burmese belongs to Category II in terms of difficulty for speakers of English. No data is available for the other languages.