Classifiers in Mising

Title
Classifiers in Mising
Publication Date
2012
Author(s)
Doley, Sarat Kumar
Post, Mark
Editor
Editor(s): Gwendolyn Hyslop, Stephen Morey, Mark Post
Type of document
Book Chapter
Language
en
Entity Type
Publication
Publisher
Foundation Books
Place of publication
New Delhi, India
Edition
1
DOI
10.1017/UPO9789382264521.014
UNE publication id
une:15570
Abstract
Mising is an under described language from the Eastern Tani branch of the Tani subgroup of Tibeto-Burman (Figure 1). It is currently spoken by approximately 587,310 Mising tribes people living primarily in eight districts of upper Assam, namely Tinsukia, Dibrugarh, Sibsagar, Jorhat, Golaghat, Dhemaji, Lakhimpur, and Sonitpur (Census of India 2001). There are at least nine regional varieties of Missing: Pagro, Dalu, Ojan, Saajay, Moojiy, Dambug, Samuguria, Tamargoja, and Bojkual, of which the last three groups have largely adopted Assamese (an Indo-Aryan language) in preference to Mising for the majority of language situations. Mising is a synthetic and agglutinating language with extensive verb morphology (suffixes), as is typical of the Tani languages. Unlike most other Tani languages, most if not all varieties of Mising appear to lack tone as a contrastive lexical feature.
Link
Citation
North East Indian Linguistics, v.4, p. 243-266
ISBN
9789382264521
9788175969308
Start page
243
End page
266

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