Wa language

Wa
Va, Vo, Awa
Spoken in Burma, China
Ethnicity Va
Native speakers 1.3 million  (2000)
Language family
Language codes
ISO 639-3 variously:
prk – Parauk
wbm – Vo
vwa – Awa

Wa (Va) is the language of the Wa people of Burma and China. There are three distinct varieties, sometimes considered separate languages; their names in Ethnologue are Parauk, the majority and standard form; Vo (40,000 speakers), and Awa (100,000 speakers), though all may be called Wa, Awa, Va, Vo.

In Wa, there are nine vowels: i, e, ɛ, a, ɯ, u, ɤ, o, ɔ. All of these vowels can be tense or lax. Tenseness is a phonemic feature in syllables with unaspirated initials.[1]

There are diphthongs and triphthongs. The general syllabic structure of Wa is C(C)(V)V(V)(C). Only a few words have zero-initials.[1]

The standard Wa is a non-tonal language. However, there are dialects which are tonal. There is correspondence between tones in tonal dialects and tenseness in non-tonal dialects.[1]

References

  1. ^ a b c "佤语研究", edited by 王敬骝.