Mizo language

This article is about the official language of Mizoram. For related languages spoken by Mizo peoples, see Mizo people.
Mizo
Lushai
Native to India, Bangladesh, Burma
Region Mizoram, Tripura, Assam, Manipur, Meghalaya, Tahan, Nagaland
Ethnicity Mizo people
Native speakers
690,000  (2001)[1]
Sino-Tibetan
Official status
Official language in
Mizoram (India)
Language codes
ISO 639-2 lus
ISO 639-3 lus
Glottolog lush1249[2]
{{{mapalt}}}

The Mizo language, or Mizo ṭawng, is spoken natively by the Mizo people in the Mizoram state of India, Chin State in Burma, and the Chittagong Hill Tracts of Bangladesh. The language is also known as Lushai, a colonial term, as the Lushei people were the first to have external exposure. Though still common, Lushai (or Lusei, or Lushei) is considered incorrect by the Mizo themselves.[3] Much poetic language is derived from Pawi, Paite, and Hmar, and most known ancient poems considered to be in the Mizo language are actually in Pawi.[4]

History

The Mizo language belongs to the Kukish branch of the Sino-Tibetan language family. The numerous clans of the Mizo had respective dialects, amongst which the Lushei (Lusei, by Mizo themselves) dialect was most common, and which subsequently became the Mizo language and the lingua franca of the Kuki peoples due to its extensive and exclusive use by the Christian missionaries.

Writing system

Christian missionaries[5] started developing an alphabet for the language by adapting the Hunterian system of transliteration. The 25 letters used for writing in Mizo language are:

Letter a aw b ch d e f g ng h i j k
Name  listen  listen  listen  listen  listen  listen  listen  listen  listen  listen  listen  listen  listen
Letter l m n o p r s t u v z
Name  listen  listen  listen  listen  listen  listen  listen  listen  listen  listen  listen  listen

A circumflex ^ was later added to the vowels to indicate long vowels, viz., â, ê, î, ô, û, which were insufficient to fully express Mizo tone. Recently, a leading newspaper in Mizoram, Vanglaini, the magazine Kristian Ṭhalai, and other publishers began using á, à, ä, é, è, ë, í, ì, ï, ó, ò, ú, ù, ü to indicate the long intonations and tones. However, this does not differentiate the different intonations that short tones can have.[6][7]

Relation with other languages

Mizo language is related to the other languages of the Sino-Tibetan family.[8] The Kukish languages (which native Mizo speakers call Zohnahthlâk ṭawngho/Mizo ṭawngho) have a substantial amount of words in common,[9] and Hmar and Mizo language are especially similar; they are close to being mutually intelligible at the spoken level, and they are mostly mutually intelligible at the poetic level.

Mizo and Sino-Tibetan languages

The following table illustrates the similarity between Mizo ṭawng and some other members of the Sino-Tibetan family.[10] The words given are cognates, whose origins could be traced back to the proto-language Proto-Sino-Tibetan (given in the first column of the table).

Proto-Sino-TibetanMizo languageStandard Chinese character (Pīnyīn)Early Middle ChineseOld ChineseWritten TibetanWritten BurmeseBodoTrungEnglish meaning
*tujHtui 水(shuǐ)- - - - døi- Water
*sĭj(H) (? / ś-)thi死 (sǐ)si'sjidshi-basethøiɕidie
*ghāHkhà苦 (kǔ) kʰɔ'khagkhakhâkhákha (salty)Bitter
*sĭŋthing-sinsjinshingsac - - wood/tree
*miǝ̆ŋhming名 (míng)mjiajŋmjingming-muŋ-name
*paHpa 爸 (bà)----afah-father
*rŭk(pa-)ruk六 (liù)luwkljəkwdrugkhrokdohkhlusix
*ŋāH(pa-)nga五 (wǔ)ŋɔ'ngaglngaŋ̩âbapəŋ-ŋàfive
*nă-nang汝 (rǔ)----nøngthou (you)
*nĭjni日 (rì)----shanday/sun
*druaŋchhung (inside)中(zhōng) (middle)ṭüŋ ṭǜŋtruŋ truŋsgźuŋǝtwaŋh-a3-tuŋ1 (middle)
*tī̆kʷtâwk (enough, sufficient)淑 (shú, shū, chù)--sdug (pretty, nice)thǝuk (be worth, have certain value; be lucky)---
*[ph]raṭha-------good
*chēŋ (be blue, green)hring (green)青 (qīng) (green)chieŋshēŋ---
*ch[ē]tsât切 (qiē, qiè)chietshītzed ćhać--to cut
References for the above table:[11][12]

Mizo and Burmese

The following few words suggest that Mizo and the Burmese are of the same family: kun ("to bend"), kam ("bank of a river"), kha ("bitter"), sam ("hair"), mei ("fire"), that ("to kill"), ni ("sun") hnih ("two") li ("four") nga ("five")

Phonology

Vowels

Monophthongs

Mizo language has eight tones and intonations for each of the vowels a, aw, e, i and u, four of which are reduced tones and the other four long tones. The vowel o has only three tones, all of them of the reduced type; it has almost exactly the same sound as the diphthong /oʊ/ found in American English. However, the vowels can be represented as follows:[13]

Front Central Back
Close i [i], [ɨ], [] u [u], [ʊ], [ʊː]
Mid e [e], [ɛ], [ɛː] aw [o], [ɔ], [ɔː]
Open a [ʌ], [a], [ɑ], [ɑː], [ä]

The vowel o has almost exactly the same sound as the diphthong // in American English.

Diphthongs

Starting with aStarting with e Starting with i Starting with u
ai (/aɪ̯/, /ɑːi/ or /ai/) ei (/eɪ̯/, /ɛi/ or /ɛɪ̯/) ia (/ɪə̯/ /ɪa/, /ja/ or /ɪa̭/) ua (/u̯a/ or /ua̭/)
au (/aʊ̯/, /ɑːʊ̯/) eu (/ɛu/, /eʊ/ or /eʊ̯/) iu (/ɪʊ̯/ or /iw/) ui (/ɥi/ or /ʔwi/)

Triphthongs

Mizo ṭawng has the following triphthongs:

Consonants

Mizo has the following consonants.[13] The first symbol is its orthographical form and the second one in IPA.

Labial Dental Alveolar Velar Glottal
central lateral
Plosive voiceless p [p] t [t] k [k] ʔ [ʔ]1
aspirated ph [pʰ] th [tʰ] kh [kʰ]
voiced b [b] d [d]
Affricate voiceless ch [t͡s]
aspirated chh [t͡sʰ], [ʰ]
lateral tl [t͡l]
aspirated lateral thl [t͡lʰ]
flap ṭ [t͡r]
aspirated flap ṭh [t͡rʰ]
Fricative voiceless f [f] s [s] h [h]
voiced v [v] z [z] l [l]
Nasal plain m [m] n [n] ng [ŋ]
aspirated hm [ʰm] hn [ʰn] ngh [ʰŋ]
Liquid plain r [r] l l
aspirated hr [ʰr] hl [ʰl]
glottalized1 rh [rʔ] lh [lʔ]
  1. The glottal and glottalized consonants appear only in final position.

Tone

Mizo is a tonal language, in which differences in pitch and pitch contour can change the meanings of words. Tone systems have developed independently in many of the daughter languages largely through simplifications in the set of possible syllable-final and syllable-initial consonants. Typically, a distinction between voiceless and voiced initial consonants is replaced by a distinction between high and low tone, while falling and rising tones developed from syllable-final h and glottal stop, which themselves often reflect earlier consonants.

The eight tones and intonations that the vowel a (and the vowels aw, e, i, u, and this constitutes all the tones in the Mizo language) can have can be shown by the letter sequence p-a-n-g, as follows:[14]

Sample sentences

The following table illustrates the pronunciations of various consonants, vowels and diphthongs found in Mizo language:

SentencePronunciation
Zạwhtë ka hmùzɒʔ.teː kʌ ʰmuː
Thlàpǔi a ëng tlʰaː.pwi ʔʌ ʔɛːŋ
Tlángah kǎn láwntlaː.ŋʌʔ kʌn loːn
Phengphehlep chi hrang paruk ṭhu chungin ka enpʰeːŋ.pʰɛ.lʰɛp tsi ʰraŋ pʌ.rʊk trʰʊ tsʊ.ŋin kʌ ɛn
Ṭahbelh chu chhunah kan hruai ve lo vang.trʌʔ.bɛlʔ tsʊ tʃuː.nʌʔ kʌn ʰrwai veː loʊ vʌŋ(or lɔ.vʌŋ)
I va berh ve!ʔɪ vʌ berʔ ve:
Khàuphár thạwvẹn vè êm êm rịngawt mai che u hian.kʰauː.pʰaːr tʰɔ.vɛn veː ʔɛːm ʔɛːm ri.ŋɔt mai/mʌj tsɛ ʔʊ hjaːn
Nghakuai kan chiahʰŋa.kua̯ːi kan tsjaʔ
I zuan kai ngam ka ring.ʔi zua̯ːn kaːi ŋam ka riŋ
Hläu miah lovin.ʰlaṷ mjʌʔ lɔ.vin
Kuai tliakkwai tljaːk
I tán liau liaui taːn ljaʊ ljaʊ
I uar a ni lo maw?ʔɪ ʔʊar ʔʌ nɪ loʊ ˈmɔː
Sakeisʌ.ˈkeɪ
Paih darh suhpʌɪʔ dʌrʔ sʊʔ
References and further reading for this section.[15][16][17][18]

Grammar

Main article: Mizo grammar

Mizo contains many analyzable polysyllables, which are polysyllabic units in which the individual syllables have meaning by themselves. In a true monosyllabic language, polysyllables are mostly confined to compound words, such as "lighthouse". The first syllables of compounds tend over time to be de-stressed, and may eventually be reduced to prefixed consonants. The word nuntheihna ("survival") is composed of nung ("to live"), theih ("possible") and na (a nominalizing suffix); likewise, theihna means "possibility". Virtually all polysyllabic morphemes in Mizo can be shown to originate in this way. For example, the disyllabic form bakhwan ("butterfly"), which occurs in one dialect of the Trung (or Dulung) language of Yunnan, is actually a reduced form of the compound blak kwar, found in a closely related dialect. It is reported over 18 of the dialects share about 850 words with the same meaning. For example, ban ("arm"), ke ("leg"), thla ("wing", "month"), lu ("head") and kut ("hand").

Word order

Mizo declarative word order is Object-subject-verb (OSV). For example:

Lehkhabukaziak
bookIwrite

However, even if one says Ka ziak lehkhabu, its meaning is not changed, nor does it become incorrect; the word order becomes Subject-verb-object. But this form is used only in particular situations.

Verbs

Conjugation

The verbs (called thiltih in Mizo)[19] are not conjugated as in languages such as English and French by changing the desinence of words, but the tense (in a sentence) is clarified by the aspect and the addition of some particles, such as[20]

etc.

Modification of verbs

Mizo verbs are often used in the Gerund, and most verbs change desinence in the Gerund; this modification is called tihdanglamna. This modified form is also the past participle. Some verbs which undergo modification are tabulated below:

Mizo verbTihdanglam (modified form)English meaning
ziakziahziak - to write
ziah - writing (g.), written
tâttahtât - to whet (such as a knife)
tah - whetting (g.), whetted
mâkmà - to divorce (said of a man divorcing his wife)
mâk - divorcing (g.), divorced

However, even if the spelling of a verb is not changed, its tone is sometimes changed. For example the verbs tum (to aim), hum (to protect) etc. change tones; the tone is lowered in the modified form. There is a third class of verbs - that of verbs which neither change tone nor are inflected (modified). Examples include hneh (to conquer), hnek (to strike with one's fist).

Modification of words is not restricted to verbs; adjectives, adverbs etc. are also modified.

Nouns

Construction

There is no gender for nouns, and there are no articles. There are some specific suffixes for forming nouns from verbs and adjectives, the most common of which are -na and -zia. The suffix -na is used for forming nouns from both verbs and adjectives, whereas -zia is used specifically for nominalising adjectives. For example,

Declension of nouns

Mizo nouns undergo declension into cases. The main cases can be classified as follows:[21]

CaseDesinenceTone (in pronunciation)Examples
Nominative
Accusative
Genitive
no change -
-
-
1. tui
2. nula
3. hmangaihna
Ergative suffix -in for non-proper nouns, 'n for proper nouns short low pitch for -in 1. tuiin
2. nulain
3. hmangaihnain
Instrumental short high pitch on -in
Locative suffix -ah 1. tuiah
2. nulaah
3. hmangaihnaah

Pluralisation

Nouns are pluralized by suffixing -te, -ho, -teho or -hote, for example:

NounPluralsMeaning
mipamipate
mipaho
mipa - man
mipate/mipaho - men
naupangnaupangte
naupangho
naupang - child
naupangte/-ho - children

Pronouns

Forms

All Mizo pronouns occur in two forms, namely in free form and clitic form:[21]

Free formClitic form
kei(I)ka (I)
keimah (I)[22]
keini (we)kan (we)
keimahni (we)[22]
nang(you, singular)i (you, singular)
nangmah (you)[22]
nangni (you, plural)in (you, plural)
nangmahni (you, plural)[22]
ani (he, she, it)a (he, she, it)
amah (he, she, it)[22]
anni (they)an (they)
anmahni (they)[22]

The free form is mostly used for emphasis, and has to be used in conjunction with either the clitic form or an appropriate pronominal particle, as shown in the following examples:

  1. Kei (=I free form) ka (=I clitic form)lo tel ve kher a ngai em?. This is a somewhat emphatic way of saying Ka lo tel ve kher a ngai em?
  2. Nangni (=you pl., free form) in (you pl., clitic form) zo tawh em? This is a somewhat emphatic way of saying Nangni in zo tawh em?
  3. Ani (he/she) a (s/he) kal ve chuan a ṭha lo vang.

The clitic form is also used as a genitive form of the pronoun.

Declension

Mizo pronouns, like Mizo nouns, are declined into cases as follows:

Pronoun (Nominative case)Genitive caseAccusative caseErgative case
clitic form
kakami, minkeimahin=keima'n
kankanminkeimahni-in=keimahnin
iichenangmahin=nangma'n
ininche unangmahni-in=nangmahnin
aaamahamahin=ama'n
anananmahnianmahni-in=anmahni'n
free form
keikeimakeimah, keimah minkeimahin=keima'n
keimahkeimakeimah, keimah minkeimahin=keima'n
keinikeinikeini, keini minkeini-in=keini'n
keimahnikeimahnikeimahni, keimahni minkeimahni-in=keimahni'n
annianniannianni'n
anmahnianmahnianmahnianmahni-in=anmahni'n

Adjectives

Mizo adjectives (Mizo: hrilhfiahna) follow the nouns they describe, as follows:

1. naupangfel a good child
childgood
2. lehkhabuchhiartlâk a readable book
bookreadable
3.hmasawnnachhenfâkawm sustainable development
developmentsustainable

Negation

For declarative sentences, negation is achieved by adding the particle lo (not) at the end of a sentence. For example

SentenceNegation
Lala a lo kal
Lala is coming/Lala came
Lala a lo kal lo
Lala did not come
Pathumin paruk a sem thei
Three divides six
Pathumin paruk a sem thei lo
Three does not divide six

Also, for words such as engmah (nothing), tumah (nobody) etc., unlike English we have to add the negation particle lo; for example

1. Tumah
nobody
ka
I
hmu
see
lo
not
2. Engmah
nothing
ka
I
rawn keng
bring
lo
not

Thus we have to use double negation for such cases.

Unique parts of speech in Mizo ṭawng

All kinds of Parts of Speech like noun, pronoun, verbs, etc. can be found in Mizo language with some additional unique kinds - post-positions and double adverbs.

Sample texts in Mizo ṭawng

The following is a sample text in Mizo of the Article 1 of the Universal Declaration of Human Rights:[23]

Mizo ṭawngEnglish
Mi zawng zawng hi zalèna piang kan ni a, zahawmna leh dikna chanvoah intluk tlâng vek kan ni. Chhia leh ṭha hriatna fîm neia siam kan nih avangin kan mihring puite chungah inunauna thinlung kan pu tlat tur a ni. All human beings are born free and equal in dignity and rights. They are endowed with reason and conscience. Therefore, they should act towards one another in a spirit of brotherhood.

Some Mizo words and phrases

Mizo ṭawngEnglish
Ka läwm eThank you
I dam em?How are you?
TuiWater
ChâwFood
SanghâFish
ArsâChicken
KhúaVillage/town/city
Day/the sun
ThlàMoon/month
KumYear/age
Ṭhà mâw? (informal)How do you do?
VànSky
BoruakAir
Thlawh(theih)naAeroplane
ṬumhmunAirport
Zinto travel
LeiEarth
Thlà(pui)the moon
ZakhamnaAssurance
Meat
Engtin?/Engtiangin?How?
MangṭhaGood night
Dár engzât nge?What time is it now?
ThingpuiTea
Khaw'nge i kal dáwn?Where are you going?
Dam takin [(u) le]Goodbye/Go in peace
Engtikah?When?
Khawiah?Where?
Eng(nge)?What?
AmaherawhchuHowever

Counting numbers

Mizo ṭawngEnglish
(Pa)khatOne
(Pa)hnihTwo
(Pa)thumThree
(Pa)liFour
(Pa)ngáFive
(Pa)rukSix
(Pa)sarihSeven
(Pa)riatEight
(Pa)kuaNine
SàwmTen
SàwmpakhatEleven
SàwmpakuaNineteen
SawmhnihTwenty
SawmthumThirty
SawmküaNinety
Hundred
ZangáFive hundred
Säng(khat)One thousand
Sïng(khat)Ten thousand
Nûai(khat)Hundred thousand/One lakh in Indian English
MaktadûaiMillion
VaibelchhiaTen million
VaibelchhetakHundred million
TlûklehdingäwnBillion

Mizo literature

Main article: Mizo literature

Books

The Mizo language has a thriving literature with Mizo departments in Mizoram University and Manipur University . The governing body is the Mizo Academy of Letters, which awards the annual literary prize MAL Book of the Year since 1989. The books awarded so far and their authors are tabulated below along with the years:[24]

YearBookAuthorComments on the book
1989Ka LungkhamB. Lalthangliana
1990HmangaihzualiC. LaizawnaNovel
1991Zoram Khawvel-IL. KeivomContemporary Mizo history
1992Ṭhangthar TaitesenaRomawia
1993Mizo LiteratureB. Lalthangliana
1994Kum za Kristian Zofate hmabâkBangalore Mizo Christian Fellowship
1995Ram leh i tan chauhH. Lallungmuana
1996Bible leh ScienceP.C. BiaksiamaCreationism
1997Pasalṭha KhuangcheraLaltluangliana KhiangteDrama
1998AnitaC. LaizawnaNovel
1999Tlawm ve lo Lalnu RopuilianiLalsangzuali SailoMizo history
2000Chawngmawii leh HrangchhuanaR. RozikaNovel
2001Ka khualzin kawngRobuanga
2002Runlum NuthaiL.Z. SailoEulogy
2003Kan Bible hiZairemaTheology
2004ZorinpariH. LalngurlianaNovel
2005Damlai thlipuiLalhriataNovel
2006Pasalṭhate ni hnuhnungC. LalnunchangaHistorical adventure novel
2007Zofate zinkawngah zalenna mei a mit tur a ni loR. ZamawiaFactual description and idealization of Mizo uprising
2008Chun chawi lohLalhriataNovel
2009Rintei zùnléngLalrammawia NgenteNovel
2010Beiseina MittuiSamson ThanrumaNovel
2011Zodinpuii (posthumously awarded)LalchhantluangaNovel
2012SihlipuiRomuanpuii ZadengNovel
2013ThinglubulLalpekkimaNovel

This award is only for books originally written in Mizo and not for translations, and it has been awarded every year since 1989. The award has been given to books on history and religion, but most of the winners are novels. Each year, the academy examines about a hundred books (in 2011, 149 books were examined),[25] out of which it selects the top 20, and then first shortlistling it further to top 10, and then to top 5, then top 3, finally chooses the winner.

The academy also awards lifetime achievement in Mizo literature.

Some of the most well-known Mizo writers include James Dokhuma, Ṭhuamtea Khawlhring, C. Laizawna, C. Lalnunchanga, Vanneihtluanga etc.

Newspaper

The Mizoram Press Information Bureau lists some twenty Mizo daily newspapers just in Aizawl city, as of March 2013.[26] The following list gives some of the most well-known newspapers published in Mizo language.

Name of newspaperPublication frequencyEditorPlace
Vanglaini chanchinbu,[27]DailyK. SapdangaAizawl
Chhawrpial DailyC.LalzamlovaAizawl
Harhna DailyC.VulluaiaAizawl
Khawpui Aw Daily ZaithankhumaAizawl
Thu Thar DailyA.RodinglianaAizawl
Zoram Tlangau DailyL.PachuauAizawl
Lengzem chanchinbuMonthlyVanneihtluangaAizawl
Zoram Thlirtu DailyLalrinmawia Sailo Aizawl
Hruaitu Arsi DailyZosanglianaAizawl
RomeiDailyRobert LalchhuanaAizawl
Zorin DailyLalkungaAizawl
Zalen Daily Vanlalrema VantawlAizawl
Chhinlung DailyVanhnuna Lunglei
HnamdamnaDaily ChawngchhumaLunglei
Lenrual DailyLalhlupuiaChamphai
Chhawkhlei DailyLalhminglianaChamphai
Rihlipui DailyDK LalhruaitluangaChamphai
Pasaltha DailyLalhmingmawia PachuauChamphai
Dumde DailyF. Lalbiakmawia (Fam)Champhai
Chhim Aw DailyBaithaSaiha
Laisuih Daily C.LalhminghluaSerchhip
Lenkawl DailyRemmawia Kawlni Serchhip
Ramlai ArsiDailyLalremruata Ralte Serchhip
Turnipui DailyS.LalhmachhuanaKolasib
Zawlbuk AwDailyHranghmingthangaThenzawl

Most of them are daily newspapers.

Statistics

There are around 700,000 speakers of Mizo language: 674,756 speakers in India (2001 census); 1,041 speakers in Bangladesh (1981 census); 12,500 speakers in Burma (1983 census).

See also

Notes and references

  1. Distribution of the 100 non-scheduled languages
  2. Nordhoff, Sebastian; Hammarström, Harald; Forkel, Robert; Haspelmath, Martin, eds. (2013). "Lushai". Glottolog. Leipzig: Max Planck Institute for Evolutionary Anthropology.
  3. Lalthangliana, B., 'Mizo tihin ṭawng a nei lo' tih kha, see also Matisoff, 'Language names' section
  4. ibid.
  5. Lalthangliana, B.: 2001, History and Culture of Mizo in India, Burma and Bangladesh, Aizawl. "Baptist Missionary Conference, 1892", p. 745
  6. The Mizo Wiktionary uses the additional symbols , ǎ, ȧ, and likewise for the other vowels aw, e, i and u, to differentiate these
  7. See the guide here
  8. Mc Kinnon, John and Wanat Bruksasri (Editors): The Higlangders of Thailand, Kuala Lumpur, Oxford University Press, 1983, p. 65.
  9. Lalthangliana, B., 'Mizo tihin ṭawng a nei lo' tih kha, or
  10. STEDT database.See also
  11. starling.rinet.ru
  12. STEDT Database
  13. 13.0 13.1 Weidert, Alfons, Component Analysis of Lushai Phonology, Amsterdam Studies in the Theory and History of Linguistic Science, Series IV - Current Issues in Linguistic Theory, volume 2, Amsterdam: John Benjamins B.V., 1975.
  14. Zoppen Club, Mizo ṭawng thumal thar
  15. Sarmah, Priyankoo & Caroline Wiltshire, An acoustic study of Mizo tones and morpho-tonology.
  16. Govind, D., Priyankoo Sarmah, S.R. Mahadeva Prasanna, Role of pitch slope and duration in synthesized Mizo tones.
  17. Khoi Lam Thang, A phonological reconstruction of Proto-chin.
  18. Indian Institute of Technology, Guwahati, Workshop on Tone and Intonation: Theory, Typology and Computation.
  19. SCERT, Mizo Grammar, class XI & XII textbook (2002-).
  20. SCERT, Mizo Grammar and Composition, 2002.
  21. 21.0 21.1 Chhangte, Lalnunthangi, The Grammar of Simple Clauses in Mizo
  22. 22.0 22.1 22.2 22.3 22.4 22.5 This form is also used as the accusative
  23. UDHR in Mizo (Unicode Website) or OHCHR Website
  24. vanglaini.org
  25. Vanglaini, April 24, 2012
  26. See the website
  27. "Vanglaini - Mizo Daily Since 1978". vanglaini.org. Retrieved 30 June 2010.

Others:

  1. The Ethnologue, 13th Edition, Barbara F. Grimes, Editor, 1996, Summer Institute of Linguistics, Inc.
  2. K. S. Singh: 1995, People of India-Mizoram, Volume XXXIII, Anthropological Survey of India, Calcutta.
  3. Grierson, G. A. (Ed.) (1904b). Tibeto-Burman Family: Specimens of the Kuki-Chin and Burma Groups, Volume III Part III of Linguistic Survey of India. Office of the Superintendent of Government Printing, Calcutta.
  4. Grierson, G. A: 1995, Languages of North-Eastern India, Gian Publishing House, New Delhi.
  5. Lunghnema, V., Mizo chanchin (B.C. 300 aṭanga 1929 A.D.), 1993.
  6. Zoramdinthara, Dr., Mizo Fiction: Emergence and Development. Ruby Press & Co.(New Delhi). 2013. ISBN 978-93-82395-16-4

External links

Mizo language test of Wikipedia at Wikimedia Incubator