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词条 Sak language
释义

  1. Geographical distribution

  2. Further reading

  3. References

  4. External links

{{Infobox language
|name=Sak
|altname=Cak
|states=Myanmar, Bangladesh
|region=Northwestern Rakhine State
|ethnicity=Chak
|speakers={{sigfig|43,000|1}}
|date=2007
|ref=e18
|familycolor=Sino-Tibetan
|fam2=Sal
|fam3=Jingpho–Luish
|fam4=Luish
|iso3=ckh
|glotto=sakk1239
|glottorefname=Luish
}}

Sak (also known as Cak, Chak, or Tsak) is a Sino-Tibetan language of the Sal branch spoken in Bangladesh and Myanmar.

Geographical distribution

Cak is spoken in Bangladesh by about 3,000 people and in Rakhine State, Burma by about 1,000 people according to Ethnologue. In Bangladesh, Cak is spoken in Baishari, Naikhyongchari, and

Dochari (Huziwara 2018). In Rakhine State, Burma, Sak is spoken in Maungdaw, Buthidaung, Rathedaung, and Mrauk U townships (Huziwara 2018). The Baishari dialect is the most conservative one (Huziwara 2018).[1]

According to Ethnologue, in Bangladesh, Chak is spoken in 14 villages in:

  • Chittagong Division: Baishari, Bandarban, Bishar Chokpra
  • south Naikhongchari area in the Arakan Blue Mountains

Further reading

  • Benedict, P. K. (1939). Semantic differentiation in Indo-Chinese. Harvard Journal of Asiatic Studies, 4(3/4), 213-229. Retrieved February 12, 2016 {{jstor|2717775}}
  • Driem, G. V. (1993). The proto-Tibeto-Burman verbal agreement system. Bulletin of the School of Oriental and African Studies, 56(2), 292-334. Retrieved February 12, 2016 {{jstor|619904}}
  • Glottolog 2.7 - Sak. (n.d.). Retrieved February 12, 2016  
  • Grierson, G. (1921). Kadu and its relatives. Bulletin of the School of Oriental Studies, 2(1), 39-41. Retrieved February 12, 2016 {{jstor|607735}}
  • Huziwara, Keisuke. 2002. “Chakku-go no onsei ni kansuru koosatu” [A phonetic analysis of Cak]. Kyoto University Linguistic Research [Kyooto Daigaku Gengogaku Kenkyuu] 21:217–73.
  • Huziwara, Keisuke. 2008. Chakku-go no kizyutu gengogakuteki kenkyuu [A descriptive linguistic study of the Cak language]. Doctoral dissertation, Kyoto University. lix + 942 pp.
  • Huziwara, K. (2008). Cak numerals. The Dhaka University Journal of Linguistics, 1(2), 1-10. Retrieved February 12, 2016,  
  • Huziwara, Keisuke. 2010. “Cak prefixes.” In Dai Zhongming and James A. Matisoff, eds., Zang-Mian-yu yanjiu sishi nian [Forty Years of Sino-Tibetan Studies], pp. 130–45. Harbin: Heilongjiang University Press.
  • Shafer, R. (1940). The vocalism of Sino-Tibetan. Journal of the American Oriental Society, 60(3), 302-337. Retrieved February 12, 2016, {{jstor|594419}}
  • Thurgood, G., & LaPolla, R. J. (2003). The Sino-Tibetan languages.
  • Voegelin, C. F., & Voegelin, F. M. (1965). Languages of the world: Sino-Tibetan fascicle five. Anthropological Linguistics, 7(6), 1-58. Retrieved February 12, 2016 {{jstor|30022507}}

References

1. ^Huziwara, Keisuke (2018). Varieties of Cak dialects. Paper presented at the 28th Annual Meeting of the Southeast Asian Linguistics Society, held May 17-19, 2018 in Kaohsiung, Taiwan.

External links

  • Samples of Spoken Sak/Chak from a Missionary Project
{{Languages of Burma}}{{Languages of Bangladesh}}{{Sal languages}}

2 : Sal languages|Languages of Myanmar

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