The Bai Language: A Musical Language with Typological Ablative Cases

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DOI: 10.4236/jss.2015.312020    2,486 Downloads   3,400 Views  Citations
Author(s)
Suqin Li1,2*

ABSTRACT

The Bai language (shortened as Bai henceforth) is of Sino-Tibetan language family, used in southwest China. Typological ablative cases are found in Bai that the word-building in some dialects follows a few archaic analytical rules, including the formation of its pronoun system, its antonymic verbs and adverbs, and the formation of its tetra-syllabic phrases, etc. The most particular feature is that the morphological change in the antonymic verbs realizes the grammatical function. The archaic formations may be remnants of Yi-Burman proto language, which needs historical studies in terms of language evolution. However, the pivotal motivation, we believe, is the need to be a musical language in satisfying the various needs to transmit the ethnic culture orally, and this need is the critical stimulus to make it keep the inflective changes.

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Li, S. (2015) The Bai Language: A Musical Language with Typological Ablative Cases. Open Journal of Social Sciences, 3, 183-189. doi: 10.4236/jss.2015.312020.

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