(Download) "William J. Gedney's Elicitation Questionnaire." by The Journal of the American Oriental Society ~ eBook PDF Kindle ePub Free
eBook details
- Title: William J. Gedney's Elicitation Questionnaire.
- Author : The Journal of the American Oriental Society
- Release Date : January 01, 2004
- Genre: Social Science,Books,Nonfiction,
- Pages : * pages
- Size : 190 KB
Description
William J. Gedney was well known for the accurate and extensive data that he collected in his work on Tai dialects and languages. Unlike some investigators who actually settled in a village to learn and then record a dialect, Gedney worked methodically with a large number of individual informants to elicit data. After his retirement in 1980, he often spoke of publishing the questionnaire he had used for the benefit of other researchers. Part of this questionnaire, that for determining tonal systems, appeared in his 1972 article, "A Checklist for Determining Tones in Tai Dialects." But it was only after his death in 1999 that his original notebooks with the remaining portion of the questionnaire emerged. That questionnaire, along with the one for tonal systems, is presented here. The Tai family of languages extends across Southeast Asia from Assam in the west to the island of Hainan in the east and from Yunnan, Guangxi, and Guangdong in southern China in the north to the Thai-Malay border in the south. Ahom, now an extinct language, was found in Assam, the farthest point west where the Tai languages are spoken. Shan and related dialects occur in Burma and Thailand as well as along the border in Assam and Yunnan. Lue speakers inhabit the Sipsongpanna region in southern Yunnan and in western areas of Laos. In Thailand Siamese (Thai) and closely related dialects cover the area, while Lao and Lao dialects are spoken in northeastern Thailand and Laos. White, Black, and Red Tai along with Yay are spoken in northwest Vietnam, sometimes spilling into Laos, while Tay (Tho) and Nung can be found in northeast Vietnam. In China, Zhuang speakers can be found throughout Guangxi and in border areas of Yunnan and Guangdong. Throughout these areas intermediate varieties of Tai languages also occur, usually identified by place names. And at the farthest point east, in Hainan, there exist a number of languages that appear to be closely related to the Tai family. Following Fang-kuei Li, scholars generally divide this family into three branches: the Northern, the Central, and the Southwestern.