Papers by James C Wamsley
Journal of South Asian Languages and Linguistics, 2020
The Kuki-Chin group of the Tibeto-Burman language family consists of upwards of 50 languages spok... more The Kuki-Chin group of the Tibeto-Burman language family consists of upwards of 50 languages spoken mainly in western Myanmar, predominantly in Chin State and in neighboring areas of India and Bangladesh (Simons & Fennig (eds.). 2019. Ethnologue: Languages of the world, 21st edn. Dallas Texas: SIL International. Online version. http://www.ethnologue.com/). In the many daughter languages of Proto–Kuki-Chin, syllable structure simplification has yielded a synchronic situation in which individual languages are spread along a cline ranging from more conservative languages, some with complex onsets and vowel length distinctions, to more innovative languages, some with no coda consonants at all. The distribution and phonetic realization of these features vary across the Kuki-Chin group, raising a number of relevant questions about the underlying phonological representations of the Kuki-Chin syllable. This paper surveys representative structures from a variety of Kuki-Chin languages in ord...
Bookmarks Related papers MentionsView impact
Proceedings of the Workshop on Computational Methods for Endangered Languages, 2019
In this paper, we discuss our efforts to build a corpus for Laiholh, also called Hakha Chin. Laih... more In this paper, we discuss our efforts to build a corpus for Laiholh, also called Hakha Chin. Laiholh is spoken in Chin State in Western Myanmar, in parts of India and Bangladesh, and in several Burmese refugee communities in the US. Indiana, for example, is home to about 25,000 Burmese refugees. The ultimate goal of our team is to contribute to the development of speech translation technology that will be of benefit, both in general and in the local community in Indianapolis. Translation tools would be of great use in local emergency rooms, schools, and businesses. In pursuing our (admittedly lofty) goals, we are building a growing community of speakers, field linguists, computational linguists, and computer scientists. As a team, we have worked to share our different skill sets and mobilize the wider community around collecting data via Mozilla’s Common Voice platform. We present here a reflection on the project thus far, the kind of description we wish had existed when we were fir...
Bookmarks Related papers MentionsView impact
Linguists often reference the contextual features of an individual’s speech to investigate the wa... more Linguists often reference the contextual features of an individual’s speech to investigate the ways in which they represent their identity. Previous research on the links between language and gender has found that differences in the speech of men and women primarily manifest themselves in terms of pragmatics as opposed to phonological features or the lexicon. Sentence-final particles are non-obligatory particles which are appended to the end of sentences to convey extra pragmatic information. Research on sentence-final particles in Japanese (Uyeno 1971) and Cantonese (Chan 1999) has found correlations between the gender identity of the speaker and their usage of sentence-final particles. This study uses data from four men and four women to examine the ways that sentence-final particles are utilized by native speakers of Mandarin Chinese. The results of this study show that overall, men and women use sentence-final particles at a comparable rate. However, the two groups differ in tha...
Bookmarks Related papers MentionsView impact
Indiana Working Papers in South Asian Languages and Cultures
This paper presents a preliminary 100-item Swadesh word list for Hnaring Lutuv. Lutuv or Lautu(IS... more This paper presents a preliminary 100-item Swadesh word list for Hnaring Lutuv. Lutuv or Lautu(ISO 639-3 CLT) belongs to the Maraic branch of Kuki-Chin within the Tibeto-Burman language family (Eberhard et. al, 2019). Hnaring is a Lutuv village in the southern part of the Lutuv-speaking area in Thantlang Township, Chin State, Myanmar The word list comes from the intuitions of our co-author Sui Hnem Par,a 21-year-old native speaker born Near Mandalay of Lutuv parents (both from Hnaring), who lived for some of her childhood in Hnaring before moving to the US.
Bookmarks Related papers MentionsView impact
Indiana Working Papers in Southeast Asian Languages and Cultures, 2019
Demonstratives are versatile grammatical morphemes that perform semantic and pragmatic functions ... more Demonstratives are versatile grammatical morphemes that perform semantic and pragmatic functions related to spatial deixis, definiteness, familiarity, narratives, discourse, and anaphora. This paper looks at the demonstrative class in Hakha Chin, a Kuki-Chin language in the Tibeto-Burman family. Hakha Chin demonstratives exhibit several remarkable features, such as their ability to appear in prenominal, postnominal, and circumnominal positions (in which they appear concurrently in prenominal and postnominal positions). This analysis also examines Hakha Chin demonstrative morphosyntax as it relates to other elements in the noun phrase structure, such as case marking, numerals, classifiers, and adjectives. The paper also touches on the relationship between demonstratives and the expression of definiteness and familiarity in Hakha Chin, finding that bare nouns can be interpreted as either definite or indefinite and that there is a dedicated familiarity morpheme kha. The findings of this paper offer several questions for future research on the syntactic structure of Hakha Chin nominal phrases and their semantic interpretations.
Bookmarks Related papers MentionsView impact
Uploads
Papers by James C Wamsley