A discussion of Qiang bilingualism - with concurrent comments on the influence of Chinese on the Qiang language

Among all the ethnic groups living within China's borders, the Qiang (羌) have one of the longest histories. As early as the Yin-Shang (殷商) dynasty, inscriptions on bones and tortoise shells refer to the activities of the Qiang people. During the Zhou-Qin (周秦) dynastic period the Qiang resided a...

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Main Author: Sun, Hongkai
Other Authors: Chinese Academy of Social Sciences, Minority Language Institute, Beijing
Format: Journal Article
Language:English
Published: 2024
Subjects:
Online Access:https://hdl.handle.net/10356/178009
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author Sun, Hongkai
author2 Chinese Academy of Social Sciences, Minority Language Institute, Beijing
author_facet Chinese Academy of Social Sciences, Minority Language Institute, Beijing
Sun, Hongkai
author_sort Sun, Hongkai
collection NTU
description Among all the ethnic groups living within China's borders, the Qiang (羌) have one of the longest histories. As early as the Yin-Shang (殷商) dynasty, inscriptions on bones and tortoise shells refer to the activities of the Qiang people. During the Zhou-Qin (周秦) dynastic period the Qiang resided along the He (Gansu), Huang (Qinghai), Tao (Gansu), and Min (Sichuan) rivers. As the Qin (秦) imperial court grew strong, the majority of the Qiang were compelled to live among the Han-dominated population.
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spelling ntu-10356/1780092024-06-06T08:09:41Z A discussion of Qiang bilingualism - with concurrent comments on the influence of Chinese on the Qiang language Sun, Hongkai Chinese Academy of Social Sciences, Minority Language Institute, Beijing Arts and Humanities Among all the ethnic groups living within China's borders, the Qiang (羌) have one of the longest histories. As early as the Yin-Shang (殷商) dynasty, inscriptions on bones and tortoise shells refer to the activities of the Qiang people. During the Zhou-Qin (周秦) dynastic period the Qiang resided along the He (Gansu), Huang (Qinghai), Tao (Gansu), and Min (Sichuan) rivers. As the Qin (秦) imperial court grew strong, the majority of the Qiang were compelled to live among the Han-dominated population. Published version 2024-06-06T08:09:41Z 2024-06-06T08:09:41Z 2002 Journal Article Sun, H. (2002). A discussion of Qiang bilingualism - with concurrent comments on the influence of Chinese on the Qiang language. Linguistics of the Tibeto-Burman Area, 25(2), 1-25. https://dx.doi.org/10.32655/LTBA.25.2.01 0731-3500 https://hdl.handle.net/10356/178009 10.32655/LTBA.25.2.01 2 25 1 25 en Linguistics of the Tibeto-Burman Area © 2002 The Editor(s). All rights reserved. application/pdf
spellingShingle Arts and Humanities
Sun, Hongkai
A discussion of Qiang bilingualism - with concurrent comments on the influence of Chinese on the Qiang language
title A discussion of Qiang bilingualism - with concurrent comments on the influence of Chinese on the Qiang language
title_full A discussion of Qiang bilingualism - with concurrent comments on the influence of Chinese on the Qiang language
title_fullStr A discussion of Qiang bilingualism - with concurrent comments on the influence of Chinese on the Qiang language
title_full_unstemmed A discussion of Qiang bilingualism - with concurrent comments on the influence of Chinese on the Qiang language
title_short A discussion of Qiang bilingualism - with concurrent comments on the influence of Chinese on the Qiang language
title_sort discussion of qiang bilingualism with concurrent comments on the influence of chinese on the qiang language
topic Arts and Humanities
url https://hdl.handle.net/10356/178009
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