-
1
-
2
Analysis of Rime-groups in Northern-Burmish
Published 2024“…Within the large Yipo-Burmic (= Lolo-Burmese) branch of Tibeto-Burman, the Burmese language itself has received the most study. Old Burmese inscriptions, most of which date from the twelfth century, are in volume and antiquity no way comparable to Tibetan, let alone Chinese records, but they still remain the third-most useful set of early documentation for Sino-Tibetan languages, and the reconstruction of Burmese has served as both a model and tool for tracking the early development of many languages in East Asia.…”
Get full text
Journal Article -
3
Review of "A study of Rouruo 柔若语研究"
Published 2024“…With the publication of A study of Rouruo, we now have the first substantial grammar of this Lolo-Burmese language of the Tibeto-Burman family.…”
Get full text
Journal Article -
4
Request strategies in Burmese
Published 2024“…This study investigates request strategies in the Burmese language. The main data come from a questionnaire and are supplemented by observations. …”
Get full text
Journal Article -
5
A comprehensive assessment of ground motions from two 2016 intra-slab earthquakes in Myanmar
Published 2019“…In Myanmar, this was driven by improved telecommunication that has allowed social media such as the Burmese language Facebook portal of the Myanmar Earthquake Committee (MEC) to reach into rural areas from where reports of shaking effects from earthquakes have been previously unavailable. …”
Get full text
Get full text
Journal Article -
6
Problems and progress in Lolo-Burmese: quo vadimus?
Published 2024“…The Lolo-Burmese languages form one of the 7 or 8 primary divisions of the Tibeto-Burman (TB) family. …”
Get full text
Journal Article -
7
Na-khi and Froto-Lolo-Burmese: a preliminary survey
Published 2024“…It has been classified (by Matisoff 1972) as a member of the Mosoid branch of the Loloid group of Lolo-Burmese languages within the Tibeto-Burman stock. The data upon which this preliminary survey is based are exclusively from Rock (1963) who makes a definite distinction between Na-khi and the related Moso.…”
Get full text
Journal Article