Do the Buyi have their own language, there are those for example

Updated on tourism 2024-03-06
6 answers
  1. Anonymous users2024-02-06

    Yes, there are still words that are just like oracle bones that can't be understood.

  2. Anonymous users2024-02-05

    Bouyei language is the language of the Buyi ethnic group, one of the ethnic minorities in China, which belongs to the Taiwanese branch of the Dongtai language family, which is what Chinese scholars call the Zhuangdai branch of the Zhuang-Dong language family. Buyi is actually the same language as the northern dialect of Zhuang.

    The Buyi language in Guizhou Province can be roughly divided into three native languages according to its phonetic characteristics: the first native language, also known as the native language of southern Qiannan, has the largest number of speakers, mainly distributed in the southern Guizhou Buyi and Miao Autonomous Prefecture, and can directly communicate with the Guibian Tu language and the Guibei Tu language of the northern dialect of Guangxi Zhuang language; The second Tu language, also known as the Tu language of Qianzhong, is spoken by the second population, mainly distributed in the Buyi and Miao ethnic groups in southern Qiannan.

    Bouyi broadcast.

    The suburbs of Zhizhou and Guiyang can directly communicate with the first Tuyu area, and are also very close to the Zhuang dialect in northern Guangxi; The third native language, also known as Qianxi native language, is the least spoken by the population, mainly distributed in Zhenning, Guanling, Ziyun, Qinglong, Pu'an, Liuzhi, Panxian, Shuicheng, Bijie and Weining in Guizhou Province.

    The linguistic characteristics of the Buyi language are largely the same as those of other languages of this branch. Monosyllabic words predominate. Word order and imaginary words are the main means of expressing grammatical meaning.

    From the perspective of language family, the initials of Buyi language are simplified and merged faster than other languages of the same language family. Buyi sentences can be analyzed from one, two, or multiple layers of phrases.

    The Buyi language absorbed some modern Chinese loanwords from the southwestern official dialect (mainly Kungui and Qianxinan).

    The current Buyi script was developed between 1981 and 1985 after abandoning the policy of the Buzhuang Script Alliance. It is based on the Fuxing Town dialect of Wangmo County, which is more concentrated and more representative of the Buyi nationality (belonging to the first Tuyu area of Buyi language).

  3. Anonymous users2024-02-04

    The Buyi language refers to the language of the Buyi people in Guizhou。The Bouyei language is one of the ethnic minorities in China, and belongs to the Taiwanese branch of the Dongtai language family. Buyi is actually the same language as the northern dialect of Zhuang.

    The linguistic characteristics of the Buyi language are largely the same as those of other languages of this branch. Monosyllabic words predominate. Word order and imaginary words are the main means of expressing grammatical meaning. The Buyi language absorbed some modern Chinese loanwords from the southwestern official dialect (mainly Kungui and Qianxinan).

    Distribution of Buyi languages

    The Buyi language in Guizhou Province can be roughly divided into three local languages according to its phonetic characteristics: the first native language, also known as the southern Qiannan native language, is the most populous, mainly distributed in the southwest of Guizhou, the southern part of the southern Guizhou Buyi and Miao Autonomous Prefecture, and some areas in the south of Anshun City. It can be directly spoken with the Guibian Tu and Guibei Tu dialects of the northern dialect of Guangxi Zhuang.

    The second Tu language, also known as the Tu language of Qianzhong, is mainly distributed in the northern part of Qiannan Buyi and Miao Autonomous Prefecture, the northeast of Anshun City, the surrounding area of Guiyang City and the east of Bijie, and can speak directly with the first Tu language area, and is also very close to the Zhuang dialect in northern Guangxi.

    The third native language, also known as the native language of western Qianxi, is spoken by the smallest population, and is mainly distributed in the northern part of Guizhou Southwest Guizhou Buyi and Miao Autonomous Prefecture, Qinglong, Pu'an Erxian County, the central part of Anshun City, the central part of Liupanshui City, Panxian, Shuicheng, and the western part of Bijie. Thirdly, the pronunciation of the native language is relatively positive, just like the nature of Mandarin Chinese.

  4. Anonymous users2024-02-03

    The Buyi Yeliang language is Buyi. The Buyi nationality is an ethnic minority in China, which evolved from the ancient bureaucrats, mainly distributed in Guizhou Songtongkuan, Yunnan, Sichuan and other provinces, the national language is Buyi, and the writing is ancient Buyi and Latin neo-Buyi.

    The Buyi people are mainly agricultural, and their ancestors began to cultivate rice very early, and they are known as the "rice nation".

    The Buyi ethnic group is mainly distributed in the southwest of China, among which the Buyi ethnic group in Guizhou Province has the largest population, and a small part lives in Vietnam.

    The Buyi people believe in Catholicism, Moism, etc., and the main festival is March.

    March, June and a half, July and a half, full year, etc.

  5. Anonymous users2024-02-02

    The Buyi language spoken by the Buyi people belongs to the Zhuang-Dong language group of the Sino-Tibetan language family, and is actually the same language as the northern dialect of the Zhuang language.

    Due to the long-term cultural contact and exchange between the Buyi and Han ethnic groups, there are many Chinese loanwords in the Buyi vocabulary system. Buyi has a complete phonological system, a rich vocabulary, and an expressive grammatical structure. Although the Buyi people have a large population and live in a wide area, their language is only divided into local languages and there is no difference between dialects within the Buyi people.

    The Buyi language is relatively consistent within the language, with little difference, and can be roughly divided into three Tuyi areas according to the phonetic characteristics.

    The first Turk-speaking area.

    It has the largest number of speakers, mainly distributed in southwest Guizhou Buyi and Miao Autonomous Prefecture and southern Qiannan Buyi and Miao Autonomous Prefecture, and can directly communicate with Guibian Tu and Guibei Tu, which are the northern dialects of Guangxi Zhuang. The standard phonetic point of the Buyi language is the Wangmo Buyi language of the first Tu language region.

    The second Turk-speaking area.

    The second most speaker, mainly distributed in the suburbs of Qiannan Buyi and Miao Autonomous Prefecture and Guiyang, can directly communicate with the first Tuyu area, and is also very close to the Zhuang dialect in northern Guangxi.

    The third Turk-speaking area.

    The population is the least spoken, mainly distributed in Zhenning, Guanling, Ziyun, Qinglong, Pu'an, Liuzhi, Panxian, Shuicheng, Bijie and Weining in Guizhou Province.

    In 2012, during the "March 3rd" Cultural Festival of the Wangmo Buyi Nationality, experts and scholars of the Buyi and Zhuang ethnic groups reached a "Wangmo Consensus" and decided to work together to open the "Buyi Zhuang Satellite Channel" to protect and inherit the precious mother tongue culture shared by the two ethnic groups.

  6. Anonymous users2024-02-01

    Are the Zhuang people in the northern part of Guangxi - the Hechi region really Zhuang? As a local Zhuang people, I deeply doubt that we should be Buyi; Or is there some kind of blood relationship between the Buyi and the Zhuang in modern times? From a linguistic point of view:

    1. Our local Zhuang dialect, a sentence that has been handed down from generation to generation: "We are cloth people", although the pronunciation of "cloth cloth people" is somewhat different from "Buyi people", but it is very similar.

    2. Our local Zhuang dialect has almost no similarities with the Zhuang dialect in southern Guinan, and there are few similarities; However, our Zhuang dialect is the same as the Buyi language.

    Putting aside the existing ethnic registration records, do we belong to the Zhuang in the south or the Buyi in the north? We ask for a re-study from the perspectives of geography, history, language evolution, and ethnicity.

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