Sino-Tibetan languages facts for kids
Quick facts for kids Sino-Tibetan |
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Geographic distribution: |
East Asia |
Linguistic classification: | One of the world's major language families. |
Subdivisions: | |
ISO 639-2 and 639-5: | sit |
Sino-Tibetan languages
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The Sino-Tibetan languages form a language family composed of, at least, the Chinese and the Tibeto-Burman languages, including some 250 languages of East Asia. They are second only to the Indo-European languages in terms of their number of speakers.
Validity
A few scholars, most prominently Christopher Beckwith and Roy Andrew Miller, argue that Chinese is not related to Tibeto-Burman. They point to an absence of regular sound correspondences, an absence of reconstructable shared morphology, and evidence that much shared lexical material has been borrowed from Chinese into Tibeto-Burman. In opposition to this view, scholars in favor of the Sino-Tibetan hypothesis such as W. South Coblin, Graham Thurgood, James Matisoff, and Gong Hwang-cherng have argued that there are regular correspondences in sounds as well as in grammar.
Images for kids
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Old Tibetan text found at Turfan
See also
In Spanish: Lenguas sino-tibetanas para niños