Saek language

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Saek (Sek; Template:Langx) is a Tai language spoken in at least ten villages in Khammouane Province, Laos, and at least four villages in Nakhon Phanom Province in northeastern Thailand, just across the Mekong River. It is spoken by the Saek people.

Phonology

The Saek tones are (Hudak & Gedney 2010):

  • 1 = {{#invoke:IPA|main}} (/34/) mid level, slight rise at the end
  • 2 = {{#invoke:IPA|main}} (/11/) low level
  • 3 = {{#invoke:IPA|main}} (/31ˀ/) falling to low, with glottal constriction
  • 4 = {{#invoke:IPA|main}} (/454/) high peaking
  • 5 = {{#invoke:IPA|main}} (/52/) high falling
  • 6 = {{#invoke:IPA|main}} (/32ˀ/) mid level, with slight fall and glottal constriction

Saek tonal splits are as follows (See Proto-Tai language#Tones for clarification.).

Gedney Diagram: Saek Tones
*A *B *C *DS *DL
Aspirated 2, 1 6 3 4 6
Unaspirated 1 6 3 4 6
Glottalized 1 6 3 4 6
Voiced 4 5 6 6 5

Locations

Saek is spoken in the following locations (Hudak & Gedney 2010:251-252).

Thailand

Two Saek villages are "Ban Asamat" and "Ban Phai Lom," located just off the main river road a few kilometers north of Nakhon Phanom city. Another is Ban Ba Wa Saek, located further upriver, but inland a few kilometers. However, except for the older generation, the Saek language is all but disappearing as there is a strong tendency for younger generations to use the local trade language Lao/Isan, and/or the official Central Thai language as they are assimilated into mainstream Thai society.

William Gedney lists the following Saek villages in Nakhon Phanom Province, Thailand.

  1. Template:Tlit {{#invoke:Lang|lang}} (known locally as Template:Tlit). 5 km north of the city of Nakhon Phanom. This is the variant recorded by William Gedney in his Saek language: glossary, texts, and translations. Variant pronunciations: Template:Tlit (old name; archaic), Template:Tlit, Template:Tlit, Template:Tlit, Template:Tlit, Template:Tlit, Template:Tlit.
  2. Template:Tlit, one mile inland from Template:Tlit. Variant name: Template:Tlit.
  3. Template:Tlit in Si Songkhram District (Template:Tlit). Variant pronunciations: Template:Tlit, Template:Tlit, Template:Tlit.
  4. Template:Tlit in Template:Tlit district. Variant pronunciation: Template:Tlit.

According to Gedney, abandoned Saek villages in Thailand include:

  1. Template:Tlit, between Template:Tlit and the city of Nakhon Phanom.
  2. Template:Tlit, on the road to Sakon Nakhon.

Laos

According to Gedney's texts and notebooks, Saek is spoken in the following locations in Laos.

  1. Template:Tlit
  2. Template:Tlit
  3. Template:Tlit
  4. Template:Tlit - completely occupied by Saek
  5. Template:Tlit - half Lao, half Saek village

Chamberlain (1998) cites the following Saek-speaking villages in Laos. District codes are also given in parentheses (see districts of Laos).

Morev notes that Saek is also spoken in the following districts of Khammouane Province, Laos.

The Saek speakers of Laos live adjacent to Bru and Mène speakers (Chamberlain 1998).

Additional data on Saek of Laos has since been collected by Jean Pacquement (2016, 2017, 2018).<ref>Pacquement, Jean. 2018. The Saek spoken in Ban Na Kadôk: a “disappointing” dialect? Presented at SEALS 28, Kaohsiung, Taiwan.</ref><ref>Pacquement, Jean. 2017. The Saek Language: the first dialect and the second dialect. Presented at SEALS 27, 11–13 May 2017, Padang, West Sumatra, Indonesia.</ref><ref>Pacquement, Jean. 2016. Saek Language in the Early Years of the 20th Century and Nowadays. Presented at the 5th International Conference on Lao Studies, July 8–10, 2016 Thammasat University, Bangkok, Thailand.</ref>

Vietnam

According to Gedney, Vietnam is said to have the two following Saek villages. However, Chamberlain (1998) notes that all villages listed by Gedney to be in Vietnam are actually in Laos.

  1. Template:Tlit (actually in Laos according to Chamberlain (1998))
  2. Template:Tlit

According to Gedney, abandoned Saek villages in Vietnam (Laos according to Chamberlain) include the following. Their equivalents in Chamberlain (1998) are given in parentheses.

  1. Template:Tlit (Ban Beuk)
  2. Template:Tlit (Ban Na Moey)
  3. Template:Tlit (Ban Toeng - subdistrict seat on the Nam Noy)
  4. Template:Tlit (Ban Thô - next to the Houay Thô and Nam Amang confluence; just north of the mountain "Phu Kun Tho")
  5. The Template:Tlit

China

There are perhaps some Saek speakers in China, where they are classified as Zhuang people.<ref>Bradley 2007, p. 371.</ref>

Notes

Template:Reflist

References

Template:Refbegin

Sources

  • Chamberlain, James R. 1998. "The Origin of the Sek: Implications for Tai and Vietnamese History". Journal of the Siam Society 86.1 & 86.2: 27–48.
  • Gedney, W. J. (1993). William J. Gedney's the Saek language: glossary, texts, and translations. Michigan papers on South and Southeast Asia, no. 41. [ ]: Center for South and Southeast Asian Studies, University of Michigan. Template:ISBN
  • Hudak, Thomas J., and William J. Gedney. 2010. William J. Gedney's concise Saek-English, English-Saek lexicon. Oceanic Linguistics special publication, no. 37. Honolulu: University of Hawai'i Press.
  • Miyake, Marc. 2013. Saek.
  • Morev, L. N. 1988. Yazik Sek [The Saek Language]. Moscow: Nauka.

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Template:Languages of Laos Template:Tai-Kadai languages