Tocharian languages
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Tocharian languages | ||
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Spoken in: | Tarim Basin in Central Asia | |
Language extinction: | Ninth century | |
Language family: | Indo-European Tocharian |
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Writing system: | Tocharian script | |
Language codes | ||
ISO 639-1: | none | |
ISO 639-2: | ine | |
ISO 639-3: | either: xto — Tocharian A txb — Tocharian B |
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Note: This page may contain IPA phonetic symbols in Unicode. |
Tocharian or Tokharian is considered one of the most obscure branches of the group of Indo-European languages. The name of the language is taken from people known to the Greek historians (Ptolemy VI, 11, 6) as the Tocharians (Greek: Τόχαροι, "Tokharoi"). These are sometimes identified with the Yuezhi and the Kushans, while the term Tokharistan usually refers to 1st millennium Bactria. A Turkic text refers to the Turfanian language (Tocharian A) as twqry. Interpretation is difficult, but F. W. K. Müller has associated this with the name of the Bactrian Tokharoi. In Tocharian, the language is referred to as arish-käna and the Tocharians as arya.
Tocharian consisted of two languages; Tocharian A (Turfanian, Arsi, or East Tocharian) and Tocharian B (Kuchean or West Tocharian). These languages were spoken roughly from the sixth to ninth century centuries; before they became extinct, their speakers were absorbed into the expanding Uyghur tribes. Both languages were once spoken in the Tarim Basin in Central Asia, now the Xinjiang Autonomous Region of China.
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[edit] Phonemes
Phonetically, Tocharian is a "centum" Indo-European language, characterized by the merging of palato-velar consonants with plain velars (*k, *g, *gh), which is generally associated with Indo-European languages of the West European area (Italic, Celtic, Germanic, Greek). In that sense, Tocharian seems to have been an isolate in the "Satem" phonetic world of Indo-European-speaking East European and Asian populations.
[edit] Vowels
- /i/, /e/, /a/ (transcribed <ā>) /u/, /o/, /ɨ/ (transcribed <ä>), /ə/ (transcribed <a>)
- Diphthongs (Tocharian B only): /əi/ (transcribed <ai>), /oi/ (transcribed <oy>), /əu/ (transcribed <au>), /au/ (transcribed <āu>)
[edit] Consonants
- Stops: /p/, /t/, /c/, /k/, /kʷ/ (transcribed <ku>)
- Affricates: /ts/
- Fricatives: /s/, /ɕ/ (transcribed <ś>), /ʂ/ (transcribed <ṣ>)
- Approximants: /w/, /j/ (transcribed [y])
- Trills: /r/
- Nasals: /m/, /n/ (transcribed <ṃ> word-finally), /ɲ/ (transcribed <ñ>)
- Lateral approximants: /l/, /ʎ/ (transcribed <ly>)
Note that the above consonantal values are largely based on the writing of Sanskrit/Prakrit loanwords. A retroflex value for /ʂ/ is particularly suspect as it is derived from palatalized /s/; it was probably a low-frequency sibilant /ʃ/ (like German spelling <sch>), as opposed to the higher-frequency sibilant /ɕ/ (like Mandarin Pinyin spelling <x>).
[edit] Writing system
Tocharian is documented in manuscript fragments, mostly from the 8th century (with a few earlier ones) that were written on palm leaves, wooden tablets and Chinese paper, preserved by the extremely dry climate of the Tarim Basin. Samples of the language have been discovered at sites in Kucha and Karasahr, including many mural inscriptions.
Tocharian A and B are not intercomprehensible. Properly speaking, based on the tentative interpretation of twqry as related to Tokharoi, only Tocharian A may be referred to as Tocharian, while Tocharian B could be called Kuchean (its native name may have been kuśiññe), but since their grammars are usually treated together in scholarly works, the terms A and B have proven useful. A common Proto-Tocharian language must precede the attested languages by several centuries, probably dating to the 1st millennium BC. Given the small geographical range of and the lack of secular texts in Tocharian A, it might alternatively have been a liturgical language, the relationship between the two being similar to that between Classical Chinese and Mandarin. It must be noted however that the lack of a secular corpus in Tocharian A is by no means definite, due to the fragmentary preservation of Tocharian texts in general.
The alphabet the Tocharians were using is derived from the North Indian Brahmi alphabetic syllabary (abugida) and is referred to as slanting Brahmi. It soon became apparent that a large proportion of the manuscripts were translations of known Buddhist works in Sanskrit and some of them were even bilingual, facilitating decipherment of the new language. Besides the Buddhist and Manichaean religious texts, there were also monastery correspondence and accounts, commercial documents, caravan permits, and medical and magical texts, and one love poem. Many Tocharians embraced Manichaean duality or Buddhism.
[edit] Morphology
Tocharian has completely re-worked the nominal declension system of Proto-Indo-European. The only cases inherited from the proto-language are nominative, genitive, and accusative; in Tocharian the old accusative is known as the oblique case. In addition to these three cases, however, each Tocharian language has six cases formed by the addition of an invariant suffix to the oblique case. For example, the Tocharian A word käṣṣi "teacher" is declined as follows:
Case | Suffix | Singular | Plural |
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Nominative | käṣṣi | käṣṣiñ | |
Genitive | käṣṣiyāp | käṣṣiśśi | |
Oblique | käṣṣiṃ | käṣṣis | |
Instrumental | -yo | käṣṣinyo | käṣṣisyo |
Perlative | -ā | käṣṣinā | käṣṣisā |
Comitative | -aśśäl | käṣṣinaśśäl | käṣṣisaśśäl |
Allative | -ac | käṣṣinac | käṣṣisac |
Ablative | -äṣ | käṣṣinäṣ | käṣṣisäṣ |
Locative | -aṃ | käṣṣinaṃ | käṣṣisaṃ |
[edit] Cultural significance
The existence of the Tocharian languages and alphabet was not even guessed at, until chance discoveries in the early 20th century brought to light fragments of manuscripts in a then-unknown alphabetic syllabary (abugida) that turned out to belong to a hitherto unknown branch of the Indo-European family of languages, which has been named 'Tocharian'.
Tocharian has upset some theories about the relations of Indo-European languages and is revitalizing linguistic studies. The Tocharian languages are a major geographic exception to the usual pattern of Indo-European branches, being the only one that spread directly east from the theoretical Indo-European starting point in the Pontic steppe.
Tocharian probably died out after 840, when the Uyghurs were expelled from Mongolia by the Kyrgyz, retreating to the Tarim Basin. This theory is supported by the discovery of translations of Tocharian texts into Uyghur. During Uyghur rule, the peoples mixed with the Uyghurs to produce much of the modern population of what is now Xinjiang.
[edit] Comparison to other Indo-European languages
Tocharian vocabulary (sample) | ||||||||||||
Modern English | Tocharian A | Tocharian B | Irish | Latin | Ancient Greek | Vedic Sanskrit | Proto-Indo-European | |||||
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one | sas | ṣe | aon | ūnus | heis | aika | *oynos, *sems | |||||
two | wu | wi | dó | duo | duo | dváu | *d(u)woh1 | |||||
three | tre | trai | trí | trēs | treis | tri | *treyes | |||||
four | śtwar | śtwer | ceathair | quattuor | téssares | catvāras | *kwetwores | |||||
five | päñ | piś | cúig | quīnque | pente | pañka | *penkwe | |||||
six | ṣäk | ṣkas | sé | sex | héx | ṣáṣ | *(s)weḱs | |||||
seven | ṣpät | ṣukt | seacht | septem | heptá | saptá | *septm | |||||
eight | okät | okt | hocht | octō | októ | aṣṭa | *oḱtoh3 | |||||
nine | ñu | ñu | naoi | novem | ennéa | náva | *newn | |||||
ten | śäk | śak | deich | decem | deka | dáśa | *deḱm | |||||
hundred | känt | kante | cead | centum | hekatón | śatám | *ḱmtom | |||||
father | pācar | pācer | athair | pater | patēr | pitár- | *ph2tēr | |||||
mother | mācar | mācer | máthair | mater | mētér | mātar- | *meh2tēr | |||||
brother | pracar | procer | bráthair | frāter | phrátēr¹ | bhrātar- | *bhreh2tēr | |||||
sister | ṣar | ṣer | siúr | soror | éor¹ | svasṛ- | *swesor | |||||
(horse)³ | yuk | yakwe | each | equus | híppos | áśva- | *eḱwo- | |||||
cow | ko | keu | bó | bos² | boûs | gáus | *gwow- | |||||
(voice)² | vak | vek | focal¹ | vōx | épos¹ | vāk | *wekw- | |||||
name | ñom | ñem | ainm | nōmen | ónoma | nāman- | *nomn | |||||
to milk | malk | mälk | bligh | mulgēre | amélgein | marjati¹ | *melg- |
¹ = Cognate, with shifted meaning
² = Borrowed cognate, not native.
³ = English meaning, unrelated word
[edit] See also
Indo-European topics |
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Indo-European languages |
Albanian · Armenian · Baltic Celtic · Germanic · Greek Indo-Iranian (Indo-Aryan, Iranian) Italic · Slavic extinct: Anatolian · Paleo-Balkans (Dacian, |
Indo-European peoples |
Albanians · Armenians Balts · Celts · Germanic peoples Greeks · Indo-Aryans Iranians · Latins · Slavs historical: Anatolians (Hittites, Luwians) |
Proto-Indo-Europeans |
Language · Society · Religion |
Urheimat hypotheses |
Kurgan hypothesis · Anatolia Armenia · India · PCT |
Indo-European studies |
[edit] References
- "Tokharian Pratimoksa Fragment Sylvain Levi". The Journal of the Royal Asiatic Society of Great Britain and Ireland. 1913, pp. 109-120.
- Mallory, J.P. and Victor H. Mair. The Tarim Mummies. London: Thames & Hudson, 2000. (ISBN 0-500-05101-1)
- Schmalsteig, William R. "Tokharian and Baltic." Lituanus. v. 20, no. 3, 1974.
- Krause, Wolfgang and Werner Thomas. Tocharisches Elemantarbuch. Heidelberg: Carl Winter Universitätsverlag, 1960.
- Malzahn, Melanie (Ed.). Instrumenta Tocharica. Heidelberg: Carl Winter Universitätsverlag, 2007. (ISBN 978-3-8253-5299-8)
[edit] External links
- Conjugation tables for Tocharian A and B
- Tocharian alphabet (from Omniglot)
- TITUS: Tocharian alphabets& Manuscripts from the Berlin Turfan Collection
- Mark Dickens, 'Everything you always wanted to know about Tocharian'
- A Tocharian-to-English dictionary with nearly 200 words
- Tocharian Online from the University of Texas at Austin