- The
Hmongic languages, also
known as Miao
languages (Chinese: 苗语; pinyin: Miáoyǔ),
include the
various languages spoken by the Miao
people (such as Hmong...
- The West
Hmongic languages, also
known as
Chuanqiandian Miao (Chinese: 川黔滇苗; lit. 'Sichuan–Guizhou–Yunnan Miao') and
Western Miao, are a
major branch...
- Proto-
Hmongic or Proto-Miao (Chinese: 原始苗语) is the
reconstructed ancestor of the
Hmongic languages. In China, the
first comprehensive reconstruction of...
- The Bu–Nao or Bunu
languages are a
Hmongic (Miao)
language branch spoken in Guangxi, Yunnan, and
Guizhou in China. Its
speakers are
officially classified...
-
Central Miao (中部苗语), East
Hmongic (Ratliff 2010), or (somewhat ambiguously)
Black Miao, is a
dialect cluster of
Hmongic languages of China. The best...
- Lower-level
reconstructions include Proto-
Hmongic and Proto-Mienic.
Ratliff (2021)
estimates that the
split between Hmongic and
Mienic had
occurred before 2500...
-
fertile river valleys.
Hmongic (Miao) and
Mienic (Yao) are
closely related, but
clearly distinct. For
internal classifications, see
Hmongic languages and Mienic...
- Xong (Qo-Xiong), and A-Hmao.
These people (except
those in Hainan)
speak Hmongic languages, a
subfamily of the Hmong–Mien
languages including many mutually...
- The Xong
language (Dut Xonb [tu53 ɕõ35]) is the
northernmost Hmongic language,
spoken in south-central
China by
around 0.9 million people. It is called...
- Pahawh: 𖬌𖬣𖬵, [m̥ɔ̃́]) is a
dialect continuum of the West
Hmongic branch of the
Hmongic languages spoken by the
Hmong people of
Southwestern China,...