Re-Imagining "Annam": A New Analysis of Sino–Viet–Muong Linguistic Contact
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Authors
Phan, John D.
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Centre for the Study of the Chinese Southern Diaspora, The Australian National University
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Open Access
Abstract
This article examines the linguistic boundaries that separated (or united) Medieval China’s
southern territories and the river plains of northern Vietnam at the end of the first
millennium C.E. New evidence from Sino–Vietnamese vocabulary demonstrates the
existence of a regional dialect of Middle Chinese, spoken in the Ma, Ca, and Red River
plains. Preliminary analysis suggests that a “language shift” away from this “Annamese
Middle Chinese” in favor of the local, non-Chinese language, was largely responsible for
the highly sinicized lexicon of modern Vietnamese. This theory, which challenges the
tradition of an essentially literary source for Sino–Vietnamese, may help to explain some of
the sinicized features of Vietnamese phonology and syntax as well. The last section of the
article presents a tentative hypothesis for the formal emergence of Vietnamese contra its
closest relative, Muong. These hypotheses require further testing, and are presented here
as a first look at the history of the languages of “Annam”.
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Chinese Southern Diaspora Studies
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Publication
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Open Access