< Reconstruction:Proto-Sino-Tibetan < t
Reconstruction:Proto-Sino-Tibetan/t/duŋ
Proto-Sino-Tibetan
Etymology
- Proto-Sino-Tibetan: ?
- Proto-Tibeto-Burman: *t/duŋ ⪤ *ts(y)uːŋ (Matisoff, STEDT); *tsyuːŋ (Benedict, 1972) (later revised to *tuːŋ); *tuuŋ (LaPolla, 1987)
Secondary affricativisation conditioned by medial /-u-/ occurred in many cases, a phenomenon reminiscent of modern Japanese つ /tu/, [t͡sɯ]. The original initial was a plain or perhaps palatalised (?) plosive.
Descendants
- Old Chinese: 中 /*truŋ/ (B-S), /*tuŋ/ (ZS) (“centre”); 中 /*truŋ-s/ (B-S), /*tuŋs/ (ZS) (“to hit the centre, to match, to suffer”); 仲 /*ɴ-truŋ-s/ (B-S), /*duŋs/ (ZS) (“to be in the middle, second”)
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→ Japanese: 中 (ちゅう, chū)
Korean: 중 (中, jung)
Vietnamese: trung, trúng (中)
- Himalayish
- Tibeto-Kanauri
- Bodic
- Tibetan
- Written Tibetan: གཞུང (gzhung, “centre, core, middle; government; (main) text, scripture, literature”)
- Tibetan
- Bodic
- Tibeto-Kanauri
- Lolo-Burmese-Naxi
See also
- *m/s‑la(ː)j (“navel, centre, self”)
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