ja̠m⁵⁵

Pela

ja̠m⁵⁵ tsʰau³¹ tă. ja̠m⁵⁵ (an old house)

Etymology

From Proto-Sino-Tibetan *k-jim ~ k-jum (house; pit; womb). Cognate with Burmese အိမ် (im), Tibetan ཁྱིམ (khyim, house), Old Chinese (*qrɯms),[1] Lisu ꓧꓲʼ (, home), Horpa jo, Khroskyabs jə́m and Tangut 𗹨 (*ꞏjɨj², house, tent). Compare with Lhao Vo yham, Zaiwa yvum, Lashi yhoem:, and Longchuan Achang in⁵⁵.

Pronunciation

  • IPA(key): /ja̠m⁵⁵/

Noun

ja̠m⁵⁵ (Classifier ja̠m⁵⁵)

  1. home
  2. house

Derived terms

  • ja̠m⁵⁵ kja̠³⁵ tʃʰɔ̃³¹ (neighbour)
  • ja̠m⁵⁵ kʰauŋ⁵⁵ (roof)
  • ja̠m⁵⁵ mau⁵¹ (homeland)
  • ja̠m⁵⁵ pju⁵⁵ (family member)
  • ja̠m⁵⁵ sak⁵⁵ (new house)
  • ja̠m⁵⁵ saŋ⁵⁵ (own, by oneself)

References

  • Dai Qingxia, Jiang Ying, Kong Zhien, A Study of Pela Language (2007; Publishing House of Minority Nationalities, Beijing)
  • Huang Bufan (editor), Xu Shouchun, Chen Jiaying, Wang Huiyin, A Tibeto-Burman Lexicon (1992; Central Minorities University, Beijing)
  • Mangshi Jinghpo ethnicity Association of Development and Progress Studies(芒市景颇族发展进步研究学会)(ed.), Han-Zaiwa-Pela Dictionary (汉文载瓦文波拉语对译词典) (2018; Dehong Nationalities Publishing House, Mangshi)
  1. Jacques, Guillaume, 嘉绒语与上古汉语 (rGyalrong language and Old Chinese) (2005; Presentation at the International Symposium on Old Chinese Reconstruction)
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