Gongduk or Gongdu (, it is also known as Gongdubikha) is an
endangered
An endangered species is a species that is very likely to become extinct in the near future, either worldwide or in a particular political jurisdiction. Endangered species may be at risk due to factors such as habitat loss, poaching and inv ...
Sino-Tibetan language
Sino-Tibetan, also cited as Trans-Himalayan in a few sources, is a family of more than 400 languages, second only to Indo-European in number of native speakers. The vast majority of these are the 1.3 billion native speakers of Chinese languages. ...
spoken by about 1,000 people in a few inaccessible villages located near the
Kuri Chhu river in the
Gongdue Gewog of
Mongar District
Mongar District (Dzongkha: མོང་སྒར་རྫོང་ཁག་; Wylie: ''Mong-sgar rdzong-khag'') is one of the 20 dzongkhags (districts) comprising Bhutan. Mongar is the fastest-developing dzongkhag in eastern Bhutan. A regional ...
in eastern
Bhutan
Bhutan (; dz, འབྲུག་ཡུལ་, Druk Yul ), officially the Kingdom of Bhutan,), is a landlocked country in South Asia. It is situated in the Eastern Himalayas, between China in the north and India in the south. A mountai ...
. The names of the villages are Bala, Dagsa, Damkhar, Pam, Pangthang, and Yangbari (''
Ethnologue'').
Gongduk has complex verbal morphology, which Ethnologue considers a retention from
Proto-Tibeto-Burman
Proto-Tibeto-Burman (commonly abbreviated PTB) is the reconstructed ancestor of the Tibeto-Burman languages, that is, the Sino-Tibetan languages, except for Chinese. An initial reconstruction was produced by Paul K. Benedict and since refined by ...
,
[ and is lexically highly divergent.][Blench, R. & Post, M. W. (2013)]
Rethinking Sino-Tibetan phylogeny from the perspective of Northeast Indian languages
/ref> On this basis, it is apparently not part of any major subgroup and will probably have to be assigned to its own branch.
The people are said to have come from hunters that would move from place to place at times.
The language is notable for only being discovered by linguists in 1991. Currently, George van Driem
George "Sjors" van Driem (born 1957) is a Dutch linguist associated with the University of Bern, where he is the chair of Historical Linguistics and directs the Linguistics Institute.
Education
* Leiden University, 1983–1987 (PhD, ''A Grammar ...
is working towards the completion of a description of Gongduk based on his work with native speakers in the Gongduk area.[
]
Classification
George van Driem (2001:870) proposes that the ''Greater Bumthang'' ( East Bodish) languages, including Bumthang, Khengkha, and Kurtöp, may have a Gongduk substratum. Gongduk itself may also have a non-Tibeto-Burman substrate.
Gerber (2018)[Gerber, Pascal. 2018. ]
Areal features in Gongduk, Bjokapakha and Black Mountain Mönpa phonology
''. Unpublished draft. notes that Gongduk has had extensive contact with Black Mountain Mönpa before the arrival of East Bodish languages
The East Bodish languages are a small group of non-Tibetic Bodish languages spoken in eastern Bhutan and adjacent areas of Tibet and India. They include:
* Dakpa (Tawang Monpa)
* Dzala
* Nyen
Nyenschantz (russian: Ниенша́нц, ''Niensha ...
in Bhutan
Bhutan (; dz, འབྲུག་ཡུལ་, Druk Yul ), officially the Kingdom of Bhutan,), is a landlocked country in South Asia. It is situated in the Eastern Himalayas, between China in the north and India in the south. A mountai ...
. Gongduk also has many Tshangla loanwords. The following comparative vocabulary table from Gerber (2020) compares Gongduk, Black Mountain Mönpa, and Bjokapakha, which is a divergent Tshangla variety.
Comparison of numerals:
Comparison of pronouns:
Grammar
Morphology
Gongduk has productive suffixal morphology (van Driem 2014).
;<-məˀtⁿ> ‘plural suffix in human nouns’
Examples:
*oloˀŋməˀtⁿ ‘children’ < oloˀk ‘child’ + -məˀtⁿ
*ŋidɤməˀtⁿ ‘people’ < ŋidɤ ‘person’ + -məˀtⁿ
*aroˀŋməˀtⁿ ‘friends’ < aroˀk ‘friend’ + -məˀtⁿ
However, non-human plural nouns do not take on any suffixes, and remain the same:
*kurtə ‘horse, horses’
*kəitɤ ‘bird, birds’
*kiŋ ‘house, houses’
;<-e ~ -ðe ~ -θe> ‘ergative and possessive suffix’
Examples:
*bɤʔlɤpə-e ‘the people of Bɤʔlɤ rgative��
*choŋnən-ðe me ‘the seed of the maize’
*nor-θe taɦ ‘meat of the cow eef��
*rek-θe rukɤŋ ‘head bone kull��
*aroʔk-te-θe ‘the friend rgative��
*əp drəkpə-e ‘Ap Drakpa rgative��
*θok-θe əkəm ‘egg of offering (sacrificial egg)’
*lei-ti-ðe juʔmə ‘after one month’
;<-gi> ‘ablative suffix’
Examples:
*ðiŋ goŋduʔ-gi əna ‘We are from Gongduk’
*nikkələŋ-gi ‘by way of the stairs’
*dəkθə-gi ‘from Daksa’
*kidu-gi ‘as a kidu overnment gift��
*bɤʔlɤ-gi ‘from Bɤʔlɤ’
*deŋkəle wɤŋ-gi ‘from Dengkalé Dale’
*doʔmoŋ-gi ‘from "Black Roof" village’
*phəjoŋ pəm-gi ‘from Phajong Pam’
;<-gu ~ -go ~ -ku ~-ko> ‘dative / locative suffix’
Examples:
*gərəŋ-go ‘to whom’
*ohaŋ duʔ-gu ‘in that village’
*rek-ko ‘to ishead’
*ðə-go ‘to me’
*jə-go ‘to India’
*gaoŋ-go ‘whereto, where precisely’
*pəkpək-ko ‘at times, sometimes’
*thimphu-gu ‘to Thimphu’
Demonstratives
Gongduk demonstratives precede head nouns.
;ohaŋ ‘that (demonstrative)’
Examples:
*ohaŋ ŋidɤ ‘that person’
*ohaŋ koŋ ‘that tree’
*ohaŋ duʔgu ‘in that village’
Personal pronouns
Gongduk has the following personal pronoun paradigm.
van Driem (2014) compares the Gongduk first person singular personal pronoun ''ðə'' 'I, me' to Kathmandu Newar
Newar (; new, नेवार, endonym: Newa; new, नेवा, Pracalit script:) or Nepami, are the historical inhabitants of the Kathmandu Valley and its surrounding areas in Nepal and the creators of its historic heritage and civilisation ...
''dʑiː'' ~ ''dʑĩ''- 'I, me' and Tshangla ''dʑaŋ'' ~ ''dʑi''- ~ ''dʑiŋ''- 'I, me'. He also compares the Gongduk first person plural personal pronoun ''ðiŋ'' 'we, us' to Kathmandu Newar
Newar (; new, नेवार, endonym: Newa; new, नेवा, Pracalit script:) or Nepami, are the historical inhabitants of the Kathmandu Valley and its surrounding areas in Nepal and the creators of its historic heritage and civilisation ...
''dʑʰai'' ~ ''dʑʰĩ''- 'we, us'.
Vocabulary
The Gongduk words and phrases below are from van Driem (2014).[van Driem, George. 2014. ''Gongduk Nominal Morphology and the phylogenetic position of Gongduk''. Paper presented at the 20th Himalayan Languages Symposium, Nanyang Technological University, Singapore, 16 July 2014.]
Basic vocabulary
*rek ‘head’
*rukɤŋ ‘bone’
*əŋ ‘language, mouth’
*dɤŋli ‘water’
*wɤ ‘rain’
*yər ‘cliff’
*dɤ ‘salt’
*ɤn ‘tooth’
*koŋ ‘tree’
*diŋ ‘wood’
*me ‘seed’
*dola ‘cooked '' Setaria'' or rice’
*choŋnən ‘maize’
*ɤwɤ ‘banana’
*taɦ ‘meat’
*wərə ‘highland paddy
Highlands or uplands are areas of high elevation such as a mountainous region, elevated mountainous plateau or high hills. Generally speaking, upland (or uplands) refers to ranges of hills, typically from up to while highland (or highlands) is ...
, ghaiyā’
*khərəŋ ‘cooked ''Panicum
''Panicum'' (panicgrass) is a large genus of about 450 species of grasses native throughout the tropical regions of the world, with a few species extending into the northern temperate zone. They are often large, annual or perennial grasses, grow ...
'' or maize’
*don ‘pig’
*nor ‘cow’
*kurtə ‘horse’
*kəitɤ ‘bird’
*əkəm ‘egg’
*jə ‘day (24-hour period)’
*lei ‘month’
*oloʔk ‘child’
*ŋidɤ ‘person’
*aroʔk ‘friend’
*duʔ ‘village’
*kiŋ ‘house’
*nikkələŋ ‘stairs’
*θok ‘offering’
*goŋduʔ ‘Gongduk’
Numerals
*ti ‘1’
*niktsə ‘2’
*towə ‘3’
*diyə, piyə ‘4’
*ŋəwə ‘5’
*qukpə ‘6’
*ðukpə ‘7’
*yitpə, hetpə ‘8’
*ɢuwə ‘9’
*deyə ‘10’
*deθəti ‘11’
*deθəniktsə ‘12’
*deθətowə ‘13’
*khəe ‘score (20)’
*khəe ŋəwə ‘five score, i.e. one hundred’
Interrogative pronouns
*gərəŋ ‘who’
*gərəe ‘whose’
*θəpo ‘what’
*ko ‘when’
*gaoŋ ‘where, whither’
*qəti ‘how much, how many’
*gainəŋ ‘which, whence’
*qətigu ‘at what time’
*θəu, θəudi ‘why, how come’
*gora, gorapəm ‘how, in which way’
*ohaŋ ‘that (demonstrative)’
References
Bibliography
*
*Gerber, Pascal. 2019.
Gongduk agreement morphology in functional and diachronic perspective
'. Paper presented at the ISBS Inaugural Conference, Magdalen College, University of Oxford.
*
*
*van Driem, George. 2014. ''Gongduk Nominal Morphology and the phylogenetic position of Gongduk''. Paper presented at the 20th Himalayan Languages Symposium, Nanyang Technological University, Singapore, 16 July 2014.
External links
* ELAR archive o
Documentation of the flora and fauna of Gongduk
{{DEFAULTSORT:Gongduk Language
Endangered Sino-Tibetan languages
Unclassified Sino-Tibetan languages
Languages of Bhutan
Bodic languages
Languages written in Tibetan script