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  • Resilience linguistics orthography and the Gong /

Tác giả CN Bradley, David.
Nhan đề Resilience linguistics orthography and the Gong /David Bradley
Thông tin xuất bản 2011
Mô tả vật lý p. 349-360
Tóm tắt The Gong are minority group of western Thailand whose language has been in decline for over a century, In the 1920s, the first report of the language predicted its imminent demine, Since then, it has contacted to two villages outside its traditional territory. The language there Is under threat, particularly since the 1970s with roads, schools, electrisity, Buddhist temples and immovement of Thai speakers. We have been working with Ihe Gong since 1977. In 1982, we devised an orthography based on Thai. Since the mid-1980s, with support from the Thailand Research Fund and assistance from a Thai univernlly, villager have been trained and assisted to document their traditional activities, both nonlinguistic and linguistic. However, no children have learned the language In the home tor nearly 40 years. The youngest fully fluent speakers are now In their 60s, with semispeakers of varying degrees of fluency down to the age of 40 and somewhat younger people with limited active or passive knowledge. Language revitalization is difficult, even with an orthography, teaching materials and community goodwill. This is a test for resiliece linguistics, a new paradigm based on resilience thinking that attempts to empower and assist communities in their language and culture maintenance
Đề mục chủ đề Ngôn ngữ--TVĐHHN.
Thuật ngữ không kiểm soát Orthography development.
Thuật ngữ không kiểm soát Resilience linguistics.
Thuật ngữ không kiểm soát Tibeto-Burman.
Thuật ngữ không kiểm soát Thailand.
Thuật ngữ không kiểm soát Gong/ Ugong.
Thuật ngữ không kiểm soát Language maintenance.
Nguồn trích Language and education- 2011, Vol25, N.3
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035|a1456365939
039|a20241128114306|bidtocn|c20200722090625|dhuongnt|y20160819104936|zkhiembt
0410|aeng
1001|aBradley, David.
24510|aResilience linguistics orthography and the Gong /|cDavid Bradley
260|c2011
300|ap. 349-360
3620|aVol. 25 (July 2011)
520|aThe Gong are minority group of western Thailand whose language has been in decline for over a century, In the 1920s, the first report of the language predicted its imminent demine, Since then, it has contacted to two villages outside its traditional territory. The language there Is under threat, particularly since the 1970s with roads, schools, electrisity, Buddhist temples and immovement of Thai speakers. We have been working with Ihe Gong since 1977. In 1982, we devised an orthography based on Thai. Since the mid-1980s, with support from the Thailand Research Fund and assistance from a Thai univernlly, villager have been trained and assisted to document their traditional activities, both nonlinguistic and linguistic. However, no children have learned the language In the home tor nearly 40 years. The youngest fully fluent speakers are now In their 60s, with semispeakers of varying degrees of fluency down to the age of 40 and somewhat younger people with limited active or passive knowledge. Language revitalization is difficult, even with an orthography, teaching materials and community goodwill. This is a test for resiliece linguistics, a new paradigm based on resilience thinking that attempts to empower and assist communities in their language and culture maintenance
65017|aNgôn ngữ|2TVĐHHN.
653|aOrthography development.
653|aResilience linguistics.
653|aTibeto-Burman.
653|aThailand.
6530|aGong/ Ugong.
6530 |aLanguage maintenance.
7730|tLanguage and education|g2011, Vol25, N.3
890|a0|b0|c0|d0

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