Reconstruction:Proto-Sino-Tibetan/r-mi(j)-n
Proto-Sino-Tibetan
[edit]Etymology
[edit]- Proto-Sino-Tibetan: ?
- Proto-Tibeto-Burman: *r-mi(y)-n (Matisoff, STEDT); *r-miy (Chou, 1972)
A collective suffix *-n is found in Burmese and Chinese branches of Sino-Tibetan (Matisoff, 2003; Schuessler, 2007), although in the case of Chinese may in fact reflect an earlier velar coda *-ŋ, which palatalized after *-i-, as pointed out by Sagart (1999: 135). He compares Chinese 民 (OC *min, “people”) with 氓 (OC *mraːŋ, “population”), which, according to him, belong to the same word-family, but the latter retained the velar coda *-ŋ because of the preceding low vowel *-a-. Palatalization of velar codas *-ŋ and *-k preceded by *-i- appears to be well attested (Baxter, 1992), and caused the merging of *-iŋ, *-ik rhymes with *-in, *-it respectively.
Noun
[edit]*r-mi(j)-n
Descendants
[edit]- Old Chinese: 民 (mín) /*miŋ/ (B-S), /*min/ (ZS) ("people, folk, civilian")
- Middle Chinese: 民 (mín) /miɪn/
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**:
→ Japanese: 民 (みん, min)
Korean: 민 (民, min)
Vietnamese: dân (民)