pce ISO 639

ဒါအာင်‎ (Daraarin) Autonyms

Palaung, Ruching

  • Geography

    MM Mandalay region: Katha and Pyinoolwin townships; Shan state: Taunggyi district.
  • Language Cloud

A language of Myanmar

pce
Da’ang, Di-Ang, Ngwe Palaung, Palay, Silver Palaung
ဒါအာင်‎ (Daraarin)
258,000 in Myanmar (2000). Total users in all countries: 273,300.
Mandalay region: Katha and Pyinoolwin townships; Shan state: Taunggyi district.
Eastern Central Myanmar, Northern Thailand, Southwestern China
5 (Developing).
Austro-Asiatic, Mon-Khmer, Northern Mon-Khmer, Palaungic, Western Palaungic, Palaung
Pale, Rulai. Rulai dialect near Lashio has regular phonological changes and some lexical difference from Ruching.
SVO.
Vigorous. Home, village, market, religion. Used by all. Positive attitudes. Also use Burmese [mya]. Also use Lü [khb]. Also use Shan [shn]. Used as L2 by Rumai Palaung [rbb].
Literacy rate in L2: Below 5%. Strong literacy program. Literature. Dictionary. Grammar. Bible: 2021.
Myanmar (Burmese) script [Mymr]. Thai script [Thai].
Kalaw dialect tends toward loss of final consonants, could be moving to develop tones. Tense vowels change into glides with a palatal final in the Pale variety. Buddhist, traditional religion.
OLAC resources in and about Palaung, Ruching
Palaung, Pale
5,000 in Thailand (1989).
Chiang Mai province: Fang district, No Lae village.
8a (Moribund)
Shifted to Thai [tha].
Literacy rate in L2: Below 5%.
Non-indigenous. Distinct from Shwe Palaung [pll] and Rumai Palaung [rbb].
View other languages of Thailand
Palaung, Ruching
10,300 in China (2010).
Yunnan province: Dehong prefecture, Luxi county, east of Rumai.
Bulei (Bulai, Ka-ang, Pu-le, Pulei, Red De’ang), Raojin (Na-ang, Red De’ang), Da’ang.
6b (Threatened)
50% of the De’ang nationality speak Palaung. All domains. Some of all ages. Also use Jingpho [kac]. Also use Lü [khb]. Also use Mandarin Chinese [cmn].
Literacy rate in L2: 79% in any language for Deang nationality (to which Palaung speakers belong) (2000 census).
Non-indigenous. Total De’ang nationality in China: 20,556 (2010 census). Buddhist.
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