User:Saraphina9666/Dungan language/Bibliography

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The Dungan language is a Sinitic language of the Sino-Tibetan family. It is spoken by the Dungan people and the ethnic group related to the Hui people of China. Spoken in the countries of Kazakhstan and Kyrgyzstan. There are 90,000 native speakers. They also speak Mandarin, Russian and Arabic. It is currently endangered. "The native name for the language is Хуэйзў йүян, which means 'language of the Hui'. In Chinese it is known as 东干语 (dōnggānyǔ)". Dungan is a tonal language and was originally written in the Arabic alphabet. "Following the Hui migration into what would become the Soviet Union, the language also became fell under the influence of Russian along with neighboring Turkic languages and it began to be written with the Cyrillic Alphabet. During the Soviet era, Russian technical vocabulary began to enter Dungan which made it a more unique form of Mandarin." "The term "Dungan" was first seen in the late 18th century. Between 1755 and 1759, after suppressing a rebellion of local tribes, the Qing government moved floods of Hui people from Shaanxi and Gansu into Xinjiang to open up the frontier areas on a vast scale."

 Bibliography 


 * 1)   Rimsky-Korsakoff, S. (1967). Soviet Dungan: The Chinese Language of Central Asia: Alphabet, Phonology, Morphology. Monumenta Serica, 26(1), 352–421. https://doi.org/10.1080/02549948.1967.11744973
 * 2)   Fougner, K. (2012). Chinese Perspectives on the Dungan People and Language : A Critical Discourse Analysis on the Ambiguousness of the Chinese Ethnicity.
 * 3)    Zhu Yujie. (2018). A SHARED DESTINY: DUNGANS AND THE NEW SILK ROAD. In Prosperity (p. 144–). ANU Press.
 * 4)   China Village Writings of Central Asian Donggan Literature. (2017). Wai guo wen xue yan jiu (Wuhan Shi, China), 39(3), 145–.
 * 5)   Dyer, S. (1994). The Riddles, Tongue-Twisters, Doggerels, and Proverbs of the Central Asian Dungans (The Chinese Muslims). Monumenta serica, 42, 483–
 * 6)   Edward J. Vajda. (2006). A Grammar of Mangghuer: A Mongolic Language of China’s Qinghai-Gansu Sprachbund [Review of A Grammar of Mangghuer: A Mongolic Language of China’s Qinghai-Gansu Sprachbund]. Language, 82(4), 959–960. Linguistic Society of America. https://doi.org/10.1353/lan.2006.0234
 * 7)   Dyer, S. (1977). Soviet Dungan Nationalism: A Few Comments on Their Origin and Language. Monumenta Serica, 33(1), 349–362. https://doi.org/10.1080/02549948.1977.11745054
 * 8)   Hou, X. (2020). Syntactic Overshadowing and Blocking in Learning Chinese as a Second Language: A Case of Learning the Ba-Construction. ProQuest Dissertations Publishing.
 * 9)  Jiménez-Tovar, S. (2016). Limits of diaspority in Central Asia: contextualizing Dungan’s multiple belongings. Central Asian Survey, 35(3), 387–404. https://doi.org/10.1080/02634937.2016.1151626
 * 10)   Allès, E. (2005). The Chinese-speaking Muslims (Dungans) of Central Asia: A Case of Multiple Identities in a Changing Context. Asian Ethnicity, 6(2), 121–134. https://doi.org/10.1080/14631360500135716