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High Quality Content by WIKIPEDIA articles! Qiangic or Kiangic, formerly known as Dzorgai, is a language group of the northeastern Tibeto-Burman of Sino-Tibetan language family, spoken mainly in Southwestern China, including Sichuan, Tibet, and Yunnan. Thurgood and La Polla (2003) state that the inclusion of Qiang, Prinmi, and Muya is well supported, but that they do not follow Sun's argument for the inclusion of Tangut. Sun proposes two branches, northern and southern. The northern branch includes Northern Qiang (Máw ), Pumi (Prinmi), and the extinct Tangut. The southern branch is Southern…mehr

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High Quality Content by WIKIPEDIA articles! Qiangic or Kiangic, formerly known as Dzorgai, is a language group of the northeastern Tibeto-Burman of Sino-Tibetan language family, spoken mainly in Southwestern China, including Sichuan, Tibet, and Yunnan. Thurgood and La Polla (2003) state that the inclusion of Qiang, Prinmi, and Muya is well supported, but that they do not follow Sun's argument for the inclusion of Tangut. Sun proposes two branches, northern and southern. The northern branch includes Northern Qiang (Máw ), Pumi (Prinmi), and the extinct Tangut. The southern branch is Southern Qiang (Táopíng). The Tibeto-Burman family of languages (often considered a sub-group of the Sino-Tibetan language family) comprises languages spoken in various central, east, south and southeast Asian countries, including Burma (Myanmar), Tibet, northern Thailand, Vietnam, Laos, parts of central China (Guizhou and Hunan), northern mountains and middle hills of Nepal, eastern parts of Bangladesh (Chittagong Division), Bhutan, northern parts of Pakistan (Baltistan), and various regions of India.