| Rade | |
|---|---|
| Klei Êđê | |
| Native to | Vietnam | 
| Ethnicity | Rade | 
Native speakers  | 180,000 in Vietnam (2007)[1] | 
Austronesian
 
  | |
| Latin | |
| Language codes | |
| ISO 639-3 | Either:rad – Radeibh – Bih | 
| Glottolog | rade1240  Radebiha1246  Bih | 
| ELP | Bih | 
Rade (Rhade; Rade: klei Êđê; Vietnamese: tiếng Ê-đê or tiếng Ê Đê) is an Austronesian language of southern Vietnam. There may be some speakers in Cambodia. It is a member of the Chamic subgroup, and is closely related to the Cham language of central Vietnam.[2]
Dialects
Đoàn Văn Phúc (1998:24)[3] lists nine dialects of Rade. They are spoken mostly in Đắk Lắk Province in the Central Highlands region of Vietnam.
- Kpă: spoken throughout Buôn Ma Thuột
 - Krung: spoken in Ea H'leo and Krông Năng; some Krung also live among the Jarai in Gia Lai Province
 - Adham: spoken in Krông Buk, Krông Năng, and Ea H'leo
 - Ktul: spoken in Krông Bông and the southern part of Krông Pắk
 - Drao (Kơdrao): spoken in M'Đrăk (in the townships of Krông Jing, Cư M'Ta, and Ea Trang)
 - Blô: spoken in M'Đrăk (small population)
 - Êpan: spoken in M'Đrăk (small population)
 - Mdhur: spoken in Ea Kar and M'Đrăk; also in Gia Lai Province and Phu Yen Province
 - Bih: spoken in Krông Ana and in the southern part of Buôn Ma Thuột
 
Bih, which has about 1,000 speakers, may be a separate language.[4] Tam Nguyen (2015) reported that there are only 10 speakers of Bih out of an ethnic population of about 400 people.[5]
A patrilineal Rade subgroup known as the Hmok or Hmok Pai is found in the Buôn Ma Thuột area (Phạm 2005:212).[6]
Classification
Đoàn Văn Phúc (1998:23)[3] provides the following classification for the Rade dialects. Đoàn (1998) also provides a 1,000-word vocabulary list for all of the nine Rade dialects.
- Area 1
- Area 1.1: Krung, Kpă, Adham
 - Area 1.2: Drao. Êpan, Ktul
 - Blô (mixture of areas 1.1 and 1.2, as well as Mdhur)
 
 - Area 2
- Mdhur
 - Bih
 
 
Đoàn Văn Phúc (1998:23)[3] assigns the following cognacy percentages for comparisons between Kpă and the other eight dialects of Rade, with Bih as the most divergent dialect.
- Kpă – Krung: 85.5%
 - Kpă – Adham: 82%
 - Kpă – Ktul: 82%
 - Kpă – Mdhur: 80%
 - Kpă – Blô: 82%
 - Kpă – Êpan: 85%
 - Kpă – Drao: 81%
 - Kpă – Bih: 73%
 
Vocabulary
- Khoa sang – the most senior in age and authority
 - Dega – Protestant of Christian (single word identity of E-de)
 - Ih – you
 - Ung – husband
 - Ñu – her/him
 - Diñu – they
 - Drei – we
 - Khăp – love
 - Bi êmut – hate
 - idai – younger sibling
 - ami – mom/mother
 - yah – grandma/grandmother
 - ae – grandma/grandfather
 - Ama – father, dad daddy
 - Jhat – ugly, bad
 - Siam – pretty
 - Siam mniê – beautiful girl
 - Jăk – good
 - Khăp – love
 - Brei – give
 - Djŏ – true
 - Nao – go
 - Kâo – I/me
 - anăn – name
 - Čar – country
 - Čiăng – want/like
 - Aê Diê – God
 - Blŭ – speak
 - Klei blŭ – language
 - Bur – rice porridge
 - Êmong – fat
 - Êwang – skinny
 - Jŭ – black
 - Hriê/hrê – to be from
 - Mơ̆ng – from
 - Sa, dua, klâo, pă, êma – 1, 2, 3, 4, 5
 - Năm, kjuh, sa-băn, dua-păn, pluh: 6, 7, 8, 9, 10
 - Čar Mi/čar amêrik – America
 - Čar Kŭr – Cambodia
 - Anak – person
 - Hriăm – learn
 - Roă/ruă – sound of displeasure/pain
 - Buôn Ama Y'Thuôt – Buôn Ma Thuôt
 - Čih – type/write
 - Klei Mi – English
 - Klei Êđê – Rade/Ede
 - loo – A lot
 - klei brang – French
 
Phonology
The spelling is shown in italics.
Vowels
| Front | Central | Back | ||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| short | long | short | long | short | long | |
| High | ĭ /i/ | i /iː/ | ư̆ /ɨ/ | ư /ɨː/ | ŭ /u/ | u /uː/ | 
| Mid | ê̆ /e/ | ê /eː/ | ơ̆ /ə/ | ơ /əː/ | ô̆ /o/ | ô /oː/ | 
| Low | ĕ /ɛ/ | e /ɛː/ | ă /a/ | a /aː/ | ŏ /ɔ/ | o /ɔː/ | 
- Vowels /ɨ ɨː, ə əː/ can also be heard as more centralized-back [ɯ̈ ɯ̈ː, ɤ̈ ɤ̈ː].
 
Consonants
| Labial | Alveolar | Palatal | Velar | Glottal | ||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Nasal | m /m/ | n /n/ | ñ /ɲ/ | ng /ŋ/ | ||
| Stop | voiceless | p /p/ | t /t/ | č /c/ | k /k/ | /ʔ/ | 
| aspirated | ph /pʰ/ | th /tʰ/ | čh /cʰ/ | kh /kʰ/ | ||
| voiced | b /b/ | d /d/ | j /ɟ/ | g /ɡ/ | ||
| implosive | ƀ /ɓ/ | đ /ɗ/ | dj /ʄ/ | |||
| Fricative | s /s/ | h /h/ | ||||
| Approximant | w /w/ | l /l/ | y /j/ | |||
| Rhotic | r /r/ | |||||
- /w/ can also be heard as a more bilabial [β̞].
 - Glottalized final consonant sounds /wʔ, jʔ, jh/ are heard only in final position.[7]
 
References
- ↑  Rade at Ethnologue (18th ed., 2015) (subscription required)
Bih at Ethnologue (18th ed., 2015) (subscription required) - ↑ "Rade (klei Êđê)". Omniglot.
 - 1 2 3 Đoàn, Văn Phúc (1998). Từ vựng các phương ngữ Êđê / Lexique des dialectes Êđê [Vocabulary of Rade Dialects] (in Vietnamese). Hanoi: Đại học quốc gia Hà Nội and École française d'Extrême-Orient.
 - ↑ Nguyen, Tam (2013). A Grammar of Bih (PhD thesis). University of Oregon. hdl:1794/12996.
 - ↑ Nguyen, Tam (2015). Language Endangerment Factors: A Case Study with Bih. Paper presented at SoLE-4, Payap University.
 - ↑ Phâm, Côn Sơn (2005). Non nước Việt Nam: sắc nét trung bộ (in Vietnamese). Hanoi: Phương Đông Publishers.
 - ↑ Đoàn 1993.
 
Further reading
- Đoàn, Văn Phúc (1993). Ngữ âm tiếng Êđê [Ede language phonetics] (in Vietnamese). Hà Nội.
 - Sở giáo dục và đào tạo tỉnh Đắk Lắk – Viện ngôn ngữ học Việt Nam (2012). Ngữ pháp tiếng Êđê [Ede Grammar] (in Vietnamese). Hà Nội: Nhà xuất bản giáo dục Việt Nam.
 - Ủy ban nhân dân tỉnh Đăk Lăk – Sở giáo dục – Đào tạo – Viện ngôn ngữ học Việt Nam (1993). Từ điển Việt – Êđê [Vietnamese – Rade Dictionary] (in Vietnamese). Đăk Lăk: Nhà xuất bản giáo dục.
 - Linh, Nga Niê Kdam (2013). Nghệ thuật diễn xướng dân gian Ê Đê, Bih ở Dăk Lăk [Rade and Bih Folk Performing Arts in Dak Lak] (in Vietnamese). Hà Nội: Nhà xuất bản Thời Đại. ISBN 978-604-930-599-3.
 - Tharp, James A.; Buon-ya, Y.-Bham (1980). A Rhade–English Dictionary with English-Rhade Finderlist. Pacific Linguistics Series C – No. 58. Canberra: The Australian National University. doi:10.15144/PL-C58. hdl:1885/144435. ISBN 978-0-85883-217-6.
 
External links
- Alphabet and pronunciation
 - ELAR archive of Documenting Bih
 - Waddington, Ray. "Indigenous Peoples of the World – The Ede". www.peoplesoftheworld.org. Retrieved 2019-11-21.