Article · Wikipedia archive · Last revised Jul 4, 2026

Daai language

Daai, which borders the Mün and Ütbü language groups, is a Southern Kuki-Chin of Myanmar. It is spoken in 142 villages in Kanpetlet, Matupi, Mindat, and Paletwa townships in Chin State, Burma (Ethnologue). A written script for Daai was created in 1976 by U Khine Sho and Ms. Halga So Hart Manno.

Last revised
Jul 4, 2026
Read time
≈ 2 min
Length
388 w
Citations
5
Source
Daai
RegionMyanmar
EthnicityDaai Chin
Native speakers
37,000 (2010)1
Language codes
ISO 639-3dao
Glottologdai1236

Daai (also known as Daai Chin), which borders the Mün and Ütbü language groups, is a Southern Kuki-Chin of Myanmar.2 It is spoken in 142 villages in Kanpetlet, Matupi, Mindat, and Paletwa townships in Chin State, Burma (Ethnologue). A written script for Daai was created in 1976 by U Khine Sho and Ms. Halga So Hart Manno.3

Mutual intelligibility among Nghngilo (Yang), Daai Yindu, and Mkui groups is high, but is lower among other groups.4 Daai has greater than 90% lexical similarity with Daai Yindu, Yang, Mkui, Duk, and Msang, 81%–88% with Ngxang (Paletwa township) and Kheng, 80% with Shiip (Matupi township), 91%–94% with Gah/Ng-Gha (part of Mün), and 81%–87% with Mün.4

Dialects

Ethnologue lists the following dialects of daai Chin.

  • Ngxang
  • Nghngilo (Yang)
  • Ma-Tu
  • Shiip
  • Duk-Msang
  • Kheng
  • Mkuui
  • Ngjääng
  • Yet

Phonology

Consonants

Daai has twenty-four consonant phonemes.

Bilabial Alveolar Palatal Velar Glottal
Nasals m n ŋ̊ ŋ
Plosives p b t d k ʔ
Fricatives s x ɣ h
Lateral Fricatives ɬ
Approximants w l j

Vowels

Daai has seven vowel phonemes, each with a phonemic length contrast.

  Front Central Back
Unrounded Rounded
High i ɯ ɯː u
Mid ɛ ɛː ə əː ɔ ɔː
Low a

Grammar

Daai Chin is an isolating or analytic language. There is no inflectional morphology at the word level; case, number, and tense are marked by clitics.

Examples

Daai Chin English
mthan night
mpyong mouth
kpyak to destroy
pha to arrive
Nghngaai-ktheih hmin lokti. The mango fruits became ripe.
Mat jah mata i:ma am ngleh-ei ni. They did not visit each other's houses.
References

References

  1. Daai at Ethnologue (18th ed., 2015) (subscription required)
  2. Hartmann-So, Helga (1989). "Morphophonemic changes in Daai Chin". Linguistics of the Tibeto-Burman Area. 12 (2): 51. doi:10.32655/LTBA.12.2.07.
  3. Lian, Salai Van Cung; Salem-Gervais, Nicolas (November 2020). "How Many Chin Languages Should Be Taught in Government Schools? Ongoing developments and structural challenges of language-in-education policy in Chin State". Parami Journal of Education. 1 (1).
  4. "Myanmar". Ethnologue: Languages of the World. 2016. Archived from the original on 2016-10-10.