Article · Wikipedia archive · Last revised Jun 26, 2026

Maringic languages

The Maringic languages is a small group of Sino-Tibetan languages consisting of Maring and Uipo, two closely related languages spoken by the Maring and Khoibu people in Manipur, India. Linguistically, they may be closest to the Tangkhulic languages.

Last revised
Jun 26, 2026
Read time
≈ 1 min
Length
77 w
Citations
1
Source
Maringic
Geographic
distribution
Manipur, India
Linguistic classificationSino-Tibetan
Subdivisions
Language codes
Glottologmari1415
ELPMaring Naga
A Khoibu speaker recorded in India.

The Maringic languages is a small group of Sino-Tibetan languages consisting of Maring and Uipo (exonym: Khoibu), two closely related languages spoken by the Maring and Khoibu people in Manipur, India. Linguistically, they may be closest to the Tangkhulic languages.1

References

References

  1. Schumann, Freya (2024). Situating Uipo: evidence from stem alternations. SEALS 33 (33rd Annual Meeting of the Southeast Asian Linguistic Society). Taipei.