Yang, et al. (2017)[2] lists the following languages as belonging to the Taloid cluster of languages, whose speakers are descendants of soldiers sent by the
Nanzhao Kingdom from the
Dali region to be stationed in northwestern Yunnan. Taloid languages are most closely related to
Lalo,
Lolopo, and
Lipo, all of which share the
lexical innovation a¹toL for 'fire'. They are spoken primarily in
Yongsheng County and
Heqing County.
Popei 泼佩 is spoken in
Huaping County, while
Gomotage is spoken in
Eryuan County.
Andy Castro, et al. (2010)[3] have reported the discovery of 5 languages in
Heqing County, Yunnan that are most closely related to
Talu (他留话) of
Yongsheng County. Autonyms are from Castro (2010:25).
Sonaga is the most divergent, while the other four languages comprise a core subclade.
Gomotage (ɣɔ21mɔ33ta55ɣə21; also known as ɣɔ31mɔ33zɔ31 or Emaorou 俄毛柔[4]) of
Eryuan County is also probably related to Kua-nsi (Yang 2010:7).
Other languages that may belong to the Taloid cluster include:[5]
Awu, Northern 阿乌(北): 3,000 speakers in Peiyuan 培元村,[6] Shuiping 水坪村,[7] and Yongle 永乐村[8] Villages of Da'an Township 大安彝族纳西族乡,
Yongsheng County
Liude 六得: 500 speakers in 3 villages of Liude Township 六德乡,
Yongsheng County.[9]
Liwu 里乌: 4,000 speakers in
Yongsheng County, in Liang'e 良峨[10] and Jifu 吉福[11] Villages of Xinghu Township 星湖村
Tazhi: spoken by a few hundred people in Puwei Township 普威镇, northern
Miyi County 米易县,
Sichuan. The Tazhi claim they came from northern Yunnan centuries ago. It is moribund or extinct, and is perhaps related to
Talu,
Tagu, or other languages of
Yongsheng County.[9]
^Lama, Ziwo Qiu-Fuyuan (2012). Subgrouping of Nisoic (Yi) Languages: A Study from the Perspectives of Shared Innovation and Phylogenetic Estimation (Ph.D. thesis). University of Texas at Arlington. p. 145.
hdl:10106/11161.
^
abcYang, Cathryn; Kwok Wailing 范秀琳 Zhou Decai 周德才; Yang Wenjing 杨文静. 2017. The Taloid Cluster of Northwestern Yunnan: Loyal Soldiers of the Nanzhao Kingdom / 滇西北彝语他留土群:忠诚的南诏战士. Presented at ICSTLL 50, Beijing, China.