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Jahaic languages

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The Jahaic or Northern Aslian languages (also called Jehaic or Semang ) are a group of Aslian languages spoken by about 5,000 people in inland areas of Peninsular Malaysia , with a few pockets in southern Thailand . The most distinctive language in the group is the outlier Cheq Wong , which is spoken south of the Central Aslian language Semai . The other languages apart from Ten'edn can be split into two divisions:

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2-412: (unclassified) Ten'edn (Mos, Maniq) The name Maniq (Məniʔ, Maniʔ) can refer to either Kensiu or Tonga, both of which also go by the name of Mos. Some Aslian languages are already extinct, such as Wila' (also called Bila' or Lowland Semang), a language or various languages recorded having been spoken on the Province Wellesley coast opposite Penang in the early 19th century. Another extinct language

4-582: Is Ple-Temer, which was previously spoken near Gerik in northern Perak (Benjamin 2011). This Austroasiatic language -related article is a stub . You can help Misplaced Pages by expanding it . Ten%27edn Ten'edn , also known as Mos in Thailand and Tonga-Mos or just Tonga in some literature, is an aboriginal Mon–Khmer language spoken by the Maniq tribe of Thailand and Malaysia. According to Benjamin (2012), Maniq (Məniʔ, Maniʔ) can refer to

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