Bradley (2007) Loloish was traditionally divided into a northern branch, with
Lisu and the numerous
Yi languages and a southern branch, with everything else. However, per Bradley and Thurgood there is also a central branch, with languages from both northern and southern. Bradley adds a fourth, southeastern branch. •
Northern Loloish:
Nuosu (2 million),
Nasu (1.0 million), etc. •
Central Loloish:
Lisu (940,000)–
Lipho (250,000) (incl.
Lolopo (570,000),
Lalo (320,000)),
Micha (50,000),
Lahu (600,000),
Jinuo (21,000), etc. •
Southern Loloish:
Akha–
Hani,
Phunoi–
Bisu,
Pholo and
’Ugong (aberrant; removed in Bradley 1997) •
Southeastern Loloish:
Nisu,
Phula,
Sani,
Azha,
Khlula,
Muji,
Phowa, etc. Ugong is divergent; Bradley (1997) places it with the
Burmish languages. The
Tujia language is difficult to classify due to divergent vocabulary. Other unclassified Loloish languages are
Gokhy (Gɔkhý),
Lopi and
Ache.
Lama (2012) Lama (2012) classified 36 Lolo–Burmese languages based on a computational analysis of shared phonological and
lexical innovations. He finds the
Mondzish languages to be a separate branch of Lolo-Burmese, which Lama considers to have split off before
Burmish did. The rest of the Loloish languages are as follows: }} }} }} }} }} }} The Nisoish, Lisoish, and Kazhuoish clusters are closely related, forming a clade ("Ni-Li-Ka") at about the same level as the other five branches of Loloish. Lama's Naxish clade has been classified as
Qiangic rather than Loloish by
Guillaume Jacques and Alexis Michaud (
see Qiangic languages). A
Lawoish (Lawu) branch has also been recently proposed. Satterthwaite-Phillips' (2011) computational phylogenetic analysis of the Lolo-Burmese languages does support the inclusion of
Naxish (Naic) within Lolo-Burmese, but recognizes Lahoish and Nusoish as coherent language groups that form independent branches of Loloish. ==Lesser-known languages==