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Rukai language

Rukai is a Formosan language spoken by the Rukai people in Taiwan. It is a member of the Austronesian language family. The Rukai language comprises six dialects, which are Budai, Labuan, Maga, Mantauran, Tanan and Tona. The number of speakers of the six Rukai dialects is estimated to be about 10,000. Some of them are monolingual. There are varying degrees of mutual intelligibility among the Rukai dialects. Rukai is notable for its distinct grammatical voice system among the Formosan languages.

Classification

Paul Jen-kuei Li considers Rukai to be the first language to have split from the Proto-Austronesian language. Below are the estimated divergence dates of various Formosan languages from Li (2008:215).[2]

  1. Proto-Austronesian: 4,500 BCE
  2. Rukai: 3,000 BCE
  3. Tsouic: 2,500 BCE (split into Tsou and Southern Tsouic around 1,000 BCE)
  4. Most other splits: 2,000 to 0 BCE
  5. Western Plains: 1,000 CE

Classifications by various scholars[who?] repeatedly find that Rukai is one of the, and often the, most divergent of the Austronesian languages. It is therefore prime evidence for reconstructing Proto-Austronesian.[clarification needed] Ross (2009) notes that to date, reconstructions had not taken Rukai into account, and therefore cannot be considered valid for the entire family.

Dialects

Rukai is unique for being the only Formosan language without a focus system.[3]

Tanan Rukai is also the Formosan language with the largest consonant inventory, with 23 consonants and 4 vowels having length contrast.[4] Tanan Rukai also makes an animate/inanimate instead of a personal/non-personal one as most other Formosan languages do.

Mantauran is one of the most divergent dialects. Li (2001) classifies them as follows:[5]

Geographic distribution

According to Zeitoun (2007:4), there are a total of 6 Rukai dialects spoken in 12 different villages.

Together, Maga, Tona, and Mantauran are also known as the "Lower Three Villages." Rukai have also recently in Sandimen Township and southern Sanhe Village, Majia Township, where there are many Paiwan.[6] Sanhe Village is also where the Budai Rukai originally lived in before they relocated to Wutai Township in the mid-1900s.

Phonology

Most Rukai dialects have four vowels and retroflex and interdental consonants.

Budai Rukai[6] has four vowels, /i ə a u/. Words ending phonemically in a consonant add an echo vowel, one of /i ə u/, which unlike morphophonemic vowels is often lost in derivation. /ə/ is used when the last vowel of the stem is /a/.

Due to influence from Paiwan and Chinese, younger speakers sometimes pronounce /ð/ as [z], and in Tanan Rukai, younger speakers may merge /θ/ into /s/.

In Mantauran Rukai, the voiced stops have spirantized: *b to /v/, *d and *ɖ to /ð/, and *g to /h/.

The following table displays the consonant inventory of Mantauran Rukai, with written representations that differ from their IPA representations given in angle brackets (Zeitoun 2007):

Grammar

Morphology

Basic Mantauran Rukai syllables take on a basic (C)V structure, with words usually ranging from 2 to 4 syllables long (Zeitoun 2007). There are four morphological processes.

  1. Affixation
  2. Stem modification
  3. Reduplication
  4. Compounding

The following reduplication patterns occur in Budai Rukai (Austronesian Comparative Dictionary).

Reduplication of the noun stem
Reduplication of the verb stem

In Budai Rukai, reduplication of a bound stem can also be used to create certain basic nouns and verbs, such as 'thunder,' 'mountain,' and 'to scrape' (Austronesian Comparative Dictionary).

Based on an analysis of the Budai (Kucapungan) dialect, Rukai is said to be unusual among Formosan languages for having a dichotomous active-passive voice system, (Chen & Sung, 2005)[7] which may include voices such agent, patient, locative, or instrumental focus. Stan Starosta considers this to be an indication that Rukai is the first offshoot of the Austronesian language family (Zeitoun, 2007). However, this dichotomy has been challenged (Chen, 2005).[8]

Syntax

Unlike most other Formosan languages, Rukai has an accusative case-marking system instead of an ergative one typical of Austronesian-aligned languages (Zeitoun 2007). There are two types of clauses in Mantauran Rukai:

  1. Nominal
  2. Verbal

Complementalization can take on four strategies (Zeitoun 2007).

  1. Zero strategy (i.e. paratactic complements)
  2. Verb serialization
  3. Nominalization
  4. Causativization

Definite objects can be topicalized in both active and passive sentences.

Function words

Below are some Mantauran Rukai function words from Zeitoun (2007).

Word classes

Zeitoun (2007) distinguishes eleven word classes in Mantauran Rukai:.

  1. Nouns
  2. Verbs
  3. Pronouns
  4. Demonstratives
  5. Numerals
  6. Adverbs
  7. Phrasal elements
  8. Clausal elements
  9. Interclausal elements
  10. Exclamations
  11. Interjections

Verbs

Below are some Mantauran Rukai verb affixes from Zeitoun (2007).

Pronouns

Below are Rukai pronouns from Zeitoun (1997).[9] Note that Mantauran Rukai pronouns are usually bound.

Affixes

Budai Rukai

The list of Budai Rukai affixes below is sourced from Chen (2006:199-203).[6]

Prefixes

Suffixes

Infixes

Circumfixes

Compound (Multiple) Affixes

Mantauran Rukai

The following list of Mantauran Rukai affixes is sourced from Zeitoun (2007).

The following list of Budai Rukai affixes is sourced from the Comparative Austronesian Dictionary (1995).

Nominal affixes
Verbal affixes

Notes

  1. ^ Rukai at Ethnologue (18th ed., 2015) (subscription required)
  2. ^ Li, Paul Jen-kuei (2008). "Time perspective of Formosan Aborigines". In Sanchez-Mazas, Alicia (ed.). Past Human Migrations in East Asia: Matching Archaeology, Linguistics and Genetics. Taylor & Francis.
  3. ^ Li, Paul (2006). The internal relationships of Formosan languages. Tenth International Conference on Austronesian Linguistics, 17-20 January 2006, Palawan, Philippines.
  4. ^ Blust, Robert A. (2009). The Austronesian Languages. Canberra: Pacific Linguistics, Research School of Pacific and Asian Studies, Australian National University. ISBN 978-0-85883-602-0.
  5. ^ Li, Paul Jen-kuei (2001). "The dispersal of the Formosan aborigines in Taiwan" (PDF). Language and Linguistics. 2 (1): 271–278. Archived from the original (PDF) on 2020-08-08. Retrieved 2021-05-10.
  6. ^ a b c Chen, Chun-mei (2006). A Comparative Study on Formosan Phonology: Paiwan and Budai Rukai (PDF) (Ph.D. thesis). The University of Texas at Austin. hdl:2152/3758.
  7. ^ Chen, Cheng-Fu; Sung, Li-May (2005). "Interrogatives as polarity items in Kucapungan Rukai" (PDF). Concentric. 31 (1): 95–117.
  8. ^ Chen, Cheng-Fu (2005). Heinz, Jeffrey; Ntelitheos, Dimitris (eds.). Object voice and nominalization in Rukai (PDF). Annual Conference of the Austronesian Formal Linguistics Association. Los Angeles. pp. 35–47.
  9. ^ Zeitoun, Elizabeth (1997). "The pronominal system of Mantauran (Rukai)". Oceanic Linguistics. 36 (2): 312–346. doi:10.2307/3622988. JSTOR 3622988.

References

External links