The Gaddang language (also Cagayan) is and Austronesian language spoken by up to 30,000 of the
Gaddang people The Gaddang are an officially-recognized Indigenous peoples of the Philippines, indigenous people and a linguistically identified ethnic groups in the Philippines, ethnic group residing for centuries in the Northern Luzon watershed of the Cagayan Ri ...
in the
Philippines
The Philippines, officially the Republic of the Philippines, is an Archipelagic state, archipelagic country in Southeast Asia. Located in the western Pacific Ocean, it consists of List of islands of the Philippines, 7,641 islands, with a tot ...
, particularly along the
Magat and upper
Cagayan
Cagayan ( ), officially the Province of Cagayan (; ; ; isnag language, Isnag: ''Provinsia nga Cagayan''; ivatan language, Ivatan: ''Provinsiya nu Cagayan''; ; ), is a Provinces of the Philippines, province in the Philippines located in the Cag ...
rivers in the Region II provinces of
Nueva Vizcaya and
Isabela and by overseas migrants to countries in Asia, Australia, Canada, Europe, in the Middle East, United Kingdom and the United States. Most Gaddang speakers also speak
Ilocano, the lingua franca of Northern Luzon, as well as
Tagalog and English. Gaddang is associated with the "Christianized Gaddang" people, and is closely related to the highland (''non-Christian'' in local literature) tongues of
Ga'dang with 6,000 speakers,
Yogad,
Cagayan Agta with less than 1,000 and
Atta with 2,000 (although the
Negrito
The term ''Negrito'' (; ) refers to several diverse ethnic groups who inhabit isolated parts of Southeast Asia and the Andaman Islands. Populations often described as Negrito include: the Andamanese peoples (including the Great Andamanese, th ...
Aeta and Atta are genetically unrelated to the Austronesian Gaddang), and more distantly to
Ibanag,
Itawis,
Isneg and
Malaweg.
The Gaddang tongue has been vanishing from daily and public life over the past half-century. Public and church-sponsored education was historically conducted in Spanish (or later in English), and now in Filipino/Tagalog. The Dominicans tried to replace the multitude of Cagayan-valley languages with Ibanag, and later the plantations imported Ilocanos workers in such numbers that they outnumbered the valley natives. Once significantly-Gaddang communities grew exponentially after WWII due to in-migration of Tagalog, Igorot, and other ethnicities; Gaddang is now a minority language. In the 2000 Census, Gaddang was not even an identity option for residents of Nueva Vizcaya. Vocabulary and structural features of Gaddang among native Gaddang speakers have suffered as well, as usages from Ilokano and other languages affect their ''
parole
Parole, also known as provisional release, supervised release, or being on paper, is a form of early release of a prisoner, prison inmate where the prisoner agrees to abide by behavioral conditions, including checking-in with their designated ...
''. Finally, many ethnic Gaddang have migrated to other countries, and their children are not learning the ancestral tongue.
Geographic Distribution
The Gaddang people were identified as ''I-gaddang'' (likely meaning 'brown-colored people') by the Spanish in the early 1600s, and differentiated from the
Igorots
The indigenous peoples of the Cordillera in northern Luzon, Philippines, often referred to by the exonym Igorot people, or more recently, as the Cordilleran peoples, are an ethnic group composed of nine main ethnolinguistic groups whose domains ...
of the highlands by physique, skin color, homelands, and lifestyle. Mary Christine Abriza wrote "The Gaddang are found in northern Nueva Vizcaya, especially Bayombong, Solano, and Bagabag on the western bank of the Magat River, and Santiago, Angadanan, Cauayan, and Reina Mercedes on the Cagayan River for Christianed groups; and western Isabela, along the edges of Kalinga and Bontoc, in the towns of Antatet, Dalig, and the barrios of Gamu and Tumauini for the non-Christian communities. The 1960 census reports that there were 25,000 Gaddang, and that 10% or about 2,500 of these were non-Christian."
Distinct versions of Gaddang may be heard down the valleys of the Magat and Cagayan on the Asian Highway 26 (the Pan-Philippine Highway) through
Nueva Vizcaya into
Isabela after leaving
Santa Fe, where its use is infrequent, and successively through
Aritao,
Bambang,
Bayombong,
Solano,(including Quezon & Bintawan), and
Bagabag. By the time you arrive in
Santiago City, in-migration due to the economic development of the lower
Cagayan Valley
Cagayan Valley (; ), designated as Region II, is an Regions of the Philippines, administrative region in the Philippines. Located in the northeastern section of Luzon, it is composed of five Provinces of the Philippines, Philippine provinces: ...
over the last century means you now must search diligently to hear Gaddang spoken at all.
*
Santa Fe, near Dalton Pass, and San Roque (now Mabasa barangay of
Dupax del Norte) are reputed originally to have been settled by immigrants from Ilocos and Pangasinan in the latter part of the 19th century. Neither has a large community of Gaddang-speakers.
*
Aritao was originally
Isinai (with
Ibaloi and
Aeta
Aeta (Ayta ), Agta and Dumagat, are collective terms for several indigenous peoples who live in various parts of Luzon islands in the Philippines. They are included in the wider Negrito grouping of the Philippines and the rest of Southeast A ...
minorities), Kayapa is inhabited by
Ibaloi farmers and
Kankanaey-speaking merchants, while
Bambang and
Dupax were
Ilongot (also locally called Bugkalot); the Gaddang as spoken in these areas incorporates vocabulary and grammar borrowed from these unrelated languages.
*The provincial capital and university town of
Bayombong also has an Ilokano-speaking majority (as well as a significant
Ifugao
Ifugao, officially the Province of Ifugao (; ), is a landlocked province of the Philippines in the Cordillera Administrative Region in Luzon. Its capital is Lagawe and it borders Benguet to the west, Mountain Province to the north, Isabela t ...
minority), however Bayombong has a long history of recognizing the municipality's Gaddang-speaking roots. Despite growing disuse of Gaddang as a language of public and general daily life, Gaddang is often heard at social gatherings in traditional , such as "Ope Manke Wayi". Many participants are not, in fact, native speakers; they are often ethnic Ilokanos, Tagalogs, and even non-Filipinos.
*In urban
Solano, Gaddang is now rarely used outside the households of native speakers, and the many regional variants are unreconciled. Nueva Vizcaya's largest commercial center in 2013, Solano is effectively an Ilokano-speaking municipality.
*The
Bagabag variant of Gaddang is frequently described by residents of the province as the "deepest" version. Some related families in
Diadi and the adjoining Ifugao Province municipality of
Lamut also continue to speak Gaddang.
*Gaddang-speakers and the linguistically-related
Ibanag-speaking peoples were historically the original occupants of what is now the Cagayan Valley province of
Isabela, most of which was carved-out from Nueva Vizcaya in 1856. Rapid agricultural development of the new province spurred a wave of Ilokano immigration, and after 1945 the cities of
Santiago City,
Cauayan and
Ilagan City (originally the Gaddang town of Bolo) became major commercial and population centers. Presently, nearly 70% of the 1.5 million residents of Isabela identify themselves as Ilokano, and another 10% as Tagalog. 15% call themselves Ibanag, while the remaining 5% are Gaddang- or
Yogad-speakers.
Phonology
The Gaddang language is related to Ibanag, Itawis, Malaueg and others. It is distinct in that it features
phonemes
A phoneme () is any set of similar speech sounds that are perceptually regarded by the speakers of a language as a single basic sound—a smallest possible phonetic unit—that helps distinguish one word from another. All languages con ...
not present in many neighboring
Philippine languages
The Philippine languages or Philippinic are a proposed group by R. David Paul Zorc (1986) and Robert Blust (1991; 2005; 2019) that include all the languages of the Philippines and northern Sulawesi, Indonesia—except Sama–Bajaw (language ...
. As an example, the "f", "v", "z" and "j" sounds appear in Gaddang. There are notable differences from other languages in the distinction between "r" and "l" (and between "r" and "d"), and the "f" sound is a
voiceless bilabial fricative
The voiceless bilabial fricative is a type of consonantal sound, used in some spoken languages. The symbol in the International Phonetic Alphabet that represents this sound is , a Latinised form of the Greek letter Phi.
Features
Features of th ...
somewhat distinct from the
fortified
A fortification (also called a fort, fortress, fastness, or stronghold) is a military construction designed for the defense of territories in warfare, and is used to establish rule in a region during peacetime. The term is derived from Lat ...
"p" sound common in many Philippine languages (but not much closer to the English
voiceless labiodental fricative
The voiceless labiodental fricative is a type of consonantal sound used in a number of spoken languages. The symbol in the International Phonetic Alphabet that represents this sound is .
Some scholars also posit the voiceless labiodental approx ...
). Finally, the (Spanish) minimally-voiced "J" sound has evolved to a plosive (so the name ''Joseph'' sounds to the American ear as ''Kosip'').
Vowels
Most Gaddang speakers use six vowel sounds: , , , , ,
Consonants
Gaddang features doubled consonants, so the language may sound guttural to Tagalog, Ilokano, and even Pangasinan speakers. The uniqueness of this circumstance is often expressed by saying Gaddang speakers have "a hard tongue".
For example: (tood-duh). which means rice.
Gaddang is also one of the Philippine languages which is excluded from - allophony.
Grammar
Nouns
Personal pronouns
*I –
*You –
*He, she, it –
*We (exclusive) –
*We (inclusive) –
*You (plural/polite) –
*They –
*Sibling –
Demonstrative pronouns
* – this
* – that
* – here
* – there
* – over there
Enclitic particles
Existential
Interrogative words
* What, who – ( 'who are you?', 'what is that?')
* Why –
* Where –
* Where is –
* How –
* How much –
Numbers
*0 -
*1 -
*2 -
*3 -
*4 -
*5 -
*6 -
*7 -
*8 -
*9 -
*10 -
*11 -
*12 -
*13 -
*14 -
*15 -
*20 -
*21 -
*22 -
*100 -
*200 -
*500 -
*1000 -
*2000 –
Structure
Like most languages of the Philippines, Gaddang is declensionally, conjugationally and morphologically
agglutinative
In linguistics, agglutination is a morphological process in which words are formed by stringing together morphemes (word parts), each of which corresponds to a single syntactic feature. Languages that use agglutination widely are called agglu ...
.
Also like them, it is characterized by a dearth of positional/directional
adpositional adjunct words. Temporal references are usually accomplished using agglutinated nouns or verbs.
The following describes similar adpositional structure in
Tagalog: "The (locative) marker , which leads indirect objects in Filipino, corresponds to English prepositions...we can make other prepositional phrases with + other particular conjugations."
Gaddang uses in the same manner as the Tagalog , as an all-purpose indication that a spatial or temporal relationship exists.
Examples
Simple greetings/questions/phrases
*Good morning. –
*Good afternoon. –
*Good evening/night. –
*How are you? –
*I'm good and you? –
*I'm just fine, thank God. –
*Thank you. –
*Where are you going? –
*I'm going to... –
*What are you doing? –
*Oh, nothing in particular. –
*Please come in. –
*Happy birthday. –
*We visit our grandfather. – or
*Are we good, grandfather? – or
*Who are you? –
*Dodge that ball! –
*Why are you crying? –
*Are there many people here? –
*Are you sleepy? –
*I don't want to sleep yet. –
Sentences
Below are examples of Gaddang proverbs and riddles. Note the Ilokano and even Spanish loan-words.
* (Translated: 'eaten by alligator' ha, ha!)
* ('If I open it, it gossips – a fan.')
* ('Before a meal, I'm full; afterward I'm hungry – a pot.')
References
External links
Global Recordings NetworkGaddang–English DictionaryGaddang Word ListInternet Archive
{{DEFAULTSORT:Gaddang Language
Languages of Nueva Vizcaya
Languages of Isabela (province)
Cagayan Valley languages