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Rukai is a
Formosan language The Formosan languages are a geographic grouping comprising the languages of the indigenous peoples of Taiwan, all of which are Austronesian. They do not form a single subfamily of Austronesian but rather nine separate subfamilies. The Taiwa ...
spoken by the Rukai people in
Taiwan Taiwan, officially the Republic of China (ROC), is a country in East Asia, at the junction of the East and South China Seas in the northwestern Pacific Ocean, with the People's Republic of China (PRC) to the northwest, Japan to the no ...
. 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 In linguistics, mutual intelligibility is a relationship between languages or dialects in which speakers of different but related varieties can readily understand each other without prior familiarity or special effort. It is sometimes used as ...
among the Rukai dialects. Rukai is notable for its distinct
grammatical voice In linguistics, grammaticality is determined by the conformity to language usage as derived by the grammar of a particular speech variety. The notion of grammaticality rose alongside the theory of generative grammar, the goal of which is to form ...
system among the Formosan languages.


Classification

Paul Jen-kuei Li Paul Li, or Li Jen-kuei (; born 20 September 1936), is a research fellow at the Institute of Linguistics, Academia Sinica in Taipei, Taiwan Taiwan, officially the Republic of China (ROC), is a country in East Asia, at the junction of th ...
considers Rukai to be the first language to have split from the
Proto-Austronesian language Proto-Austronesian (commonly abbreviated as PAN or PAn) is a proto-language. It is the reconstructed ancestor of the Austronesian languages, one of the world's major language families. Proto-Austronesian is assumed to have begun to diversify ...
. Below are the estimated divergence dates of various Formosan languages from Li (2008:215). # Proto-Austronesian: 4,500 BCE # Rukai: 3,000 BCE # Tsouic: 2,500 BCE (split into Tsou and Southern Tsouic around 1,000 BCE) # Most other splits: 2,000 to 0 BCE # Western Plains: 1,000 CE Classifications by various scholars 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 Proto-Austronesian (commonly abbreviated as PAN or PAn) is a proto-language. It is the reconstructed ancestor of the Austronesian languages, one of the world's major language families. Proto-Austronesian is assumed to have begun to diversify ...
. 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. Tanan Rukai is also the Formosan language with the largest consonant inventory, with 23 consonants and 4 vowels having length contrast. 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: *Rukai **''Mantauran'' (萬山 Wanshan, also 'oponoho): 250–300 speakers **(Main branch) ***Maga–Tona ****''Maga'' (馬加 Majia) ****''Tona'' (多納 Duona) ***Budai–Tanan (Rukai Proper) ****''Budai'' (霧台 Wutai) ****''Tanan'' (大南 Danan; also ''Taromak'')


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. 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 has four vowels, . is not a
schwa In linguistics, specifically phonetics and phonology, schwa (, rarely or ; sometimes spelled shwa) is a vowel sound denoted by the IPA symbol , placed in the central position of the vowel chart. In English and some other languages, it rep ...
but a full vowel. Words ending phonemically in a consonant add an
echo vowel An echo vowel, also known as a synharmonic vowel, is a paragogic vowel that repeats the final vowel in a word in speech. For example, in Chumash, when a word ends with a glottal stop and comes at the end of an intonation unit, the final vowel ...
, one of , which unlike
morphophonemic Morphophonology (also morphophonemics or morphonology) is the branch of linguistics that studies the interaction between morphological and phonological or phonetic processes. Its chief focus is the sound changes that take place in morphemes ...
vowels is often lost in derivation. is used when the last vowel of the stem is . Due to influence from Paiwan and Chinese, younger speakers sometimes pronounce as , and in Tanan Rukai, younger speakers may merge into . In Mantauran Rukai, the voiced stops have spirantized: *b to , *d and *ɖ to , and *g to . 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): *4 vowels, written ''a, i, e, o''


Grammar


Morphology

Basic Mantauran Rukai syllables take on a basic structure, with words usually ranging from 2 to 4 syllables long (Zeitoun 2007). There are four morphological processes. #Affixation #Stem modification #Reduplication #Compounding The following reduplication patterns occur in Budai Rukai (''Austronesian Comparative Dictionary''). ;Reduplication of the noun stem *N + RED 'a great amount' *N(umeral or period) + RED 'lasting for a period of...' ;Reduplication of the verb stem *V + RED 'continuous, keep doing, do repeatedly' *V + RED 'future' *V (stative) + RED 'intensity, comparatively greater' 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) 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 A dichotomy is a partition of a whole (or a set) into two parts (subsets). In other words, this couple of parts must be * jointly exhaustive: everything must belong to one part or the other, and * mutually exclusive: nothing can belong simul ...
has been challenged (Chen, 2005). *Active / Agent Focus (AF): prefix ''u-/w-'' *Passive / Patient Focus (PF): prefix ''ki-''


Syntax

Unlike most other
Formosan languages The Formosan languages are a geographic grouping comprising the languages of the indigenous peoples of Taiwan, all of which are Austronesian. They do not form a single subfamily of Austronesian but rather nine separate subfamilies. The Taiwa ...
, 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: #Nominal #Verbal Complementalization can take on four strategies (Zeitoun 2007). #Zero strategy (i.e. paratactic complements) #Verb serialization #Nominalization #Causativization Definite objects can be topicalized in both active and passive sentences.


Function words

Below are some Mantauran Rukai function words from Zeitoun (2007). *la – and *mani – then


Word classes

Zeitoun (2007) distinguishes eleven word classes in Mantauran Rukai:. #Nouns #Verbs #Pronouns #Demonstratives #Numerals #Adverbs #Phrasal elements #Clausal elements #Interclausal elements #Exclamations #Interjections


Verbs

Below are some Mantauran Rukai verb affixes from Zeitoun (2007). *Dynamic verbs: ''o-''; very rarely ''om-'' and ''m-'' *Stative verbs: ''ma-'' *Negating prefix: ''ki-'' *Causative: ''pa-'' *''ʔini-Ca-'' "(one)self" *''mati-'' "well" *''k-in-a ... aə'' "... more" *''ʔako-'' "barely, just" *''ka-'' "in fact" *''mata ... aə'' "certainly"


Pronouns

Below are Rukai pronouns from Zeitoun (1997). 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). Prefixes *a- 'become' *ana- 'if' *api- 'like', 'want' *i- 'at', 'in' *ki- 'to gather', 'to collect' *ki- 'Dative Focus' *ki- 'to dig *ku- 'to remove' *ku- 'Free Pronoun marker' *ku- 'Past marker' *la- 'Plural' *lu- 'Future' *ma- 'Stative Verb' *ma- 'reciprocal' *ma- 'dual (two people)' *mu- 'to remove' *mu- 'self-motion' *- 'ordinal' *nai- 'have done' *ŋi- 'to move in certain direction' *ŋi- '-self' *ŋu- 'to ride' *pa- 'causative' *paŋu- 'by' *sa- 'body parts' *sa- 'when' *si- 'verbal prefix' *si- 'to wear' *sini- 'from' *su- 'to clean' *su- 'belong' *ta- 'to feel' *taru- 'certain' *tu- 'to mark' *tua- 'to wash' *θi- 'to release' *u-/w- 'Agent Focus' Suffixes *-a 'imperative' *-a 'Accusative Case' *-ana 'still', 'yet' *-anə 'nominalize' *-ŋa 'completive' *-ŋa 'close to' Infixes * 'past tense; non-future' * 'realis' * 'Goal subject', 'Past time' Circumfixes *aanə 'future state' *aanə 'nominalizer' *kaanə 'real or genuine' *kalaanə 'season' *saanə 'instrument' *sanuanə 'left-over' *sanulə 'frequency' *taanə 'time', 'location' Compound (Multiple) Affixes *la-ma- 'plural marker' *ɭi-tara- 'have to', must' *sa-ka- 'household' *sa-ka-uanə ; the whole' *sa-ka-si-... l-anə the ... generation *ta-ra- for a period of time *ta-ra- be good at *t-in-uanə personal relation


Mantauran Rukai

The following list of Mantauran Rukai affixes is sourced from Zeitoun (2007). *a- 'when' *a- (action/state nominalization) *a- 'plural' *-a 'beyond (in time or space)' *-a 'irrealis' *-a 'imperative' *-ae (state nominalization) *aae; allomorph: ... -ae (objective nominalization; negative imperative) *amo- 'will' *-ane (meaning unknown; used on verbs to insult someone) *-a-nga 'imperative' (mild requests) *apaa- 'reciprocal causative' (dynamic verbs) *apano- 'like to, prone to, have a tendency to' *apa'a 'reciprocal causative' (stative verbs) *apa'ohi- 'split (causative form)' *-ci 'snivel' *dh- 'invisible' *i- 'at' *-i 'irrealis' *-ie (marking of the oblique case on personal and impersonal pronouns) *-ka 'predicative negation' *ka- 'in fact, indeed, actually' *kaae 'genuine, real, original' *kalaae 'temporal nominalization' *kapa ~ kama- 'continuously' *kapa ...-nga 'all, every' *ki- 'modal negation' *kiae 'whose' *kaae 'more and more' *la- 'plural' *la-ma'a- 'reciprocal' *-lo 'plural' (demonstrative pronouns) *m- (dynamic (finite and subjunctive) verbs; alternates with k-, p-, or Ø in its non-finite form) *ma- (stative (finite and subjunctive) verbs; alternates with ka- in its non-finite form) *male (forms 'tens') *ma-Ca- 'reciprocity' (dynamic (finite and subjunctive) verbs; alternates with pa-Ca; Ca refers to the reduplication of the first consonant) *maa- 'reciprocity' (dynamic (finite and subjunctive) verbs; alternates with paa) *maae (~ paae; maa- (dual reciprocal) + -e (meaning unknown)) * 'each/both' *maatalile/lo '(a number of) floors' *maka- 'finish' *makale/lo (~ pakale/lo) 'up to N-/for N- days/months/years' *maka'an- (attaches only to aleve 'below' and lrahalre 'above') * (~ 'all' *Mali- (~ pali) 'along' *ma'ohi (~ pa'ohi) 'split' *m-o- (~ o-) 'holds X's ritual (where X = household name)' (attaches to household names to form dynamic verbs) *m-o- (~ o-) 'toward' *mo- 'anti-causative' *m-ore (~ ore-) 'perform' *mota'a- (~ ota'a-) 'raise' *n- 'visible' *-na 'still' *naa- 'continuously' *-nae 'place where' *-nae 'time when' *-nga 'already' *-nga 'superlative' *ni- 'counterfactuality (irrealis)' *nia 'concessive' *o- 'dynamic / finite / realis / active' *oe 'dress well' (derives verbs from nouns) *o-ara- 'only' (attached to verbs) *o-ka'ale/lo (~ ko'ale/lo) 'a number of recipients' *om- (~ m- / ~ Ø) 'dynamic / finite / realis / active' *o-tali (~ tali- / ~ toli) 'wrap up, pack up' *o-tali (~ tali-) 'made of' *o-tara- (~ tara-) 'a number of months / years' *taro- (doublet form: tao-) 'group of persons in movement' *o-ta'i- (~ ta'i-) 'precede' *o-'ara- (~ 'ara-) 'early' *pa- 'causative' *pa- 'every N-times' * 'stick to, think about' *pa'aae '(what is) left' *pe- 'forbiddance (?)' *pi- 'local causative' *po- 'causative of movement' *po- 'bear, grow N' (attaches to nouns) *saka- 'external' *samori- 'keep on ...-ing' (attaches only to the root ''kane'' 'to eat') *sa'api- 'prone to, inclined to' *so- 'tribute' *ta- (subjective nominalization) *ta- 'inalienability' (kinship and color terms) * 'place where' *taae 'time when' *tan-ae (forms derived locative nominal) *taka- 'a number of persons' *tako- 'while' *tala- 'container' (?; found only with the root ''ove'eke'') *tali- 'belong to' *ta'a- 'with (a group of persons)' *ta'ale/lo 'measure with an extended arm' (bound numerals) *to- 'do, make, produce, build' * 'use ... for, by ...-ing' *to'a- 'use ... to, for' *'a- 'instrument/manner nominalizer' *'ae 'have a lot of' *'aa- 'turn into' *'aka- 'Nth' (ordinal prefix 'a- + stative marker ka- (non-finite form)) *'ako- (doublet form: 'akoae) 'speak (out)' *'ako- 'barely, a little' *'akole 'say a number of times' *'akonga 'more' *'ali- 'from (in time or space)' (< '' 'aliki'' '(come) from') *'ano- 'walk, ride, take' *'ano- 'unknown meaning' (only attaches to stative roots) *'ano-Ca- 'along/with a number of persons (in movement)' (attaches to bound numeral forms and certain other roots) *'anoae 'entirely, completely, cease, alleviate' *'aole/lo 'the Nth time' (ordinal prefix 'a- + 'ole/lo 'a number of times') *'apakale/lo 'the Nth day' (ordinal prefix 'a- + pakale/lo 'up to/for a number of days / months / years) *'api- 'like ... -ing' *'a-po- 'as a result of' *'apo- 'come out' *'asaae 'what's the use of' *'asi- (meaning unknown; found only once in the word 'work') *'i- 'passive' *'i- 'verbalizer' (from nouns; polysemous prefix). Semantic core of 'i-N is 'get, obtain-N', although it can also be glossed as 'get, harvest, gather, look after, bear, have for, kill, etc.' *'i- 'put on, wear' (derives verbs from nouns) *'ia-... ae 'because of, out of' *'ini- 'movement toward' *'ini- 'cross' *'ini- 'consume' *'ini-Ca- '(one)self' (reflexive) *'iniae 'pretend' *'ini(-ae) 'behave like, look like' (derived from '' 'inilrao'' 'resemble') *'ira- 'for' (derived from '' 'iraki'' '(do) for') *'o- 'take off' *'ole/lo 'a number of times' (attaches to bound numerals) *'ole/lo 'measure' (must be followed by certain words to indicate a measure with the hand, foot, ruler, etc.) *'o-tali 'unpack' The following list of Budai Rukai affixes is sourced from the ''Comparative Austronesian Dictionary'' (1995). ;Nominal affixes *kaanə + N 'something real or genuine *ko- + Pronoun 'nominative' * + N (numeral) 'ordinal' *sa-... anə + V 'instrument, tool' *sa- + N 'some body parts' *taanə + N 'location, time' *ta-ra + N 'agentive, a person specialised in...' ;Verbal affixes *-a- + V 'realis' *-a + V 'imperative' *ki- + N 'to gather, to collect, to harvest' *ki- + V 'dative-focus, involuntary action' *ko- + N 'to remove, to peel' *ko- + V 'intransitive, patient-focus' *ma- + V 'mutual, reciprocal' *maa- + V 'stative' *mo- + N 'to discharge, remove' *mo- + V '(to go) self-motion, non-causative' *ŋi- + V 'to act or to move in a certain direction or manner' *ŋo- + N 'to ride' *pa- + V 'causative' *si- + V (bound stem) 'verbal prefix' *si- + N 'to wear, to carry, to possess' *so- + N 'to spit, to clean, to give out' *to- + N 'to make, produce, bring forth' *θi + N 'to release' *w- + V 'agent-focus, verbal prefix'


Notes


References

* * * *


External links


Yuánzhùmínzú yǔyán xiànshàng cídiǎn 原住民族語言線上詞典
– Rukai search page at the "Aboriginal language online dictionary" website of the Indigenous Languages Research and Development Foundation
Rukai teaching and learning materials published by the Council of Indigenous Peoples of Taiwan

Rukai translation of President Tsai Ing-wen's 2016 apology to indigenous people
– published on the website of the presidential office {{DEFAULTSORT:Rukai Language Formosan languages