Pazeh language

Pazeh
Native to Taiwan
Ethnicity Pazeh people
Extinct 24 October 2010, with the death of Pan Jin-yu[1]
Dialects
Kulun
Language codes
ISO 639-3 uun
Glottolog kulo1237[2]

(pink, northwest) Saisiyat, Pazeh proper, and Kulun

Pazeh (also spelled Pazih, Pazéh) is the extinct language of the Pazeh, a Taiwanese aboriginal people. It was a Formosan language of the Austronesian languages language family. The last remaining native speaker of Pazeh proper, Pan Jin-yu,[3] died in 2010 at the age of 96.[1] Before her death, she offered Pazeh classes to about 200 regular students in Puli and a small number of students in Miaoli and Taichung.[4] Kulun was a dialect that became extinct earlier.

Phonology

Pazeh has 17 consonants, 4 vowels, and 4 diphthongs (-ay, -aw, -uy, -iw).[5]

Consonants[6]
Labial Coronal1 Palatal Velar Glottal
Nasal mn ŋ
Stop p bt d k ɡ3 (ʔ)2
Fricative s z4 x h5
Rhotic ɾ
Approximant l j w
  1. /t/ and /d/ do not actually share the same place of articulation; /d/ is alveolar or prealveolar and /t/ (as well as /n/) is interdental. Other coronal consonants tend to be prealveolar or post-dental.
  2. The distribution for the glottal stop is allophonic, appearing only between like vowels, before initial vowels, and after final vowels. It is also largely absent in normal speech
  3. /ɡ/ is spirantized intervocalically
  4. /z/ is actually an alveolar/prealveolar affricate [dz] and only occurs as a syllable onset.[7]
  5. /h/ varies between glottal and pharyngeal realizations ([ħ]) and is sometimes difficult to distinguish from /x/

Although Pazeh contrasts voiced and voiceless obstruents, this contrast is neutralized in final position for labial and velar stops, where only /p/ and /k/ occur respectively (/d/ is also devoiced but a contrast is maintained). /l/ and /n/ are also neutralized to the latter.[8] Voiceless stops are unreleased in final position.

Vowels[9]
Front Central Back
Close i u
Mid (ɛ) ə (o)
Open a

Mid vowels ([ɛ] and [o]) are allophones of close vowels (/i/ and /u/ respectively).

/ɡ/ is somewhat advanced and raised when adjacent to /i/. Prevocally, high vowels are semivocalized. Most coronal consonants block this, although it still occurs after /s/. Semivowels also appear post-vocally.[11]

Phonotactics

The most common morpheme structure is CVCVC where C is any consonant and V is any vowel. Consonant clusters are rare and consist only of a nasal plus a homorganic obstruent or the glide element of a diphthong.[8]

Intervocalic voiceless stops are voiced before a morpheme boundary (but not following one) .[12] Stress falls on the ultimate syllable.[8]

Sound changes

The Pazih language merged the following Proto-Austronesian phonemes (Li 2001:7).

  1. *C, *S > s
  2. *D, *Z > d
  3. *k, *g > k
  4. *j, *s > z
  5. *S2, *H > h
  6. *N, *ñ > l
  7. *r, *R > x

Pazih also split some Proto-Austronesian phonemes:

  1. *S > s (merged with *C); *S2, *H > h
  2. *w > ø, w
  3. *e > e, u

Grammar

Like Bunun, Seediq, Squliq Atayal, Mantauran Rukai, and the Tsouic languages,[13] Pazeh does not distinguish between common nouns and personal names, whereas Saisiyat does (Li 2000). Although closely related to Saisiyat, the Pazeh language does not have the infix -um- that is present in Saisiyat.

Morphology

Pazeh makes ready use of affixes, infixes, suffixes, and circumfixes, as well as reduplication.[14] Pazeh also has "focus-marking" in its verbal morphology. In addition, verbs can be either stative or dynamic.

There are four types of focus in Pazeh (Li 2000).

  1. Agent-focus (AF): mu-, me-, mi-, m-, ma-, ∅-
  2. Patient-focus (PF) -en, -un
  3. Locative-focus (LF): -an
  4. Referential-focus (RF): sa-, saa-, si-

The following affixes are used in Pazeh verbs (Li 2000).

The following are also used to mark aspect (Li 2000).

Affixes

The Pazih affixes below are from Li (2001:10–19).

Prefixes
  • ha-: stative
  • ka-: inchoative
  • kaa-: nominal
  • kai-: to stay at a certain location
  • kali- -an: susceptible to, involuntarily
  • m-: agent focus
  • ma- (ka-): stative
  • ma- (pa-): to have (noun); agent-focus
  • maa[ka]- (paa[ka]-): – mutually, reciprocal
  • maka- (paka-): to bear, bring forth
  • mana- (pana-): to wash (body parts)
  • mari- (pari-): to bear, to give birth (of animal)
  • maru- (paru-): to lay eggs or give birth
  • masa-: verbal prefix
  • masi- (pasi-): to move, to wear
  • mata-: (number of) times
  • mati- (pati-): to carry, to wear, to catch
  • matu- (patu-): to build, erect, set up
  • maxa- (paxa-): to produce, to bring forth; to become
  • maxi- (paxi-): to have, to bring forth; to look carefully
  • me-, mi- (pi-), mi- (i-): agent-focus
  • mia- (pia-): towards, to go
  • mia- which one; ordinal (number)
  • mu- (pu-): agent-focus (-um- in many other Formosan languages); to release
  • pa-: verbalizer; causative, active verb
  • paka-: causative, stative verb
  • papa-: to ride
  • pu-: to pave
  • pu- -an: locative-focus, location
  • sa- ~saa-, si-: instrumental-focus, something used to ..., tools
  • si-: to have, to produce; to go (to a location)
  • si- -an: to bring forth, to have a growth on one's body
  • ta-: agentive, one specialized in ...; nominal prefix; verbal prefix
  • tau-: agentive
  • tau- -an: a gathering place
  • taxa-: to feel like doing; to take a special posture
  • taxi-: to lower one's body
  • taxu-: to move around
  • ti-: to get something undesirable or uncomfortable
  • tu-: stative
  • xi-: to turn over, to revert
Infixes
  • -a-: progressive, durative
  • -in-: perfective
Suffixes
  • -an: locative-focus, location
  • -an ~ -nan: locative pronoun or personal name
  • -aw: patient-focus, future
  • -ay: locative-focus, irrealis
  • -en ~ -un: patient-focus
  • -i: patient-focus, imperative; vocative, address for an elder kinship
  • CV- -an: location

Syntax

Although originally a verb-initial language, Pazeh often uses SVO (verb-medial) sentence constructions due to influence from Chinese.

There are four case markers in Pazeh (Li 2000).

  1. ki Nominative
  2. ni Genitive
  3. di Locative
  4. u Oblique

Pazeh has the following negators (Li 2001:46).

Pronouns

The Pazeh personal pronouns below are from Li (2000). (Note: vis. = visible, prox. = proximal)

Pazeh Personal Pronouns
Type of
Pronoun
Neutral Nominative Genitive Locative
1s. yaku aku naki yakuan, yakunan
2s. isiw siw nisiw isiwan
2s. (prox.) imini mini nimini iminiyan
3s. (vis.) imisiw misiw nimisiw misiwan
3s. (not vis.) isia sia nisia isiaan
1p. (incl.) ita ta nita (ta-) itaan
1p. (excl.) yami ami nyam(i) yamian, yaminan
2p. imu mu nimu imuan
2p. (prox.) yamini amini naamini yaminiyan
3p. (vis.) yamisiw amisiw naamisiw yamisiwan
3p. (not vis.) yasia asia naasia yasiaan

Numerals

Pazeh and Saisiyat are the only Formosan languages that do not have a bipartite numerical system consisting of both human and non-human numerals (Li 2006).[15] Pazeh is also the only language that forms the numerals 6 to 9 by addition (However, Saisiyat, which is closely related to Pazeh, expresses the number 6 as 5 + 1, and 9 as 10 1.)

The number "five" in Pazeh, xasep, is similar to Saisiyat Laseb, Taokas hasap, Babuza nahup, and Hoanya hasip (Li 2006). Li (2006) believes that the similarity is more likely because of borrowing rather than common origin. Laurent Sagart considers these numerals to be ancient retentions from Proto-Austronesian, but Paul Jen-kuei Li considers them to be local innovations. Unlike Pazeh, these Plains Aboriginal languages as well as the Atayalic languages use 2 × 4 to express the number 8. (The Atayalic languages as well as Thao also use 2 × 3 to express the number 6.) Saisiyat, Thao, Taokas, and Babuza use 10 1 to express 9, whereas Saisiyat uses 5 + 1 to express 6 as Pazeh does.[16] The Ilongot language of the Philippines also derives numerals in the same manner as Pazeh does (Blust 2009:273).[17]

Furthermore, numerals can function as both nouns and verbs in all Formosan languages, including Pazeh.

References

Notes

  1. 1 2 Li, Ren-gui.( 李壬癸),/Academician of the Academia Sinica (Taipei) (中央研究院院士(台北市)),"下一個消失的語言是? (Which language will be extinct next in Taiwan?)", United Daily News,2010.10.29/01:39am. (Chinese)
  2. Nordhoff, Sebastian; Hammarström, Harald; Forkel, Robert; Haspelmath, Martin, eds. (2013). "Kulon-Pazeh". Glottolog. Leipzig: Max Planck Institute for Evolutionary Anthropology.
  3. Blust (1999:322)
  4. http://www.taipeitimes.com/News/taiwan/archives/2008/06/26/2003415773
  5. Blust, Robert (1999). "Notes on Pazeh Phonology and Morphology". Oceanic Linguistics 38 (2): 321–365. doi:10.1353/ol.1999.0002.
  6. Blust (1999:325–329)
  7. Blust (1999:328)
  8. 1 2 3 Blust (1999:324)
  9. Blust (1999:329–332)
  10. Blust (1999:330)
  11. Blust (1999:329)
  12. Blust (1999:326)
  13. Li, Paul Jen-kuei. 1997. "A Syntactic Typology of Formosan Languages – Case Markers on Nouns and Pronouns." In Li, Paul Jen-kuei. 2004. Selected Papers on Formosan Languages. Taipei, Taiwan: Institute of Linguistics, Academia Sinica.
  14. Blust (1999:340)
  15. Li, Paul Jen-kuei. 2006. Numerals in Formosan Languages. Oceanic Linguistics, Vol. 45, No. 1 (Jun., 2006), pp. 133–152.
  16. http://www.sinica.edu.tw/as/advisory/journal/15-1/59-62.pdf
  17. Blust, Robert. 2009. The Austronesian Languages. Canberra: Pacific Linguistics, Research School of Pacific and Asian Studies, Australian National University. ISBN 0-85883-602-5, ISBN 978-0-85883-602-0.

General references

Bibliography

Further reading

External links

Pazeh language test of Wikipedia at Wikimedia Incubator
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