Puyuma language
Puyuma | |
---|---|
卑南語 | |
Native to | Taiwan |
Ethnicity | Puyuma people |
Native speakers | 8,500 (2002)[1] |
Austronesian
| |
Language codes | |
ISO 639-3 |
pyu |
Glottolog |
puyu1239 [2] |
(red) Puyuma |
Puyuma language test of Wikipedia at Wikimedia Incubator |
The Puyuma language or Pinuyumayan (Chinese: 卑南語; pinyin: Pēinán Yǔ) is the language of the Puyuma people, a tribe of indigenous people on Taiwan (see Taiwanese aborigines). It is a divergent Formosan language of the Austronesian family. Most speakers are older adults.
Puyuma is one of the more divergent of the Austronesian languages, and falls outside reconstructions of Proto-Austronesian.
Dialects
The internal classification of Puyuma dialects below is from (Ting 1978). Nanwang is usually shown to be the relatively phonologically conservative dialect but grammatically innovative, as it preserves proto-Puyuma voiced plosives and syncrets case.
- Proto-Puyuma
- Nanwang
- (Main branch)
- Pinaski–Ulivelivek
- Rikavung
- Kasavakan–Katipul
Puyuma-speaking villages are:[3]
- Puyuma cluster ('born of the bamboo')
- Katipul cluster ('born of a stone')
- Alipai (Chinese: Pinlang 賓朗)
- Pinaski (Chinese: Hsia Pinlang 下賓朗); 2 km north of Puyuma/Nanwang, and maintains close relations with it
- Pankiu (Chinese: Pankiu)
- Kasavakan (Chinese: Chienhe 建和)
- Katratripul (Chinese: Chihpen 知本)
- Likavung (Chinese: Lichia 利嘉)
- Tamalakaw (Chinese: Taian 泰安)
- Ulivelivek (Chinese: Chulu 初鹿)
Phonology
Puyuma has 18 consonants and 4 vowels:
Bilabial | Alveolar | Retroflex | Palatal | Velar | Glottal | ||
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Nasal | m | n | ŋ | ||||
Plosive | Voiceless | p | t | ʈ | k | ʔ | |
Voiced | b | d | ɖ | ɡ | |||
Fricative | s | ||||||
Trill | r | ||||||
Approximant | l | ɭ | j | w |
Front | Central | Back | |
---|---|---|---|
Close | i | u | |
Mid | ə | ||
Open | a |
Grammar
Morphology
Puyuma verbs have four types of focus:[5]
- Actor focus: Ø (no mark), -em-, -en- (after labials), me-, meʔ-, ma-
- Object focus: -aw
- Referent focus: -ay
- Instrumental focus: -anay
There are three verbal aspects:[5]
- Perfect
- Imperfect
- Future
There are two modes:[5]
- Imperative
- Hortative future
Affixes include:[5]
- Perfect: Ø (no mark)
- Imperfect: Reduplication; -a-
- Future: Reduplication, sometimes only -a-
- Hortative future: -a-
- Imperative mode: Ø (no mark)
Syntax
Puyuma has a verb-initial word order.
Articles include:[6]
- i – singular personal
- a – singular non-personal
- na – plural (personal and non-personal)
Pronouns
The Puyuma personal pronouns are:[7]
Type of Pronoun |
Nominative[8] | Oblique: Direct |
Oblique: Indirect |
Oblique: Non-Subject |
Neutral |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
1s. | nanku | kanku, kananku | draku, drananku | kanku | kuiku |
2s. | nanu | kanu, kananu | dranu, drananu | kanu | yuyu |
3s. | nantu | kantu, kanantu | dratu, dranantu | kantaw | taytaw |
1p. (incl.) | nanta | kanta, kananta | drata, drananta | kanta | taita |
1p. (excl.) | naniam | kaniam, kananiam | draniam, drananiam | kaniam | mimi |
2p. | nanemu | kanemu, kananemu | dranemu, drananemu | kanemu | muimu |
3p. | nantu | kantu, kanantu | dratu, dranantu | kantaw | – |
Type of Pronoun |
Nominative (Subject) |
Nominative (Possessor of subject) |
Genitive |
---|---|---|---|
1s. | =ku | ku= | ku= |
2s. | =yu | nu= | nu= |
3s. | – | tu= | tu= |
1p. (incl.) | =ta | ta= | ta= |
1p. (excl.) | =mi | niam= | mi= |
2p. | =mu | mu= | mu= |
3p. | – | tu= | tu= |
Affixes
The Puyuma affixes are:[9]
- Prefixes
- ika-: the shape of; forming; shaping
- ka-: stative marker
- kara-: collective, to do something together
- kare-: the number of times
- ki-: to get something
- kir-: to go against (voluntarily)
- kitu-: to become
- kur-: be exposed to; be together (passively)
- m-, ma-: actor voice affix/intransitive affix
- maka-: along; to face against
- mara-: comparative/superlative marker
- mar(e)-: reciprocal; plurality of relations
- mi-: to have; to use
- mu-: anticausative marker
- mutu-: to become, to transform into
- pa-/p-: causative marker
- pu-: put
- puka-: ordinal numeral marker
- piya-: to face a certain direction
- si-: to pretend to
- tara-: to use (an instrument), to speak (a language)
- tinu-: to simulate
- tua-: to make, to form
- u-: to go
- ya-: to belong to; nominalizer
- Suffixes
- -a: perfective marker; numeral classifier
- -an: nominalizer; collective/plural marker
- -anay: conveyance voice affix/transitive affix
- -aw: patient voice affix/transitive affix
- -ay: locative voice affix/transitive affix
- -i, -u: imperative transitive marker
- Infixes
- -in-: perfective marker
- -em-: actor voice affix/intransitive affix
- Circumfixes
- -in-anan: the members of
- ka- -an: a period of time
- muri- -an: the way one is doing something; the way something was done
- sa- -an: people doing things together
- sa- -enan: people belonging to the same community
- si- -an: nominalizer
- Ca- -an, CVCV- -an: collectivity, plurality
Notes
- ↑ Puyuma at Ethnologue (18th ed., 2015)
- ↑ Nordhoff, Sebastian; Hammarström, Harald; Forkel, Robert; Haspelmath, Martin, eds. (2013). "Puyuma". Glottolog. Leipzig: Max Planck Institute for Evolutionary Anthropology.
- ↑ Zeitoun & Cauquelin (2006), p. 655.
- 1 2 Teng (2008), pp. 11, 18.
- 1 2 3 4 Cauquelin (2004), p. 25–26.
- ↑ Cauquelin (1991), p. 27.
- ↑ Teng (2008), p. 61–64.
- ↑ Possessor of subject
- ↑ Teng (2008), p. 282-285.
References
- Cauquelin, Josiane (1991). Dictionnaire puyuma-français. Paris: Ecole Française d'Extreme-Orient. ISBN 9782855395517.
- Cauquelin, Josiane (2004). Aborigines of Taiwan: the Puyuma - From Headhunting to the Modern World. London: RoutledgeCurzon. ISBN 9780203498590.
- Teng, Stacy Fang-Ching (2008). A reference grammar of Puyuma, an Austronesian language of Taiwan. Pacific linguistics 595. Canberra: Pacific Linguistics, Research School of Pacific and Asian Studies, Australian National University. ISBN 9780858835870.
- Ting, Pang-hsin (Sep 1978). "Reconstruction of Proto-Puyuma Phonology". Bulletin of the Institute of History and Philology (Academia Sinica) 49: 321–391. OCLC 4938029239. Retrieved 5 December 2014.
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