Saisiyat language explained

Saisiyat
Nativename:SaiSiyat
States:Taiwan
Ethnicity:7,900
Speakers:4,750
Date:2002
Ref:e19
Familycolor:Austronesian
Fam2:Northwest Formosan
Iso3:xsy
Glotto:sais1237
Glottorefname:Saisiyat
Dia1:Taai
Dia2:Tungho
Map:Formosan languages.png
Mapcaption:Saisiyat, Pazeh, and Kulon (pink, northwest). Some Chinese-language sources designate the white area in the northwest as a Kulon area, as opposed to the small pink circle on this map.[1]

Saisiyat (sometimes spelled Saisiat) is the language of the Saisiyat, a Taiwanese indigenous people. It is a Formosan language of the Austronesian family. It has approximately 4,750 speakers.

Distribution

The language area of Saisiyat is small, situated in the northwest of the country between the Hakka Chinese and Atayal regions in the mountains (Wufeng, Hsinchu; Nanchuang and Shitan, Miaoli). There are two main dialects: Ta'ai (North Saisiyat) and Tungho (South Saisiyat). Ta'ai is spoken in Hsinchu and Tungho is spoken in Miao-Li. Kulon, an extinct Formosan language, is closely related to Saisiyat but is considered by Taiwanese linguist Paul Jen-kuei Li to be a separate language.

Usage

Today, one thousand Saisiyat people do not use the Saisiyat language. Many young people use Hakka or Atayal instead, and few children speak Saisiyat. Hakka Chinese speakers, Atayal speakers and Saisiyat speakers live more or less together. Many Saisiyat are able to speak Saisiyat, Hakka, Atayal, Mandarin, and, sometimes, Min Nan as well. Although Saisiyat has a relatively large number of speakers, the language is endangered.

Orthography

Phonology

Consonants

Labial!colspan=2
AlveolarPost-alveolarDorsalGlottal
Nasalstyle=border-right-width:0style=border-left-width:0pronounced as /link/style=border-right-width:0style=border-left-width:0pronounced as /link/style=border-right-width:0style=border-left-width:0pronounced as /link/
Plosivestyle=border-right-width:0pronounced as /link/style=border-left-width:0style=border-right-width:0pronounced as /link/style=border-left-width:0style=border-right-width:0pronounced as /link/style=border-left-width:0style=border-right-width:0pronounced as /link/style=border-left-width:0
Fricativestyle=border-right-width:0pronounced as /link/style=border-left-width:0pronounced as /link/style=border-right-width:0pronounced as /link/style=border-left-width:0style=border-right-width:0pronounced as /link/style=border-left-width:0
Approximantstyle=border-right-width:0style=border-left-width:0pronounced as /link/style=border-right-width:0style=border-left-width:0pronounced as /link/style=border-right-width:0style=border-left-width:0pronounced as /link/style=border-right-width:0style=border-left-width:0pronounced as /link/
Trillstyle=border-right-width:0style=border-left-width:0pronounced as /link/

Orthographic notes:

Vowels

Monophthongs!  ! Front! Central! Back
Closepronounced as /link/  
Close-mid  pronounced as /link/
Mid pronounced as /link/ 
Open-midpronounced as /link/  
Openpronounced as /link/pronounced as /link/ 

Grammar

Syntax

Although it also allows for verb-initial constructions,[4] Saisiyat is a strongly subject-initial language (i.e., SVO), and is shifting to an accusative language, while it still has many features of split ergativity (Hsieh & Huang 2006:91). Pazeh and Thao, also Northern Formosan languages, are the only other Formosan languages that allow for SVO constructions. Saisiyat's case-marking system distinguishes between personal and common nouns (Hsieh & Huang 2006:93).

Nominative!c=02
Accusativec=03Genitivec=04Dativec=05Possessivec=06Locative
Personalc=01Ø, hic=02hic=03nic=04'an-ac=05'ini'c=06kan, kala
Commonc=01Ø, kac=02kac=03nokac=04'an noka-ac=05noc=06ray

Pronouns

Saisiyat has an elaborate pronominal system (Hsieh & Huang 2006:93).

Nominative!c=02
Accusativec=03Genitivec=04Dativec=05Possessivec=06Locative
1s.c=01yako/yaoc=02yakin/'iyakinc=03ma'anc=04'inimanc=05'amana'ac=06kanman
2s.c=01So'oc=02'iso'onc=03niSoc=04'iniSoc=05'anso'o'ac=06kanSo
3s.c=01siac=02hisiac=03nisiac=04'inisiac=05'ansiaac=06kansia
1p. (incl.)c=01'itac=02'inimitac=03mita'c=04'inimita'c=05'anmita'ac=06kan'ita
1p. (excl.)c=01yamic=02'iniya'omc=03niya'omc=04'iniya'omc=05'anya'omac=06kanyami
2p.c=01moyoc=02'inimonc=03nimonc=04'inimonc=05'anmoyoac=06kanmoyo
3p.c=01lasiac=02hilasiac=03nasiac=04'inilasiac=05'anlasiaac=06kanlasia

Verbs

The following are verbal prefixes in Saisiyat (Hsieh & Huang 2006:93).

I!c=02
II
Agent Focus (AF)c=01m-, -om-, ma-, Øc=02   Ø   
Patient Focus (PF)c=01-enc=02   -i   
Locative Focus (LF)c=01-anc=02 -
Referential Focus (RF)c=01si-, sik-c=02-ani
Saisiyat verbs can be nominalized in the following ways.
Lexical nominalization!c=02
Syntactic nominalizationc=03Temporal/Aspectual
Agentc=01ka-ma-Vc=02ka-pa-Vc=03Habitual, Future
Patientc=01ka-V-en, V-in-c=02ka-V-en, V-in-c=03Future (for ka-V-en), Perfective (for V-in-)
Locationc=01ka-V-anc=02ka-V-anc=03Future
Instrumentc=01ka-V, Ca-V (reduplication)c=02ka-V, Ca-V (reduplication)c=03Future

References

Works cited

Further reading

External links

Notes and References

  1. Web site: 2009-08-06 . Táiwān yuánzhùmín píngpǔ zúqún bǎinián fēnlèi shǐ xìliè dìtú . zh:臺灣原住民平埔族群百年分類史系列地圖 . A History of the Classification of Plains Taiwanese Tribes Over the Past Century . 2017-03-04 . blog.xuite.net . zh.
  2. Web site: Saisiyat (SaySiyat) . Omniglot . en.
  3. Jiang . Wenyu . I . Chang-Liao . Chiang . Fang-Mei . 2006 . The Prosodic Realization of Negation in Saisiyat and English . Oceanic Linguistics . en . 45 . 1 . 110–132 . 10.1353/ol.2006.0007 . 4499949. 144937416 .
  4. Book: Li, Paul Jen-kuei . 1998 . zh:台灣南島語言 . The Austronesian Languages of Taiwan . Li . Paul Jen-kuei . 2004 . Selected Papers on Formosan Languages . Taipei, Taiwan . Institute of Linguistics, Academia Sinica.