Kavalan (also known as Kvalan, Kebalan or Kbalan) was formerly spoken in the Northeast coast area of Taiwan by the Kavalan people (噶瑪蘭). It is an East Formosan language of the Austronesian family.
(dark green, north) The Kavalanic languages: Basai, Ketagalan, and Kavalan
This article contains IPA phonetic symbols. Without proper rendering support, you may see question marks, boxes, or other symbols instead of Unicode characters. For an introductory guide on IPA symbols, see Help:IPA.
Kavalan is no longer spoken in its original area. As of 1930, it was used only as a home language. As of 1987, it was still spoken in Atayal territories. In 2000, this language was still reported to be spoken by 24 speakers but considered moribund.
In 2017, a study using the EDGE metric from species conservation found that Kavalan, although critically endangered, was among the most lexically distinct of Austronesian languages.[3]
Dialectsedit
Kavalan consists of the following speech communities ordered from north to south:[4]
Kariawan (Jialiwan 加禮宛) – near Hualien, a formerly Sakizaya-speaking area
Patʀungan (Xinshe 新社) – located in Fungpin (豐濱鄉), Hualien
Kulis (Lide 立德)
Kralut (Zhangyuan 樟原)
These speech communities in eastern Taiwan were named after older settlements from the north, such as Kariawan, Sahut, and Tamayan, where the Kavalan people originally migrated from. Modern-day Kavalan speakers are surrounded by the Amis.
Tsuchida (1985) notes that word lists collected from Lamkham 南崁 (Nankan) and Poting 埔頂 (Buding) are closest to Kavalan,[5] while Li (2001) counts them as 'Basaic' languages.[6]
Kavalan nouns and verbs are distinguished by the lack of /a/ in the first syllable (nouns) or presence of /a/ (verbs).[8] Kavalan syllables take on the structure (C)(C)V(C)(C).[11] Kavalan is also one of two Formosan languages to have geminating consonants.
Kavalan affixes include:
m- (agent focus)
-um-/-m- (agent focus)
-in/-n- as variants of ni- (patient)
-a (irrealis patient-focus marker)
-an (locative-focus marker, nominalizer)
-i (imperative, patient focus)
pa- (causative)
qa- (future)
Unlike many other Formosan languages, there is no *-en suffix.
Syntaxedit
Kavalan, like most other Formosan and Philippine languages, has many case markers.
^Perrault, Nicolas; Farrell, Maxwell J.; Davies, T. Jonathan (2017). "Tongues on the EDGE: Language Preservation Priorities Based on Threat and Lexical Distinctiveness". Royal Society Open Science. 4 (12): 171218. Bibcode:2017RSOS....471218P. doi:10.1098/rsos.171218. PMC5750020. PMID 29308253. S2CID 23970007.
^Tsuchida, Shigeru. 1985. Kulon: Yet another Austronesian language in Taiwan?. Bulletin of the Institute of Ethnology, Academia Sinica 60. 1-59.
^Li, Paul Jen-kuei (2001). "The Dispersal of the Formosan Aborigines in Taiwan" (PDF). Language and Linguistics / Yǔyán jì yǔyánxué. 2 (1): 271–278. Archived from the original (PDF) on 2020-08-08.
^Moriguchi, Tsunekazu (1983). "An Inquiry into Kbalan Phonology" (PDF). Journal of Asian and African Studies. 26: 202–219.
Li, Paul Jen-kuei 李壬癸; Tsuchida, Shigeru 土田滋 (2006). Kavalan Dictionary(PDF). Language and Linguistics Monograph Series A-19. Taipei, Taiwan: Institute of Linguistics, Academia Sinica. ISBN 978-986-00-6993-8. Archived from the original (PDF) on 2020-07-16.
Blust, Robert (2009). The Austronesian Languages. Canberra: Pacific Linguistics, Research School of Pacific and Asian Studies, Australian National University. ISBN 978-0-85883-602-0. ISBN 978-0-85883-602-0
Chang, Yungli 張永利 (2000). Gámălányŭ cānkăo yŭfă 噶瑪蘭語參考語法 [A Reference Grammar of Kavalan] (in Chinese). Taibei Shi: Yuanliu chuban shiye yuxian gongsi. ISBN 957-32-3898-5.
Hsieh, Fuhui 謝富惠 (2018). Gámǎlányǔ yǔfǎ gàilùn 噶瑪蘭語語法概論 [Introduction to Kavalan Grammar] (in Chinese). Xinbei Shi: Yuanzhuminzu weiyuanhui. ISBN 978-986-05-5692-6. Archived from the original on 2022-02-28. Retrieved 2021-07-06 – via alilin.apc.gov.tw.
External linksedit
Kavalan language test of Wikipedia at Wikimedia Incubator
Taiwan government publications: Kavalan dictionary (in Chinese)
The Academy in Taipei press release: Kavalan dictionary published (in Chinese)
Yuánzhùmínzú yǔyán xiànshàng cídiǎn 原住民族語言線上詞典 (in Chinese) – Kavalan search page at the "Aboriginal language online dictionary" website of the Foundation for the Research and Development of Indigenous Languages
Kavalan teaching and leaning materials published by the Council of Indigenous Peoples of Taiwan Archived 2022-02-28 at the Wayback Machine(in Chinese)
Kavalan translation of President Tsai Ing-wen's 2016 apology to indigenous people – published on the website of the presidential office