Saaroa language


Saaroa or Hla’alua is a Southern Tsouic language is spoken by the Saaroa people, an indigenous people of Taiwan. It is a Formosan language of the Austronesian family.
The Saaroa live in the two villages of Taoyuan and Kaochung in Taoyuan District, Kaohsiung City, Taiwan.
With fewer than 10 native speakers and an ethnic population of 400 people, Saaroa is considered critically endangered. Even among native speakers of the language, they use primarily Mandarin or Bunun in their daily lives. There is no longer an active speech community for Saaroa.

Language evolution

When grouped according to grammar, Saaroa is most closely related to the other Formosan language Tsou and branches very early from the Proto-Formosan language that defines the grouping.
On lexical and phonographical grounds, Tsou, Kanakanabu, and Saaroa also cluster well to form the Tsouic subgroup; it is likely that the Rukai and the "Lower Three Villages Rukai" are also Tsouic languages.
The Tsouic group used to occupy a fairly large area in the southwestern parts of central Taiwan. Due to the invasion of other communities and contagious diseases, it shrank to the relatively small areas as today.
The oral tradition say that the Tsouic group originated in Yushan. About 2,000 years ago, the group split into two, the Northern Tsou and Southern Tsou. Northern Tsou moved down along Nantzuhsien River to the west, while Southern Tsou moved down along Laonung River. The latter split into two, Kanakanabu and Saaroa about 800 years ago.
In 1990, Saaroa was nearly extinct. Few children speak the language. The Bunun language is becoming the main language of the Saaroa people, and many of the elders in the community speak Taiwanese Hokkien. The shift to the Bunun language occurred when the Bunun migrated into the area inhabited by the Saaroa people.
Saaroa has heavily borrowed from Mantauran Rukai, since the Saaroa and Rukai peoples are geographically adjacent to each other.

Grammatical profile

Lha’alua has 13 consonants: |p, t, k, ʔ, s, v, ts, m, n, ŋ, r, ɾ, ɬ| and four vowels: |i, ɨ, u, a|. The basic syllable pattern in Saaroa is V, where C stands for consonants and V for vowels or long vowels. Vowels can either appear as long vowels or in clusters. Vowels in clusters make two or more syllables. There are also plenty of loan words in Saaroa, many of which were introduced during the Imperial Japanese Era. Apart from Japanese, words were borrowed from Mandarin Chinese, Taiwanese southern Min, and other aboriginal languages in the neighboring area, e.g. Bunun.
In the past, Roman script was employed in the previous writing materials of Saaroa.
PhonemeOrthographyPhonetic representation
pp in all environments
tt in all environments
kk in all environments
ʔ' in all environments
ss in all environments, except followed by the high front unrounded vowel i; before the high front unrounded vowel i.
vv in all environments, except followed by a high vowel; before the high front unrounded vowel i.
tsc in all environments except before the high front unrounded vowel i; before the high front rounded vowel i.
mm in all environments
nn in all environments
ŋng in all environments
rr in all environments
ɾl in all environments
ɬlh in all environments
bb loan phoneme
phph loan phoneme
thth loan phoneme
khkh loan phoneme
tshch loan phoneme
tsloan phoneme
dzdz loan phoneme
gg loan phoneme
hh loan phoneme
ii in all environments
ɨe in all environments
uu in all environments
aa in all environments
ɛe19 loan phoneme
ɔo loan phoneme
V:VV20any long vowel written as two identical vowels

Underived roots carry the basic meaning of words typically consist of more than two syllables, in a V.V.V pattern.
Saaroa distinguishes primary stress and secondary stress. Primary stress is not contrastive, nor is secondary stress. A vowel with primary stress is characterised by higher pitch and greater intensity. Though the stressed syllable is realised with a high pitch, the difference between words does not lie in the positioning or quality of this pitch. Therefore, Saaroa should not be considered a pitch-accent language.
In Saaroa, reduplication is a very productive morphological process. Exactly the same morphological process may apply to a dynamic verb and an adjectival element within a predicate. For example, when undergoing reduplication, both adjectival elements and dynamic verbs can have 'progressive', 'continuous', intensification ', 'diminutive' and 'collectivity' meanings.
In Saaroa, nouns are subsumed under several grammatical subclasses according to their morphological/syntactic possibilities correlating with semantic properties of their referents common nouns, kinship terms, human nouns and nonhuman nouns, person names, locative nouns and temporal nouns. These classes may overlap; accordingly, a noun can fall in more than one class.
Similarly, verbs are subsumed under several grammatical subclasses according to the morphological/syntactic possibilities correlating with semantic properties of the referents: transitivity classes, stative verbs, and adverbial verbs. All the classes may overlap; accordingly, a verb can fall into more than one class.
In Saaroa, the functional possibilities of adjectival elements typically include being modifiers to a head noun in an NP and heads of an intransitive predicate.
When it comes to word order, Saaroa is basically a predicate-initial language. The irrealis Actor Voice verb muacekehle 'will return' appears before the Subject argument kana'ana 'he'. Moreover, the basic word order is Verb-Actor-Theme. For example, the nominative Actor argument of an Actor Voice Construction. Similalrly, the nominative Theme argument of a Patient Voice construction must follow the genitive Actor argument.