Tsouic languages


The Tsouic languages are three Formosan languages, Tsou proper and the Southern languages Kanakanabu and Saaroa. The Southern Tsouic languages of Kanakanabu and Saaroa have the smallest phonemic inventories out of all the Formosan languages, with each language having only 13 consonants and 4 vowels. These two languages are highly endangered, as many Southern Tsouic speakers are shifting to Bunun and Mandarin Chinese.
The Proto-Tsouic language was reconstructed by Japanese linguist Shigeru Tsichida in 1976, and is supported by Blust, Li, and Sagart. However, Chang and Ross deny that Tsouic is a valid group; Ross places Southern Tsouic within Nuclear Austronesian, but the Tsou language as a more divergent branch.
Sagart supports Tsouic on the basis on shared irregular phonological reflexes confined to specific terms, in addition to over 57 terms reconstructed by Tsuchida that appear in no other Austronesian clade.

Classification

The following sound changes from Proto-Austronesian occurred in the Tsouic languages.