Taivoan language

Taivoan or Taivuan, is a Formosan language spoken until the end of the 19th century by the indigenous Taivoan people of Taiwan. Taivoan used to be regarded as a dialect of Siraya, but now more evidence has shown that they should be classified as separate languages. The corpora previously regarded as Siraya like the Gospel of St. Matthew and the Notes on Formulary of Christianity translated into "Siraya" by the Dutch people in the 17th century should be in Taivoan majorly.

Taivoan
Rara ka maka-Taivoan
Pronunciation[taivu'an]
Native toTaiwan
RegionSouthwestern, around present-day Tainan, Kaohsiung. Also among some migration communities along Huatung Valley.
EthnicityTaivoan
Extinctend of 19th century; revitalization movement
Austronesian
Latin (Sinckan Manuscripts), Han characters (traditional)
Language codes
ISO 639-2map
ISO 639-3tvx
Glottologtaiv1237
Linguasphere30-FAA-bb
(pink) Taivoan
Coordinates: 23°06′N 120°27′E

Since the January 2019 code release, SIL International has recognized Taivoan as an independent language and assigned the code tvx.

This article is issued from Wikipedia. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.