Overview Bunun is a verb-initial language and has an
Austronesian alignment system or
focus system. This means that Bunun clauses do not have a nominative–accusative or absolutive–ergative alignment, but that arguments of a clause are ordered according to which participant in the event described by the verb is 'in focus'. In Bunun, three distinct roles can be in focus: • the
agent: the person or thing that is doing the action or achieving/maintaining a state; • the
undergoer: the person or thing that is somehow participating in the action without being an agent; there are three kinds of undergoers: •
patients: persons or things to whom an action is done or an event happens •
instruments: things (sometimes persons) which are used to perform an action •
beneficiaries (also called
recipients): the persons (sometimes things) for whom an action is done or for whom an event happens • the
locative participant: the location where an action takes place; in languages with a Philippine-style voice system, spatial location is often at the same level in a clause as agents and patients, rather than being an
adverbial clause, like in English. Which argument is in focus is indicated on the verb by a combination of prefixes and suffixes. • a verb in agent focus is often unmarked, but can get the prefix
ma- or – more rarely –
pa- or
ka- • a verb in undergoer focus gets a suffix
-un • a verb locative focus gets a suffix
-an Many other languages with a focus system have different marking for patients, instruments and beneficiaries, but this is not the case in Bunun. The focussed argument in a Bunun clause will normally always occur immediately after the verb (e.g. in an actor-focus clause, the agent will appear before any other participant) and is in the Isbukun dialect marked with a post-nominal marker
a. Some of these prefixes are special in that they do not only occur in the verb they derive, but are also foreshadowed on a preceding auxiliary. These are called
lexical prefixes or
anticipatory prefixes and only occur in Bunun and a small number of other Formosan languages. Below are some Takivatan Bunun verbal prefixes from De Busser (2009). In short: • Movement from: Cu- • Dynamic event: Ca- • Stative event: Ci- • Inchoative event: Cin- • Neutral: mV- • Causative: pV- • Accusative: kV- A more complete list of Bunun affixes from De Busser (2009) is given below. ;Focus • agent focus (AF):
-Ø • undergoer focus (UF):
-un (also used as a nominalizer) • locative focus (LF):
-an (also used as a nominalizer) ;Tense-aspect-mood (TAM) affixes • na- irrealis (futurity, consequence, volition, imperatives). This is also the least bound TAM prefix. • -aŋ progressive (progressive aspect, simultaneity, expressing wishes/optative usage) • -in perfective (completion, resultative meaning, change of state, anteriority) • -in- past/resultative (past, past/present contrast) • -i- past infix which occurs only occasionally ;Participant cross-reference • -Ø agent • -un patient • -an locative • is- instrumental • ki- beneficiary ;Locative prefixes • Stationary ‘at, in’: i- • Itinerary ‘arrive at’: atan-, pan-, pana- • Allative ‘to’: mu-, mun- • Terminative ‘until’: sau- • Directional ‘toward, in the direction of’: tan-, tana- • Viative ‘along, following’: malan- • Perlative ‘through, into’: tauna-, tuna-, tun- • Ablative ‘from’: maisna-, maina-, maisi-, taka- ;Event-type prefixes • ma- Marks dynamic events • ma- Marks stative events • mi- Marks stative negative events • a- Unproductive stative prefix • paŋka- Marks material properties (stative) • min- Marks result states (transformational) • pain- Participatory; marks group actions ;Causative • pa- causative of dynamic verb • pi- causative of stative verb • pu- cause to go towards ;Classification of events • mis- burning events • tin- shock events • pala- splitting events • pasi- separating events • kat- grasping events ;Patient-incorporating prefixes • bit- 'lightning' • kun- 'wear' • malas- 'speak' • maqu- 'use' • muda- 'walk' • pas- 'spit' • qu- 'drink' • sa- 'see' • tal- 'wash' • tapu- 'have trait' • tastu- 'belong' • taus-/tus- 'give birth' • tin- 'harvest' • tum- 'drive' ;Verbalizers • pu- verbalizer: 'to hunt for' • maqu- verbalizer: 'to use' • malas- verbalizer: 'to speak'
Pronouns Takivatan Bunun personal pronoun roots are (De Busser 2009:453): • 1s: -ak- • 2s: -su- • 3s: -is- • 1p (incl.): -at- • 1p (excl.): -ðam- • 2p: -(a)mu- • 3p: -in- The tables of Takivatan Bunun personal pronouns below are sourced from De Busser (2009:441). Iskubun Bunun personal pronouns are somewhat different (De Busser 2009:454).
Demonstratives Takivatan Bunun has the following demonstrative roots and affixes (De Busser 2009:454): ;Demonstrative suffixes • Proximal:
-i • Medial:
-un • Distal:
-a ;Demonstrative roots •
aip-: singular •
aiŋk-: vague plural •
aint-: paucal •
ait-: inclusive generic ;Demonstrative prefixes •
Ø-: visible •
n-: not visible ;Place words •
ʔiti here •
ʔitun there (medial) •
ʔita there (distal)
Function words •
sia anaphoric marker, "aforementioned"; also used as a hesitation marker •
tu attributive marker •
duma "others" •
itu honorific marker Takivatan Bunun also has definitive markers. ==Notes==