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Cia-Cia language

Cia-Cia, also known as (South) Buton or Butonese, is an Austronesian language spoken principally around the city of Baubau on the southern tip of Buton island, off the southeast coast of Sulawesi, in Indonesia. It is written using the Latin and Hangul scripts.

Demographics
In 2012, there were 105,000 speakers of Cia-Cia, In two of the approximately 75 Cia-Cia-speaking subdistricts, the language has been privately taught to schoolchildren using the Hangul script since 2008. The students are also taught some basic Korean. ==Geographic distribution==
Geographic distribution
Cia-Cia is spoken in Southeast Sulawesi, south Buton Island, Binongko Island, and Batu Atas Island. ==Name==
Name
The name of the language comes from the negator , "no". is said to be of Ternatese origin (butu – "market", "marketplace"). Names such as "South Buton" can be used to disambiguate from Wolio, the historically dominant language of the island. ==Dialects==
Dialects
The language situation on the island of Buton is very complicated and not known in great detail. Dialects include Kaesabu, Sampolawa (Mambulu-Laporo), Wabula (with its subvarieties), and Masiri. The Masiri dialect shows the greatest amount of vocabulary in common with the standard dialect. ==Phonology==
Phonology
Phonology according to Rene van den Berg (1991). /, / may also be heard as open-mid [, ]. ==Orthography==
Orthography
Cia-Cia was once written in a Jawi-like script called Gundhul, based on Arabic, with five additional consonant letters but no signs for vowels. Hangul The Korean alphabet, called Hangul internationally, was invented in the 15th century by the Korean king Sejong the Great. The writing system has since received significant praise from international linguists and is now considered a point of pride for Koreans. South Korean linguists have been attempting to spread the script outside of Korea, particularly to languages that do not yet have their own writing systems. In the 1990s, a Hangul-based alphabet was devised for the Lahu language of China and Southeast Asia, but this did not see significant adoption. Lee Ki-nam (), whose father was a linguist, became a significant force in advocating for Hangul's use for Cia-Cia. During the 1910–1945 Japanese colonial period in Korea, teaching Hangul was at times persecuted; the elder Lee was once dismissed from a teaching position for secretly teaching it to his students. Around the 1990s, after retiring from her career, Lee Ki-nam began to do missionary and charitable work, and she developed an interest in spreading Hangul to ethnic groups with languages that did not already have well-established writing systems. Two teachers representing two language groups in Baubau went to Seoul for a six-month training course in Hangul at SNU. One of them quit, but the other returned to Baubau in July 2009 to begin teaching Hangul to 50 third-graders. The project encountered difficulties between the city of Baubau, the Hunminjeongeum Society, and the Seoul Metropolitan Government, in 2011. The King Sejong Institute, which had been established in Baubau in 2011 to teach Hangul to locals, abandoned its offices after a year of operation, in 2012. In January 2020, the publication of the first Cia-Cia dictionary in Hangul was announced; it was published in December 2021. This renewed interest in Hangul for Cia-Cia, and the King Sejong Institute reopened its offices in Baubau in 2022. In December 2023, Agence France-Presse again published an article with interviews showcasing the Hangul effort. As of 2025, Cia-Cia's use of Hangul remains limited to schools and local signs in the two subdistricts that originally adopted the program. ==Examples==
Examples
Words Cia-Cia, like Muna, has three sets of numerals: a free form, a prefixed form, and a reduplicated form. 3R:third person realis 3IR:third person irrealis 3DO:third person direct object 3POS:third person possessive VM:verbal marker {{interlinear|lang=cia|indent=3 Rene van den Berg (1991) provides a few more examples. ==References==
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