Ruc is an
isolating language with no
inflection used in verbs and nouns at all, and a general drift towards analytic grammar is evident. In terms of
derivational morphology, Ruc retains several forms of
affixations that have been lost in other Vietic languages like Vietnamese, but their semantics are largely eroded. The transformation of archaic Vietic morphosyntax like Ruc from an
Austroasiatic inflectional form to a newer analytical one is currently happening irreversibly and accelerating, with some Vietic languages having already finished the process. Under intense interactions with speakers of other more
analytic languages such as
Vietnamese and
Lao, in the future, Ruc's older form of morphology may have been lost and replaced with a new one as seen in many
Mainland Southeast Asian languages with affixes being less syntactically functional or no longer used.
Case There are few recognizable cases in Ruc and they only utilize
prefixes. The dative prefix
pa- of Ruc has been cited by some linguists as supporting evidence for the
Austric languages hypothesis.
Syntax Like other Vietic languages, Ruc shares similar characteristics:
SVO structure,
head-initial noun phrase structure,
topic-comment. However, Ruc syntax will slightly differ with Vietnamese in cases of Ruc verbs that causative affixes are used.
Compounding Ruc compounding is similar to those seen in other Austroasiatic languages: Noun-Verb: ɲa:² (house) + jo:n¹ (tall) → ɲa:² jo:n¹ ‘house on stilts’ Verb-Noun: pɯə² (suitable) + kudəl¹ (stomach) → pɯə² kudəl¹ ‘to be satisfied’ Verb-Verb: ti² (go) + luh¹ (exit) → ti² luh¹ ‘to exit’ Verb-Verb/Adjective: khik³ (healthy) + kitəɲ³ (young) → khik3 kitəɲ3 ‘robust’ Approx. 16% of Ruc words are compounds while 84% are simple words according to a 1996 analysed corpus data.
Reduplication Like other Vietic languages, reduplication in Ruc can be either full reduplication (
monomorphemic words) or segment alternation (with polymorphemic roots). For examples, pu35 (‘to suckle’) → pu³⁵ pu³⁵ (‘to be suckling’) lɛɲ¹ (‘up’) → lɛɲ¹ lɤaw⁴ (‘agile’) kərɓeːŋ → kərɓeːŋ¹ kərɓiːt² (‘to hang about’)
Derivational affixation Affixation in Ruc creates lexicalized forms of words utilizing prefixes and infixes, while suffixes are almost lacking. The causative prefix
pa- and infix
-a- turn an intransitive verb into a transitive verb. For examples, (a) kun⁴ (‘afraid’) → pakun⁴ (‘threaten’) kɯcit³ (‘to die’) → kacit³ (‘to kill’) The causative resultative prefix
pa- is a homonym: rɯmɛk³ (‘cool’) → parɯmɛk³ (‘to cool (something)’) The nominalizing infixes
-n- and
-r- make a noun from a verb: tʰut (‘to stop up’) → tanut³ (‘stopper’) səp³ (‘to cover’) → sanəp³ (‘a blanket’) The quantifying prefix
mu- turns numerals into measuring units. hal¹ (‘two’) → muhal¹ (‘two-finger span’) Ruc has historical traces of a stative prefix on a number of adjectives but their word roots have largely eroded, leaving disyllabic adjectives with unanalyzable prefixes. ==Vocabulary==