Inst. JM De Pano‘s work, “Voice and Aspect Inflection in Southern Cordilleran Languages: Paradigms in Pangasinan, Bugkalot/Eģongot, and Keley-i,” has been conferred the Best Paper Award during the 7th Linguistic Society of the Philippines International Conference (LSPIC) which was held in Lingayen, Pangasinan on 24-26 April 2025.

Below is the abstract of De Pano’s paper:

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Voice and Aspect Inflection in Southern Cordilleran Languages: Paradigms in Pangasinan, Bugkalot/Eģongot, and Keley-i

The Southern Cordilleran subgroup, originally termed as Pangasinic (Zorc, 1979), is a classification of several Philippine vernaculars spoken across four regions (CAR, I, II, III). Among the members of this group are Pangasinan (pag) which is considered as a major language (Constantino, 1971) but may be endangered (Anderson & Anderson, 2007), the threatened Bugkalot/Eg̓ongot (ilk) with less than 6,000 speakers, and Keley-i (ify) which its speakers push as a separate language from the others spoken in some towns in Ifugao. These three are given varying degrees of membership by the literature (Blust, 1991; Dyen, 1965; Himes, 1998; McFarland, 1980; Thomas & Healy, 1962; Walton, 1979) based on the reflex of the Proto Southern Cordilleran (PSC) *(ʔ)uN- in verbs in the non-past (Himes 1998; Zorc, 1979). This paper then presents the voice-aspect paradigm of the three languages (i) to revisit the subgrouping based on the shared innovation, (ii) to arrive at a better understanding of the morphosyntax of Southern Cordilleran verbs, and (iii) to update the descriptions of these vernaculars. For voice, it covers ACTOR VOICE (AV), PATIENT VOICE (PV), LOCATIVE VOICE (LV), BENEFACTIVE VOICE (BV), and INSTRUMENTAL VOICE (IV). For aspect, it includes PERFECTIVE, RECENT PERFECTIVE, IMPERFECTIVE, and CONTEMPLATIVE. Data used in the analysis came from personal fieldwork done in the municipalities of Calasiao (in Pangasinan), Bambang and Bayombong (in Nueva Vizcaya), and Asipulo (in Ifugao) within the period of June 2023 to November 2024. The findings re-establish the position of Pangasinan, Bugkalot/Eg̓ongot, and Keley-i within Southern Cordilleran, and better inform the reconstruction of a general proto-morpheme voice-aspect paradigm of PSC. 

This year’s LSPIC focuses “on theorizing and reimagining national and regional languages through interface studies on language, culture, literature, digital spaces, online discourses, and language education.” The theme is “Language through the ages, across the regions.”

Pagbati, Sir JM!

Published by UP Department of Linguistics