Chru (, also known as Chu, Chu Ru, Churu, Cho Ru, Choru) is a Chamic language of Vietnam spoken by the Churu people in southern Lâm ÃÂá»Âng Province (especially in ÃÂán Dðáng District) and in Ninh ThuáºÂn Province.
Like the other Chamic languages spoken in Vietnam (Cham, Jarai, Rade and Roglai), use of Chru is declining as native speakers are generally bilingual in Vietnamese, which is used for most official or public settings, like schools.
The following table lists the consonants of Chru.
There exist post-aspirated consonants , , , but these behave as sequences of stop plus . For example, from the word ('to plane') the nominal ('a plane') can be derived by infixation of -n-.
The vowel inventory is given in the following table. All vowels but exist in nasalized form.
Words consist of up to two pre-syllables, and a main syllable. A full example is ('to turn over'). The vowels in the pre-syllables are always after a consonant and otherwise.
Like many other languages of Southeast Asia, including Vietnamese, Chru is an analytic (or isolating) language without morphological marking of case, gender, number, or tense. In its typological profile it reflects extensive language contact effects, as it more closely resembles a Mon-Khmer language with monosyllabic roots and impoverished morphology rather than a canonical Austronesian language with bisyllabic roots and derivational morphology (Grant 2005). It has subject-verb-object (SVO) word order.
Chru uses a pre-verbal negative particle, as a simple negative in declarative sentences:
An optional clause-final negative particle, , may also be used, particularly in negative questions and negative responses to questions: