Dagiti Saaroa ket agtataengda kadagiti dua a purok iti Taoyuan ken Kaochung idiay Distrito ti Taoyuan (Taoyuan Township), Siudad ti Kaohsiung, Taiwan (Zeitoun ken Teng 2014).[3]
Addaan daytoy kadagiti basbassit ngem 10 a patneng nga agsasao ken ti populasion ti etniko iti 400 a tattao, ti Saaroa ket naikeddeng a nakaro a naisagmak a pagsasao. Uray kadagiti patneng nga agsasao iti pagsasao, kangrunaanda nga agus-usar iti Mandarin wenno Bunun kadagiti inaldaw a panagbiagda. Awanen ti napaut ken aktibo a komunidad nga agsasao iti Saaroa.[1]
^"Archive copy"(PDF). Naiyarkibo manipud iti kasisigud(PDF) idi 2014-06-06. Naala idi 2016-11-06.{{cite web}}: Panagtaripato ti CS1: naiyarkibo a kopia a kas titulo (silpo)
Bibliograpia
Ferrell, R. (1979). Construction markers and subgrouping of Formosan languages. Southeast Asian Linguistic Studies, 3, 199-211.
Li, C. (2010). The Syntax and Semantics of Eventuality in Painwan and Saaroa. Tsing Hua University. 456pp.
Li, Paul Jen-kuei. 2001. "The Dispersal of the Formosan Aborigines in Taiwan." Languages and Linguistics 2.1:271-278
Pan, C. (2012). A Grammar of Lha'alua, an Austronesian Language of Taiwan. James Cook University. 417pp
Starosta, S. (1996). The position of Saaroa in the grammatical subgrouping of Formosan languages. In Pan-Asiatic Linguistics: Proceedings of the Fourth International Symposium on Languages and Linguistics (Vol. 3, pp. 944–966)
Adu pay a mabasbasa
Pan, Chia-jung. 2012. A Grammar of Lha’alua: An Austronesian Language of Taiwan. Cairns: James Cook University PhD Thesis.
Pan, Chia-Jung. 2014. The grammar of knowledge in Saaroa. In: Aikhenvald, Alexandra Y., and Dixon, R.M.W., (eds.) The Grammar of Knowledge: A Cross-Linguistic Typology. Explorations in Linguistic Typology (7). Oxford University Press, Oxford, pp. 89–106.
Pan, Chia-Jung. 2015. Reported Evidentials in Saaroa, Kanakanavu, and Tsou. In: Zeitoun, Elizabeth, Teng, Stacy F., and Wu, Joy J., (eds.) New Advances in Formosan Linguistics. Asia-Pacific Linguistics series studies on Austronesian Languages (SAL 003). The Australian National University, Canberra, pp. 341–362.