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Okinawan language

Okinawan (Okinawan: Ucinaaguci) is a Ryukyuan language spoken in Japan on the southern island of Okinawa, as well as the surrounding islands of Kerama , Kume-jima , Tonaki , Aguni , and a number of smaller islands located to the east of the main island of Okinawa.

It is divided into three main groups: Northern (Kunigami dialect of Kunigami), Central (Standard, Shuri -Naha), and Southern. The Shuri dialect was standardized during the era of the Ryukyuan Kingdom, during the reign of King Sho Shin (1477-1526). It was the official language used by royalty and aristocracy. All of the songs and poems in the language from that era are written in the Shuri dialect.

Contents

1 Bibliography

2 External links

Phonology

This section describes the Nakijin dialect, which differs from the Shuri dialect somewhat.

Vowels

Okinawan has three short vowels, [a i u], and five long vowels, [a: e: i: o: u:]. Note that [u] is rounded, unlike in Japanese.

Consonants

This is a comprehensive listing of consonants, and lists allophonic sets such as [h ç ɸ] separately. For a list of phonemic consonants, consult the syllabary.

Blab. Alv. Palv. Pal. Velar Uvular Glot.
Plosive p b t d k g ʔ
Nasal m n ɲ ŋ ɴ
Laryngeal nasal ʔm ʔn
Tap or flap ɾ
Affricate tʃ dʒ
Fricative ɸ s ʃ ç h
Approximant j ɰ
Laryngeal approximant ʔj ʔɰ

Syllabary

(Technically, these are mora, not syllables.)

ʔi ʔe ʔa ʔo ʔu ʔja ʔjo ʔju ʔwa ʔɴ
[ʔi] [ʔe] [ʔa] [ʔo] [ʔu] [ʔja] [ʔjo] [ʔju] [ʔɰa] [ʔn]
[ʔm]
i e a o u ja jo ju we wa ɴ
[i]
[ji]
[e]
[je]
[a] [o]
[wo]
[u]
[wu]
[ja] [jo] [ju] [ɰe] [ɰa] [n]
[m]
[ŋ]
[ɴ]
hi he ha ho hu hja hjo hju hwa
[çi] [çe] [ha] [ho] [ɸu] [ça] [ço] [çu] [ɸa]
gi ge ga go gu gja gwe gwa
[gi] [ge] [ga] [go] [gu] [gja] [gʷe] [gʷa]
ki ke ka ko ku kja kwe kwa
[ki] [ke] [ka] [ko] [ku] [kja] [kʷe] [kʷa]
ci ce ca co cu
[tʃi] [tʃe] [tʃa] [tʃo] [tʃu]
zi ze za zo zu
[dʒi] [dʒe] [dʒa] [dʒo] [dʒu]
si se sa so su sja sju
[ʃi] [ʃe] [sa] [so] [su] [ʃa] [ʃu]
di de da do du
ri re ra ro ru
[di] [de] [da] [do] [du]
[ɾi] [ɾe] [ɾa] [ɾo] [ɾu]
ti te ta to tu
[ti] [te] [ta] [to] [tu]
mi me ma mo mu mja mjo
[mi] [me] [ma] [mo] [mu] [mja] [mjo]
bi be ba bo bu bja bjo bju
[bi] [be] [ba] [bo] [bu] [bja] [bjo] [bju]
pi pe pa po pu pja pju
[pi] [pe] [pa] [po] [pu] [pja] [pju]
q
[h]
[j]
[s]
[t]
[p]
e
[:]


Correspondences with Japanese

Japanese Okinawan Notes
/e/ /i/ [ti] not [tʃi]
/o/ /u/ [tu] not [tsu], [du] not [dzu]
/ai/ /e:/
/ae/
/au/ /o:/
/ao/
/aja/
/k/ /k/ /g/ also occurs
/ka/ /ka/ /ha/ also occurs
/ki/ /ci/ [tʃi]
/ku/ /ku/ /hu/ [ɸu] also occurs
/si/ /si/ /hi/ [çi] also occurs
/su/ /si/ [ʃi]; formerly distinguished as [si]
/hi/ [çi] also occurs
/tu/ /ci/ [tʃi]; formerly distinguished as [tsi]
/da/ /ra/ [d] and [ɾ] have merged
/de/ /ri/
/do/ /ru/
/ni/ /ni/ Moraic /ɴ/ also occurs
/nu/ /nu/
/ha/ /hwa/ /pa/ also occurs, but rarely
/hi/ /pi/ ~ /hi/
/he/
/mi/ /mi/ Moraic /ɴ/ also occurs
/mu/ /mu/
/ri/ /i/ /iri/ and /uri/ unaffected
/wa/ /wa/ Tends to become /a/ medially

Writing

Okinawan for Japanese audiences is now written entirely in katakana (phonetically) or like normal Japanese - a mixture of hiragana, katakana and Kanji (sometimes chosen for meaning only, for instance, 太陽 for tiida, sun; usually chosen because of cognacy) with ruby.

Grammar

Okinawan dialects retain a number of old grammatical features, such as a distinction between the terminal form (終止形) and the attributive form (連体形), the genitive function of が ga (lost in the Shuri dialect), the nominative function of ぬ nu (Japanese: の no), as well as honorific/plain distribution of ga and nu in nominative use.

書く kaku
to read
Classical Shuri
Irrealis 未然形 書か kaka- kaka-
Continuative 連用形 書き kaki- kaci-
Terminal 終止形 書く kaku kacun
Attributive 連体形 書く kaku kacuru
Realis 已然形 書け kake- kaki-
Imperative 命令形 書け kake kaki

One etymology given for the -un and -uru endings is the continuative form suffixed with uri (Classical Japanese: 居り wori, to be; to exist): -un developed from the terminal form uri; -uru developed from the attributive form uru, i.e:

  • kacuru derives from kaci-uru;
  • kacun derives from kaci-uri; and
  • yumun (Japanese: 読む yomu, to read) derives from yumi + uri.

A similar etymology is given for the terminal -san and attributive -saru endings for adjectives: the stem suffixed with さ sa (nominalises adjectives, i.e. high → height, hot → heat), suffixed with ari (Classical Japanese: 有り ari, to exist; to have), i.e:

  • takasan (Japanese: 高い takai, high; tall) derives from taka-sa-ari;
  • atsusan (Japanese: 暑い atsui, hot; warm) derives from atsu-sa-ari; and
  • yutasaru (good; pleasant) derives from yuta-sa-aru.

Bibliography

Japanese

  • 平山輝男編著 『全国方言辞典〔1〕: 県別方言の特色』 角川書店、1983年 (昭和58年)

External links

English

Japanese

10-26-2009 08:16:03
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