Okinawan language

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Okinawan
ʔucināguci, うちなーぐち, 沖縄口
Spoken in: Japan 
Region: Okinawa Island
Total speakers: 984,285
Language family: Japonic
 Ryukyuan
  Amami-Okinawan
   Southern Amami-Okinawan
    Okinawan
Language codes
ISO 639-1: none
ISO 639-2: mis
ISO 639-3: ryu – [[]]

Okinawan (Okinawan: ウチナーグチ, 沖縄口, ʔucināguci) 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 two main groups: Central (Standard, Shuri-Naha) and Southern. The Shuri dialect was standardized during the era of the Ryukyu Kingdom, during the reign of King Shō 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.

The speech of Northern Okinawa is usually considered a separate language; see Kunigami language.

Contents

Phonology

Vowels

Okinawan has three short vowels, /a i u/, and five long vowels, /aː eː iː oː uː/. Note that /u/ is rounded, unlike in Japanese.

Consonants

Bilabial Alveolar Palatal Velar Uvular Glottal
Plosive p b t d k ɡ ʔ
Nasal m n ɴ
Tap or flap ɾ
Fricative ɸ s h
Approximant j w
Laryngeal approximant ʔj ʔw

Syllabary

(Technically, these are morae, 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
[ɡi] [ɡe] [ɡa] [ɡo] [ɡu] [ɡja] [ɡʷe] [ɡʷa]
ki ke ka ko ku kja kwe kwa
[ki] [ke] [ka] [ko] [ku] [kja] [kʷe] [kʷa]
ci ce ca co cu
[ʨi] [ʨe] [ʨa] [ʨo] [ʨu]
zi ze za zo zu
[ʥi] [ʥe] [ʥa] [ʥo] [ʥu]
si se sa so su sja sju
[ɕi] [ɕe] [sa] [so] [su] [ɕa] [ɕu]
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
[ː]

Correspondences with Japanese

Japanese Okinawan Notes
/e/ /i/ [ti] not [ʨi]
/o/ /u/ [tu] not [tsu], [du] not [dzu]
/ai/ /eː/
/ae/
/au/ /oː/
/ao/
/aja/
/k/ /k/ /ɡ/ also occurs
/ka/ /ka/ /ha/ also occurs
/ki/ /ʨi/ [ʨi]
/ku/ /ku/ /hu/, [ɸu] also occurs
/si/ /si/ /hi/, [çi] also occurs
/su/ /si/ [ɕi]; formerly distinguished as [si]
/hi/ [çi] also occurs
/tu/ /ʨi/ [ʨi]; 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/ unaffected
/wa/ /wa/ Tends to become /a/ medially

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 ga (lost in the Shuri dialect), the nominative function of nu (Japanese: no), as well as honorific/plain distribution of ga and nu in nominative use.

書く kaku
to write
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 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.

See also

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

Wikipedia content modification information:

  • This page was last modified on 25 July 2008, at 16:28.

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