CLASSIFICATION

There is no evidence relating
Japanese to a single family of languages, not even the East Asian languages.
The East Asian languages belong to the Sino-Tibetan family. Many place Japanese in the Altaic family, which
includes Turkish, Mongolian, and Korean, with the closest relationship to Korean.
The original Altaic language was spoken in the Transcaspian steppe country.
The speakers of this language went through massive migrations before
2,000 B.C., spreading this language family from Turkey in the west to Japan
in the east. Linguists also find similarities between Japanese
and the Austronesian languages of the South Pacific.
It is currently classified under the Altaic language family.
It is also important to
note that Ainu is Japan's only other indigenous language
in the northern island of Hokkaido. The
Ainu people, who are physically and culturally different from the rest of the
Japanese, speak a language that has even more successfully escaped attempts
to relate it to a single language family. Ainu
is neither related to the Japanese language nor to any of the Altaic languages.
The language is now nearly extinct.

(Source: www.ethnologue.com)
Regional
Dialects
There are a large number of dialects throughout
the four main islands and the smaller islands of Okinawa and others. Some dialects
such as those spoken in the southern parts of Japan (Kyushu, Okinawa) are virtually
incomprehensible to the speakers of other dialects, requiring the use of the
standard (or "common") dialect for communication. The two dialect
families with the largest number of speakers are the dialect spoken in and around
Tokyo, which is equivalent to the "common" dialect and the dialects
of the Kansai region spoken in western Japan in cities such as Kyoto, Osaka,
and Kobe.
Common Dialect
Standard Japanese, the
form heard most commonly on national television and radio and television is
traditionally the dialect of educated people in Tokyo but is now understood
everywhere in Japan. Although standard Japanese has begun to replace some regional
accents, many of these remain quite distinctive.
Kansai Ben Dialect
Kansai Ben is a dialect of the Kansai area. The district covers the areas of Shiga, Mie, Nara, Kyoto, Wakayama, Osaka, and Hyogo. Generally this dialect encompasses the greater Osaka region, and the area around Kobe, and Kyoto. Differences between Kansai Ben and common Japanese can be seen below.
Some differences
between Kansai ben and standard Japanese "Hyojun go"
("hyojun" means standard and "go" means language.)
Many words in Hyojun go
are shortened in Kansai ben.
The number of syllables
decrease.
|
Kansai ben |
Hyojun go |
English |
|
Yo |
yoku |
very,well |
|
omoroi |
omoshiroi |
interesting |
|
chau |
chigau |
wrong |
|
kora,korya |
koreha |
this is |
|
sora,sorya |
soreha |
that is |
|
So sho |
so shiyo |
let's do so. |
|
Kansai ben |
Hyojun go |
English |
|
Iko |
ikou |
let's go |
|
yaro |
yarou |
let's do |
Ya
is often used in Kansai ben. Desu and its variations in Hyojun go are replaced
by ya.
(Ya
and desu can be thought to function as the verb "to be" or "to
do".)
|
Kansai ben |
Hyojun go |
English |
|
Uso ya. |
Uso da. |
You're kidding. |
|
Iya ya. |
Iya da. |
I don't like. |
|
Suki ya. |
Suki da. |
I like it. |
|
So yattara |
So dattara |
If that's true |
|
Nan ya? |
Nan da? |
What? |
|
So yanka. |
So janai ka. |
isn't it? |
|
("janai" is the variation of "deha
nai".) |
||
(Source from: Hidetoshi Tokumara)
From the northern island of Hokkaido to
the southern islands of Okinawa, Japan is rich in various regional dialects.
The Japanese dialects can be divided into the Eastern and Western dialects.
While the Easterners say "yano-assatte" (the
day after tomorrow), "shoppai" (salty) and "-nai" (not),
the Westerners use "shi-asatte," "karai" and "-n"
or "-nu." (The Tokyoites are the only folks in eastern Japan who use
"shi-asatte.") The consonants are more emphasized in the East, whereas
the vowels are more carefully pronounced in the West. And the Japanese high-low
tonal accents sometimes take different forms between the eastern and western
dialects.
The dialects of Hokkaido, Tohoku, Kanto and the eastern part of Chubu are the Eastern Dialects, while those of the western part of Chubu (including Nagoya City), Kansai (including Osaka, Kyoto and Kobe Cities), Chugoku, Shikoku, Kyushu and Okinawa are the Western Dialects. The Japanese common language used to be based on the dialects of the Kansai region, but since the 17th century is based on the dialect of Tokyo in the Kanto region, as Japan's political and economic center moved from Kyoto and Osaka to Tokyo.
Eastern
Dialects
Tohoku Dialects
The Japanese dialects spoken in the six prefectures
(Aomori, Akita, Iwate, Miyagi, Yamagata and Fukushima) of Japan's Tohoku (Northeast)
Region are collectively called the Tokoku-Ben (Tohoku Dialects). Phonetically,
it has such features as: "e" is pronounced just like "i";
"shi" and "su" are pronounced the same, likewise with "ji"
and "zu," and "chi" and "chu." Therefore, "sushi"
(sushi in English), "susu" (soot) and "suzu" (bell) are
all pronounced the same. Voiceless sounds often become voiced, as in "tsugue"
(desk in English, tsukue in Japanese) and "kada" (shoulder, kata).
The Tohoku dialects can be divided into two: the Northern
Tohoku Dialects spoken in the areas including Aomori, Morioka, Akita and Sakata
Cities; and the Southern Tohoku Dialects spoken in the area including Sendai,
Yamagata, Aizu-Wakamatsu and Fukushima
Cities. The Tsugaru-Ben among the northern dialects, the Satsuma-Ben and the
Okinawa-Ben, are said to be the most difficult Japanese dialects. .
The southern Tohoku dialects in addition
have such features as: "shi," "su" and "shu" are
pronounced the same: likewise with "ji," "zu" and "ju";
"chi," "chu," and "ju"; the regular Japanese high-low
tonal accent is lacking; etc.
Izumo Ben (Izumo Dialect) in Japanese sushi, susu (soot)
and shishi (lion) are all pronounced the same as "susu," as in the
southern Tohoku dialect.
Western
Dialects
Kyoto Dialect
The Kyoto dialect, Kyo
Kotoba, has a long history and developed in Kyoto's own refined culture.
It has a unique sound apart from standard Japanese. Moreover, the implication
of a word changes according to place, time, relationship between people and
subtle pronunciation.
Ryukyuan Dialect
The language of Okinawa belongs to the Japanese-Ryukyuan
language family, which extends from Hokkaido in northern Japan to Yonaguni (73
m. off the coast of Taiwan) in the southern Ryukyus.
In Okinawan, there are five long vowels
(a, i, u, e and o) like in Japanese, while there are only three short vowels
(a, i and u), with Japanese "e" and "o" corresponding to
Okinawan "i" and "u." Examples: "ami" (English
"rain," Japanese "ame") and "kumu" (English "cloud,"
Japanese "kumo"). As in the Okinawan words "pana" (English
"nose," Japanese "hana") and "pigi" (English "beard,"
Japanese "hige")
Within the Ryukyuan language (extending
from Amami Oshima to Yonaguni), the Okinawan language itself is comprised of
many different dialects and sub-dialects from village to village. The Shuri
dialect was common in the King Sho Shin’s kingdom (1477-1526). It was the official
lanugage used in conversation by the aristocratic class of Shuri castle.
The Shuri dialect is characterized by complexity
of honorific markers, which differentiate class, sex, and age. A diversity of
respect forms was strictly adhered to among the three social classes of aristocracy,
gentry, and commoners; between male and female; and also between different age
groups. The appropriate respect forms had to be used when two speakers were
from the same class, same sex, and even to the same age. When two speakers were
of completely different status, conversational usage was extremely complex.
The phonological characteristics of the
Shuri dialect as compared to standard Japanese are mainly the vowel changes
of the e to i and o to u. For example, the word for rain
is pronounced ame in Japanese while it is pronounced ami in Shuri. In
the same manner, the word for cloud is pronounced kumo in Japanese while
it is pronounced kumu in Shuri. Some differences between Japnese and
Shuri dialect also exist in consonants.

English is a verb-subject-object
formation. Basically the auxiliary verb
tenses precede the verb. The adverbs follow the verb, and prepositions
precede the noun. Japanese fits into
the subject-object-verb category. An
auxiliary verb follows the verb. Adverbs
precede the verb. Postpositions like
prepositions will follow the noun.
To better illustrate the
differences here are two examples.
Example 1
Akiko wa
sakana o tabete iru.
Akiko topic marker fish object
marker eating is.
Akiko fish eating is.
Akiko is eating fish.
Example 2
Kanojo wa akai sukato
o haite imasu.
She red skirt
wearing is.
She is wearing a red skirt.
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more information click here

Morphology
Japanese
was solely a spoken language before the Chinese writing system was introduced
to Japan in about the 5th century. With
the introduction of the writing system from China starting about 1,500 years
ago, the Japanese people began to extensively record their language through
poetry and prose. The language of that era, called Old Japanese, had a number
of features that have been lost through time. For example, Old Japanese had
eight vowels instead of the five that we see today. Old Japanese, however, lacked the contrast between long and short
vowels that is so important to modern Japanese. Middle Japanese extends to the
end of the 16th century, bridging the wide differences in grammar and lexicon
between Old Japanese and the modern language.
The transition from Old Japanese to Modern Japanese took place from about
the twelfth century, A.D., to the sixteenth century, A.D.
Japanese
is usually written vertically and from right to left across a page. Thus, the
first page of a Japanese book is what readers of English would normally think
of as the last page. In modern times, Japan has adopted the Western style of
writing horizontally from left to right for some publications, such as textbooks.
Written or printed Japanese has no spaces between words.
There are three basic writing systems
in Japanese; they are Katakana, Hiragana, and Kanji. There is a fourth system called Romaji
Katakana is a very angular script. It is composed of 46 distinctive characters.
Katakana can be used to express any sound in the Japanese language. The
first 5 characters correspond to 5 vowels common to many languages.
· A
sounds like the a in the English word father.
· E
sounds like the e in the English word prey.
· I
sounds like the i in the English word machine.
· O
sounds like the o in the English word most.
·
U sounds like the u in
the English word truth.
Katakana is most commonly used to express
Hiragana is a
much smoother script, full of loops and curves. There are 46 basic hiragana
characters, each one having a counterpart in katakana. All sounds in the Japanese language can be
expressed with just hiragana. These two basic writing systems share most rules,
but lengthening vowel sounds and making consonant sounds harder are done differently
in the two sets.
a) Simple words, like
the verb aru or the noun neko.
b) Conjugations at the ends of verbs, like mimasu (I see) and mimashita
(I saw.)
c) Particles of speech, such as wa, e, and o. Note that the particle
wa is the same as the hiragana ha, eis the same as the
hiragana he, and the particle o is different from the normal hiragana
o.
Hiragana is the first writing system
taught to Japanese children, so low-level children's books are written exclusively
in hiragana, and even in more advanced level texts, difficult kanji will
have the pronunciation written above in hiragana.
Kanji is the most complicated
script in Japanese. First brought to Japan by Buddhist monks more than 1200
years ago. They are based on Chinese
ideograms and there are thousands of characters. Each one represents a different idea,
but not necessarily a different sound as is the case with katakana, hiragana,
and romaji. In fact, most of the characters have more than one possible reading.
The ideogram for person can be read as jin, nin, hito, bito, ri.
Kanji is most commonly used
to express
a) Place names, like
Tokyo or Osaka.
b) The names of people, like my wife.
c)Most nouns, as well as verb and adjective stems.
Romaji ABC...
Besides the three forms of writing of Katakana,
Hiragana, and Kanji, Japanese is sometimes written in Romaji. Romaji is primarily
used for the convenience of foreigners. With Romaji, one can read Japanese without
knowing any Japanese writing system.
If you would like to learn how to write your name in Japanese click here: http://www.asahi-net.or.jp/~ft5k-ymd/Yn.html