Awaji dialect
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The , also called , is a dialect of Japanese spoken on Awaji Island (which comprises the cities of Sumoto,
Minamiawaji is a city in the southern part of Awaji Island in Hyōgo Prefecture, Japan. , the city had an estimated population of 45,489 kn 19856 households, and a population density of 200 persons per km².The total area of the city is . Geography The cit ...
, and Awaji) in the southern part of Hyōgo Prefecture. According to the introduction of "Comprehensive Study of the
Kinki Region The or the , lies in the southern-central region of Japan's main island Honshū. The region includes the prefectures of Nara, Wakayama, Kyoto, Osaka, Hyōgo and Shiga, often also Mie, sometimes Fukui, Tokushima and Tottori. The metropolit ...
," a publication of the
National Institute for Japanese Language and Linguistics The (NINJAL) is an independent administrative institution in Japan, established for the purpose of studying, surveying, promoting, and making recommendations for the proper usage of the Japanese language.NINJALweb page (English)/ref> The institu ...
(NINJAL), titled "Subgroupings of the Kinki Dialects", the Awaji Dialect straddles the Central (typified by the pronunciation of the mora /se/ as e use of the copula ''=ja'', a distinction between the perfect and progressive aspects, and a migration of the monograde verb classes to the quadrigrade class) and Western Kansai dialect regions. The dialect shares many features with the dialects of the cities of
Osaka is a designated city in the Kansai region of Honshu in Japan. It is the capital of and most populous city in Osaka Prefecture, and the third most populous city in Japan, following Special wards of Tokyo and Yokohama. With a population of ...
, Kobe, and
Wakayama Wakayama may refer to: *Wakayama Prefecture, a prefecture of Japan *Wakayama (city) Wakayama City Hall is the capital city of Wakayama Prefecture in the Kansai region of Japan. , the city had an estimated population of 351,391 in 157066 househol ...
, which is shares the
Osaka Bay Osaka Bay (大阪湾 ''Ōsaka-wan'' ) is a bay in western Japan. As an eastern part of the Seto Inland Sea, it is separated from the Pacific Ocean by the Kii Channel and from the neighbor western part of the Inland Sea by the Akashi Strait. ...
with, as well as with that of Tokushima Prefecture, which exercised control (as Awa Province) over Awaji Island during the feudal period. On the other hand, it bears little resemblance to the
Banshū dialect The , also called the , is a Japanese dialect spoken in the Harima region (corresponding to the boundaries of the former Harima Province) of southwestern Hyōgo Prefecture. Although it is included in the Kansai dialect group, it shares much of i ...
, spoken right across the
Akashi Strait The is a strait between the Japanese islands of Honshu and Awaji. The strait connects Seto Inland Sea and Osaka Bay. The width of the Akashi Strait is approximately 4 kilometers, and maximum depth is about 110 meters. The fastest tidal curren ...
from the island.


Classification

Tasuaki Negita in ''A Study of the Awaji Dialect'' (1986, ) divides the Awaji dialect into Northern, Central, and Southern varieties, grouping the Northern Awaji dialect with that of the area of the former Kawachi and Yamato Provinces, Central Awaji with that of
Izumi Province :''The characters ''泉州'' are also used for the name of the Chinese city of Quanzhou''. was a province of Japan in the area of southern Osaka Prefecture. Tango bordered on Kii to the south, Yamato and Kawachi to the west, and Settsu to ...
and Wakayama City, and Southern Awaji with that of Tokushima City. Yamamoto Toshiharu and Yuriko Iino in "The Dialects of Hyōgo: Their Distribution and Classification" (published in The Bulletin of
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, Vol. 10, 1962) instead divide the dialect into Northern Awaji, Sumoto, and Southern Awaji, and further subdivide Northern Awaji into Eastern and Northern sub-varieties.


Intonation and pitch accent

:''Where a gloss is given for either only Awaji dialect or standard Japanese, the other gloss is identical to the given one.'' The entire island uses a Keihan type (wordtone and accent) pitch accent system. Especially among the elderly and people living in remote areas, the traditional Keihan system (which has disappeared in
Kyoto Kyoto (; Japanese language, Japanese: , ''Kyōto'' ), officially , is the capital city of Kyoto Prefecture in Japan. Located in the Kansai region on the island of Honshu, Kyoto forms a part of the Keihanshin, Keihanshin metropolitan area along wi ...
, Osaka, Kobe, and most of the rest of the Kansai Region) is still to be found. Yoichi Fujiwara noted in "Three Major Dialects of the Inland Sea Region" (part of ''Japanese Dialects of the
Shōwa Period Shōwa may refer to: * Hirohito (1901–1989), the 124th Emperor of Japan, known posthumously as Emperor Shōwa * Showa Corporation, a Japanese suspension and shock manufacturer, affiliated with the Honda keiretsu Japanese eras * Jōwa (Heian ...
'') that the vicinity of the former Ikuwa Village (now part of the Hokudan-chō Tsuna-gun area of Awaji City) had a H-L-H type intonation (e.g., ''dokomade it-temo'' ("wherever go.") would be pronounced ''dókòmádè ìttémò''). Eiichi Murauchi tells us that one Mrs. Koi, an elderly women from Kamaguchi (now part of the Higashiura-chō Tsuna-gun area of Awaji City) had ''kíkìbín'' ("heel") and ''kátàkúmà'' ("piggyback ride") for standard Japanese ''kibisu'' and ''kataguruma'', respectively, and Yoshiyuki Hattori observed in 1965 an elderly woman from the Kusumoto area (now also part of Higashiura-chō Tsuna-gun) who had ''tsúbàkúrò'' ("swallow") for standard ''tsubame''. In general, north of Gunge (part of the Ichinomiya-chō Tsuna-gun area of Awaji City) and Shizuki (part of Tsuna-chō Tsuna-gun area of Awaji City), the prosodic system includes examples not only like these, which can be found throughout the country, but a somewhat different system, found nowhere else in Hyōgo Prefecture.


Pronunciation

:''Where a gloss is given for either only Awaji dialect or standard Japanese, the other gloss is identical to the given one.'' Awaji dialect speakers, like many other speakers of rural Kansai dialects, exhibit alternations between the phonemes /d/, /z/, and /r/, between /m/ and /b/, and /b/ and /w/. Other features shared in common with such dialects include diphthong assimilation, excrescence at a compound boundary, alternations between voiced and voiceless consonants, and various euphonic changes. To give an example of variant forms, the Sumoto variety has ''igok-'' ("move"), ''sabuk-'' ("cold"), ''osshe-'' ("teach"), ''kaaraa'' ("roof tile"), and ''ebesu'' ("provincial") for standard ''ugok-'', ''samuk-'', ''oshie-'', ''kawara'', and ''ebisu'', respectively. In the Yura district of Sumoto, however, a very distinctive variety of Awaji dialect, termed Yura-ben (meaning "Yura dialect"), is spoken, characterized by rapid speech and frequent sound assimilations and omissions, making it very difficult to understand (in the rest of island, only the assimilation of the diphthong /ai/ to /æː/ is common). According to the ''Linguistic Atlas of Japan'' (a publication of NINJAL's Regional Linguistics Laboratory), elderly people in some sections of the former towns of Midori and Nandan (now both part of Minamiawaji City) still preserved the distinction between /kw/ and /k/ and /gw/ and /g/, lost in most of the rest of the country. In addition, the map indicates a preservation of the medieval pronunciation of the mora /se/ as ein some parts of Nandan's Fukura district. In most Kansai dialects, when a mora other than the first of a word consisting of a consonant and a high vowel is followed immediately by a vowel or semivowel (whether word-internally or -externally), the consonant changes to one of the moraic phonemes /Q/ or /N/, the high vowel is deleted, and the vowel or semivowel becomes /j/; the resulting sequence of /QCj/ or /NCj/ may then be subject to further changes due to the regular process of palatalization common to all Japanese dialects. This process is exemplified by the famous realization ''sunmyos=shat-tara assha=de nisshakas=shuki=ni'' ("If you want to get to Sumiyoshi, catch the Nishi-Akashi-bound
rain Rain is water droplets that have condensed from atmospheric water vapor and then fall under gravity. Rain is a major component of the water cycle and is responsible for depositing most of the fresh water on the Earth. It provides water ...
at Ashiya," lit. "Sumiyoshi= Ashiya= Nishi-Akashi

") for underlying *''sumiyoshi=yat-tara ashiya=de nishiakashi=yuki=ni''. In the Awaji dialect, however, this change can also affect the first mora of a word, resulting in forms like ''ssar-'' ("sit") and ''ssho'' ("salt") for standard ''suwar-'' and ''shio'', respectively, and thus making the dialect a rare example of a Japanese variety that allows initial geminates.


Grammar

:''Where a gloss is given for either only Awaji dialect or standard Japanese, the other gloss is identical to the given one.'' Awaji dialect has the following features: * A migration of the monograde verbal class to the quadrigrade class, originating in the Sumoto area, is currently underway. For example, ''okira-n'' ("wake up.") and ''okire-ra-n'' ("wake up.") for standard Japanese ''oki-nak-'' ("wake up.") and ''oki-rare-nak-'' ("wake up."), respectively. * A merger of the conclusive and adnominal for adjectival nouns. For example, ''kimama=na'' ("selfish=") for standard ''kimama=da''. * Some speakers use the copulas ''=ja'' and ''=ya'' interchangeably. The copula ''=da'' is not used, but in Sumoto the particle ''=daa'' can be used to express the tentative mood. For example, ''a-n=daa'' ("exist.=") and ''sha na-i=dee=ka'' ("it can't be helped," lit. "method exist-

") for standard ''ar-u=dar-oo'' ("exist.=") and ''sikata=dewa-na-i=ka'' (lit. "method

"), respectively. * The nominative particle ''=ga'' often fuses with the preceding noun. For example, ''am=yaa'' ("rain=") for standard ''ame=ga''. * The sentence ending particle used to mark tag questions in Sumoto is ''=na'', and ''=no'' elsewhere on the island. For example, ''yo-o oyog-u=naa'' ("good. swim.=") for standard ''yo-ku oyog-u=ne''. * Up until the early Shōwa period, married women in Sumoto used the sentence-ending particles ''=zan'' and ''=kan''. For example, ''e-e=zan'' ("good.=") for standard ''i-i=n=da=ne'' ("good.

").


Conjugation

The ''-ba'' of the provisional form fuses with the base of the verb; for example, ''kak-ya'' ("write.") for standard ''kake-ba''. Also, the r-row quadrigrade nonpast ending ''-r-u'' and the monograde nonpast ending ''-ru'' change to either /Q/ or /N/ when followed by some uninflected words and a few special verbs, giving forms like ''hashiz=zo'' ("run-=") and ''a-n=no=ka'' ("exist.

") for standard ''hashir-u=zo'' ("run.=") and ''ar-u=no=ka''.


Speakers of the Awaji dialect are often lambasted for not using respectful language. It has been said of the regional character of Sumoto, that since social status and socioeconomic levels do not vary much, respectful language is scarce, that people from Awaji are often heard to speak unreservedly to each other in the interest of fostering frankness among intimates, and that the use of such language may come off as cold or distant. But the Awaji dialect certainly does not lack respectful forms intrinsically. Although the dialect has its own rich inventory of such expressions, due to the diffusion of respectful forms from Standard Japanese on the island, they are in the process of disappearing.


Respectful verbs and auxiliaries


* + ''-nahar-'' (quadrigrade conjugation). Equivalent to standard + ''-nasar-''. Also equivalent to related Osaka dialect + ''-har-''. * + ''-tsuka''. Equivalent to standard + ''-kudasa-i''. Derived from Middle Japanese ''tukapasa-re-yo'' ("send."). Also used in the
Shikoku dialect The are a group of the Japanese dialects spoken on Shikoku. The Shikoku dialects are: * Awa dialect (Tokushima Prefecture, formerly known as Awa Province) * Sanuki dialect (Kagawa Prefecture formerly known as Sanuki Province) * Iyo dialect ...
s. Equivalent to related San'yō dialect + ''-tsukaasa-i''. * + ''-tsukahar-'' (quadrigrade conjugation). Equivalent to standard + ''-kudasar-''. A composite of the above two. * + ''-nas-i-ta''. Equivalent to standard + ''-nasar-e-ta''. * + ''-hairyo''. Equivalent to standard + ''-kudasa-i''. Also used in the Shikoku dialects. * + ''-okure''. Equivalent to standard + ''-kure''.


* ''ang-yo''. Equivalent to standard ''age-mash-ō''. * + ''-t-ang-yo''. Equivalent to standard + ''-t-age-mash-ō''.


* + ''-mash-o''. Equivalent to standard + ''-mash-ō''. * ''=desse''. Equivalent to standard ''=des-u-yo''. Also used in Osaka dialect. * ''omas-'' (quadrigrade conjugation). Polite equivalent for the verb ''ar-'' ("exist"). Also used in Osaka dialect. * + ''-n-se''. Equivalent to standard + ''-mash-ō''. Nushima women's language. An example of an ancient form preserved on an outlying island.


Other types of respectful language

In polite language, the forms ''a-z=ze'' ("exist.=") and ''a-k=kana'' ("exist.=") are preferred to ''a-z=zo'' and ''a-k=ka'' ("exist.=") for standard ''ar-u=yo'' and ''ar-u=ka'', respectively. Also, the choice of the honorific prefix ''go='' or ''o='' is governed by the same rules as in the standard language, so ''kigen=ya e-e=ka'' ("Are ouin a good mood?", lit. "mood= good.=") becomes ''go=kigen=ya o=yoroshi-i=kana'' (lit. "=mood= =good-="), for standard ''kigen=wa i-i=ka'' and ''go=kigen=wa o=yoroshi-i=kana'', respectively. Of course, when in Standard Japanese a speaker would attach the suffix ''-san'' to a person's name, in Awaji dialect the suffix ''-han'' is used instead, just as in the Osaka dialect.


Vocabulary

:''Where a gloss is given for either only Awaji dialect or standard Japanese, the other gloss is identical to the given one.''


Influence from surroundings

The variations of the island's regions are such that it is difficult to talk of a single, unified Awaji dialect. The lineages of Kobe and Osaka, Kii, Awa are mixed together in the vocabulary and grammar of the dialect. To take the standard ''mi-na-i'' ("see.") as an example, the Kobe/Osaka forms ''mii-hen'' and ''mi-yahen'' are found in the vicinity of the former Tsuna District and in the
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and Nakagawa sections of Sumoto City, the Kii forms ''mi-n'' and ''mi-yan'' are found in Sumoto's Yura and Nada neighborhoods, the Nada neighborhood of the Nandan-chō Mihara-gun section of Minamiawaji City, and on Nushima, and the Awa form ''mi-yasen'' (all "see.") is found in the rest of the former Mihara District and within the original boundaries of the City of Sumoto, and there are even areas of Sumoto and southern Goshiki where the Kobe/Osaka and Awa forms are found in free variation. One place where the vocabulary is relatively average or even meager is the island's largest city, Sumoto, in the so-called "Sumoto Dialect" spoken within the old boundaries of the city. Conversely, it is within the very same city, in the Yura neighborhood, where what may be the island's most characteristic variety, the aforementioned Yura Dialect, is spoken. In most Kansai dialects, the word ''aho'' ("idiot") is seen for standard ''baka'', and the Awaji dialect is no exception, but in Hokudan one also find ''chage'' (realized ɕaŋe with the same meaning. The form ''kichanak-'' ("dirty") is common for standard ''kitanak-'', and particularly in northern region the form ''chanak-'' or the alternative word ''yosowashik-'' are also found. The dialects of Kyoto/Osaka/Kobe, Wakayama, and Okayama have retained the word ''senchi'' ("restroom"), replaced in the standard language by ''benjo'', and in Awaji this has become ''sencha''; the dialects of Sumoto's Yura and Nada sections also have the forms ''hako'' and ''nbako''. Throughout Hokudan and in parts of Higashiura expressions reminiscent of those of the Kawachi dialect, such as ''yo-o ki-ta=noo ware'' ("welcome," lit. "good. come.= you") and ''sonna koto s-uk=ka re'' ("don't do that," lit. "that sort of thing do.= you") for standard ''yok-u ki-ta=nee, omae=wa'' (lit. "good. come.=, you=") and ''sonna koto s-uru=kai, omae=wa'' ("that sort of thing do.=, you="), respectively, can be seen. The reason that Awaji shares forms and vocabulary with such geographically distant regions as
Settsu is a city located in Osaka Prefecture, Japan. As of 2017, the city has an estimated population of 85,290 and a population density of 5,664 people per km². The total area is 14.88 km². Surrounding municipalities *Osaka Prefecture **Higa ...
, Izumi, and Kawachi is that from ancient times a bilateral trade of goods and culture flourished, and the activities of the Nojima and Mihara fisherman (groups that once inhabited the island and that are mentioned in the earliest chronicles of Japan), who moved between Naniwa and Yamato, is noted in the historical record. As for the connection to Awa, the island was during the Edo Period ruled over by the
Tokushima Domain was a feudal domain under the Tokugawa shogunate of Edo period Japan, controlling all of Awa Province and Awaji Province in what is now Tokushima Prefecture and Awaji Island of modern-day Hyōgo Prefecture. It was centered around Tokushima ...
.


A dialect at the center of the Inland Sea

As the Seto Inland Sea has from time immemorial served to connect Kyushu and the
Kinai is a Japanese term denoting an ancient division of the country. ''Kinai'' is a name for the ancient provinces around the capital Nara and Heian-kyō. Nussbaum, Louis-Frédéric. (2005). "''Kinai''" in . The five provinces were called ''go-kinai' ...
by sea, it has played a very important role in Japanese history. New words from the capital area leaving
Honshu , historically called , is the largest and most populous island of Japan. It is located south of Hokkaidō across the Tsugaru Strait, north of Shikoku across the Inland Sea, and northeast of Kyūshū across the Kanmon Straits. The island se ...
for the West first had to stop over in Awaji. Through absorbing all of this new vocabulary so quickly, the island, along with others in its vicinity such as Shōdo and Shimada and 大毛島, Ōge in the
Naruto Strait is a strait between Awaji Island and Shikoku in Japan. It connects Harima Nada, the eastern part of the Inland Sea and the Kii Channel. A famous feature of the strait is the Naruto whirlpools. Ōnaruto Bridge, the southern part of the Kobe-A ...
, constituted a remarkable dialect sprachbund (an area where dialects share linguistic features, in this case vocabulary, because of extensive contact despite not necessarily being closely related). For standard ''takenoko-gasa'' (a type of conical hat made from weaving together bamboo sheaths, lit. "bamboo shoot.hat"), we find words such as ''taiko-gasa'' and ''taiko-bachi'' disseminated throughout the Seto, and the word ''chinchiro'' ("pinecone") for standard ''matsukasa'', pervasive in mainland Kansai, has also spread to Awaji and the islands in the open sea around the Naruto. Under the influence of this state of affairs, Awaji Island has had a strong tendency to be isolated on the periphery. Examples of vocabulary items found only on the island are ''hotoke=no uma'' ("praying mantis," lit. "buddha. horse"), for standard ''kamakiri'' ("praying mantis"), ''hi=ater-i ame'' ("sunshower," lit. "sun=expose. rain") for standard ''hi=der-i ame'' (lit. "sun=shine. rain"), and ''hidari=ete'' ("left-handed," lit. "left=forte") for standard ''hidari=kik-i'' (lit. "left=effective."). In addition to these Awaji-specific forms, the dialect also has forms found in other places, such as ''iari'' ("ant") for standard ''ari'', also found in Kyushu, and even as new words develop or are taken in from elsewhere, there is a still a tendency to preserve the old forms.


References


Further reading

* ''Hyōgo's Dialects and Regional Speech Styles''. Minoru Wada and Ryōji Kamata, Kobe Shimbun General Publishing Division, 1992. .


Notes


See also

* Awaji Province *
Banshū dialect The , also called the , is a Japanese dialect spoken in the Harima region (corresponding to the boundaries of the former Harima Province) of southwestern Hyōgo Prefecture. Although it is included in the Kansai dialect group, it shares much of i ...
* Kishū dialect * Awa dialect * Sanuki dialect {{Japanese language Japanese language Japanese dialects Kansai region Shikoku region Seto Inland Sea Hyōgo Prefecture