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Kunigami or Northern Okinawan (, , ) is a Ryukyuan language of Northern
Okinawa Island , officially , is the largest of the Okinawa Islands and the Ryukyu Islands, Ryukyu (''Nansei'') Islands of Japan in the Kyushu region. It is the smallest and least populated of the five Japanese archipelago, main islands of Japan. The island is ...
in Kunigami District and city of Nago, otherwise known as the Yanbaru region, historically the territory of the kingdom of Hokuzan. The Nakijin dialect is often considered representative of Kunigami, analogous to the Shuri- Naha dialect of Central Okinawan. The number of fluent native speakers of Kunigami is not known. As a result of Japanese language policy, the younger generation mostly speaks Japanese as their first language.


Location

In addition to the northern portion of Okinawa Island, Kunigami is spoken on the small neighboring islands of Ie, Tsuken and Kudaka.


Scope and classification

''Glottolog'', following Pellard (2009), classifies Kunigami with Central Okinawan as the two Okinawan languages. ''Ethnologue'' adds Okinoerabu and Yoron; these (along with all other languages of the northern Ryukyu Islands) are classified as Amami languages by ''Glottolog''. The UNESCO ''Atlas of the World's Languages in Danger'', following Uemura (2003), includes Okinoerabu and Yoron as varieties of Kunigami.


Folk terminology

The speakers of Kunigami have various words for "language", "dialect", and "style of speech". For example, linguist Nakasone Seizen (1907–1995) stated that the dialect of his home community Yonamine, Nakijin Village had (corresponding Standard Japanese word forms in parentheses): (''kuchi''), (''kotoba'') and (''monoii''). The language of one's own community was referred to as or . The Yonamine dialect was part of Nakijin's western dialect called . The northern part of Okinawa was colloquially known as Yanbaru and hence its language was sometimes called .


Phonology

Like most Ryukyuan languages north of Central Okinawan, Kunigami has series of so-called "tensed" or "glottalized" consonants. While the nasals and glides are truly glottalized, the stops are tenuis , in contrast to the aspiration of the "plain" stops . Kunigami is also notable for the presence of an phoneme separate from the phoneme that is believed to be the historical source of in most other
Japonic languages Japonic or Japanese–Ryukyuan () is a language family comprising Japanese language, Japanese, spoken in the main islands of Japan, and the Ryukyuan languages, spoken in the Ryukyu Islands. The family is universally accepted by linguists, and sig ...
; Kunigami instead has two different sources:
Proto-Japonic Proto-Japonic, also known as Proto-Japanese or Proto-Japanese–Ryukyuan, is the linguistic reconstruction, reconstructed language ancestral to the Japonic languages, Japonic language family. It has been reconstructed by using a combination of int ...
or otherwise the zero initial in certain conditioning environments. Thus, for example, the Nakijin dialect of Kunigami has (light, a lamp, a
shōji A is a door, window or room divider used in traditional Japanese architecture, consisting of Transparency and translucency, translucent (or transparent) sheets on a lattice frame. Where light transmission is not needed, the similar but opaq ...
),Acute accent indicates a high tone which is cognate with Japanese (light, a lamp); the Kunigami form is distinguished from its Japanese cognate by the initial , tenuis , and elision of Proto-Japonic *r before *i. The Kunigami language also makes distinctions in certain word pairs, such as Nakijin dialect (cloud) and (spider), which in Japanese are almost homophonic ( and ).


Morphology

One notable difference in the use of certain morphological markers between Kunigami language and Standard Japanese is the use of the form as an adverb in Kunigami: e.g. Nakijin dialect , which is equivalent to Standard Japanese ''toókú hanárete irú'' ("It is far away"). In Standard Japanese, the form is used adverbially, while the form is used exclusively to derive abstract nouns of quality and amount ("-ness" forms) from adjectival stems.


Resources

* ''Okinawa Nakijin Hōgen Jiten'' by Seizen Nakasone. A dictionary of the Yonamine dialect of Nakijin village. * ''Okinawa Iejima Hōgen Jiten'' by Mutsuko Oshio. A dictionary of the Ie dialect.


References

{{DEFAULTSORT:Kunigami Language Ryukyuan languages