is the oldest attested stage of the
Japanese language
is the principal language of the Japonic languages, Japonic language family spoken by the Japanese people. It has around 123 million speakers, primarily in Japan, the only country where it is the national language, and within the Japanese dia ...
, recorded in documents from the
Nara period
The of the history of Japan covers the years from 710 to 794. Empress Genmei established the capital of Heijō-kyō (present-day Nara). Except for a five-year period (740–745), when the capital was briefly moved again, it remained the capita ...
(8th century). It became
Early Middle Japanese in the succeeding
Heian period
The is the last division of classical Japanese history, running from 794 to 1185. It followed the Nara period, beginning when the 50th emperor, Emperor Kammu, moved the capital of Japan to Heian-kyō (modern Kyoto). means in Japanese. It is a ...
, but the precise delimitation of the stages is controversial.
Old Japanese was an early member of the
Japonic language family. No genetic links to other language families have been proven.
Old Japanese was written using
man'yōgana
is an ancient writing system that uses Chinese characters to represent the Japanese language. It was the first known kana system to be developed as a means to represent the Japanese language phonetically. The date of the earliest usage of t ...
, which is a writing system that employs
Chinese characters
Chinese characters are logographs used Written Chinese, to write the Chinese languages and others from regions historically influenced by Chinese culture. Of the four independently invented writing systems accepted by scholars, they represe ...
as
syllabograms or (occasionally)
logogram
In a written language, a logogram (from Ancient Greek 'word', and 'that which is drawn or written'), also logograph or lexigraph, is a written character that represents a semantic component of a language, such as a word or morpheme. Chine ...
s. It featured a few phonemic differences from later forms, such as a simpler syllable structure and distinctions between several pairs of syllables that have been pronounced identically since Early Middle Japanese. The phonetic realization of these distinctions is uncertain.
Internal reconstruction
Internal reconstruction is a method of reconstructing an earlier state in a language's history using only language-internal evidence of the language in question.
The comparative method compares variations between languages, such as in sets of co ...
points to a pre-Old Japanese phase with fewer consonants and vowels.
As is typical of Japonic languages, Old Japanese was primarily an
agglutinative language with a
subject–object–verb word order, adjectives and adverbs preceding the nouns and verbs they modified and auxiliary verbs and particles appended to the main verb. Unlike in later periods, Old Japanese adjectives could be used uninflected to modify following nouns. Old Japanese verbs had a rich system of tense and aspect suffixes.
Sources and dating

Old Japanese is usually defined as the language of the
Nara period
The of the history of Japan covers the years from 710 to 794. Empress Genmei established the capital of Heijō-kyō (present-day Nara). Except for a five-year period (740–745), when the capital was briefly moved again, it remained the capita ...
(710–794), when the capital was
Heijō-kyō (now
Nara
The National Archives and Records Administration (NARA) is an independent agency of the United States government within the executive branch, charged with the preservation and documentation of government and historical records. It is also task ...
).
That is the period of the earliest connected texts in Japanese, the 112 songs included in the ''
Kojiki'' (712).
The other major literary sources of the period are the 128 songs included in the ''
Nihon Shoki'' (720) and the ''
Man'yōshū
The is the oldest extant collection of Japanese (poetry in Classical Japanese), compiled sometime after AD 759 during the Nara period. The anthology is one of the most revered of Japan's poetic compilations. The compiler, or the last in ...
'' (), a compilation of over 4,500 poems.
Shorter samples are 25 poems in the ''
Fudoki'' (720) and the 21 poems of the ''
Bussokuseki-kahi'' ().
The latter has the virtue of being an original inscription, whereas the oldest surviving manuscripts of all the other texts are the results of centuries of copying, with the attendant risk of scribal errors.
Prose texts are more limited but are thought to reflect the syntax of Old Japanese more accurately than verse texts do. The most important are the 27 ('liturgies') recorded in the ''
Engishiki'' (compiled in 927) and the 62 (literally 'announced order', meaning imperial edicts) recorded in the ''
Shoku Nihongi
The is an imperially-commissioned Japanese history text. Completed in 797, it is the second of the '' Six National Histories'', coming directly after the and followed by ''Nihon Kōki''. Fujiwara no Tsugutada and Sugano no Mamichi served as t ...
'' (797).
A limited number of Japanese words, mostly personal names and place names, are recorded phonetically in ancient Chinese texts, such as the "''Wei Zhi''" portion of the ''
Records of the Three Kingdoms
The ''Records of the Three Kingdoms'' is a Chinese official history written by Chen Shou in the late 3rd century CE, covering the end of the Han dynasty (220 CE) and the subsequent Three Kingdoms period (220–280 CE). It is regard ...
'' (3rd century AD), but the transcriptions by Chinese scholars are unreliable.
The oldest surviving inscriptions from Japan, dating from the 5th or early 6th centuries, include those on the
Suda Hachiman Shrine Mirror, the
Inariyama Sword, and the
Eta Funayama Sword.
Those inscriptions are written in
Classical Chinese
Classical Chinese is the language in which the classics of Chinese literature were written, from . For millennia thereafter, the written Chinese used in these works was imitated and iterated upon by scholars in a form now called Literary ...
but contain several Japanese names that were transcribed phonetically using Chinese characters.
Such inscriptions became more common from the
Suiko period (592–628).
Those fragments are usually considered a form of Old Japanese.
Of the 10,000 paper records kept at
Shōsōin
The is the wikt:treasure house, treasure house of Tōdai-ji Temple in Nara, Nara, Nara, Japan. The building is in the ''azekura'' (log-cabin) style with a raised floor. It lies to the northwest of the Great Buddha Hall. The Shōsō-in houses arti ...
, only two, dating from about 762, are in Old Japanese.
Over 150,000 wooden tablets () dating from the late 7th and early 8th century have been unearthed.
The tablets bear short texts, often in Old Japanese of a more colloquial style than the polished poems and liturgies of the primary corpus.
Writing system
Artifacts inscribed with Chinese characters dated as early as the 1st century AD have been found in Japan, but detailed knowledge of the script seems not to have reached the islands until the early 5th century.
According to the ''Kojiki'' and ''Nihon Shoki'', the script was brought by scholars from
Baekje
Baekje or Paekche (; ) was a Korean kingdom located in southwestern Korea from 18 BCE to 660 CE. It was one of the Three Kingdoms of Korea, together with Goguryeo and Silla. While the three kingdoms were in separate existence, Baekje had the h ...
(southwestern Korea).
The earliest texts found in Japan were written in
Classical Chinese
Classical Chinese is the language in which the classics of Chinese literature were written, from . For millennia thereafter, the written Chinese used in these works was imitated and iterated upon by scholars in a form now called Literary ...
, probably by immigrant scribes.
Later "hybrid" texts show the influence of
Japanese grammar, such as the
word order
In linguistics, word order (also known as linear order) is the order of the syntactic constituents of a language. Word order typology studies it from a cross-linguistic perspective, and examines how languages employ different orders. Correlatio ...
(for example, the verb being placed after the object).
Chinese and Koreans had long used Chinese characters to write non-Chinese terms and proper names phonetically by selecting characters for Chinese words that sounded similar to each syllable.
Koreans also used the characters phonetically to write Korean particles and inflections that were added to Chinese texts to allow them to be read as Korean (
Idu script).
In Japan, the practice was developed into , a complete script for the language that used Chinese characters phonetically, which was the ancestor of modern
kana syllabaries.
This system was already in use in the verse parts of the ''
Kojiki'' (712) and the ''
Nihon Shoki'' (720).
For example, the first line of the first poem in the ''Kojiki'' was written with five characters:
This method of writing Japanese syllables by using characters for their Chinese sounds () was supplemented with indirect methods in the complex mixed script of the ''
Man'yōshū
The is the oldest extant collection of Japanese (poetry in Classical Japanese), compiled sometime after AD 759 during the Nara period. The anthology is one of the most revered of Japan's poetic compilations. The compiler, or the last in ...
'' ().
Syllables
In , each Old Japanese syllable was represented by a Chinese character. Although any of several characters could be used for a given syllable, a careful analysis reveals that 88 syllables were distinguished in early Old Japanese, typified by the ''Kojiki'' songs:
As in later forms of Japanese, the system has gaps where ''yi'' and ''wu'' might be expected.
Shinkichi Hashimoto discovered in 1917 that many syllables that have a modern ''i'', ''e'' or ''o'' occurred in two forms, termed types and .
These are denoted by subscripts 1 and 2 respectively in the above table. The syllables ''mo
1'' and ''mo
2'' are not distinguished in the slightly later ''Nihon Shoki'' and ''Man'yōshū'', reducing the syllable count to 87.
Some authors also believe that two forms of ''po'' were distinguished in the ''Kojiki''.
All of these pairs had merged in the Early Middle Japanese of the Heian period.
The consonants ''g'', ''z'', ''d'', ''b'' and ''r'' did not occur at the start of a word.
Conversely, syllables consisting of a single vowel were restricted to word-initial position, with a few exceptions such as 'oar', 'to lie down', 'to regret' (with conclusive ), 'to age' and , the adnominal form of the verb 'to plant'.
Alexander Vovin argues that the non-initial syllables ''i'' and ''u'' in these cases should be read as Old Japanese syllables ''yi'' and ''wu''.
The rare vowel almost always occurred at the end of a morpheme.
Most occurrences of , and were also at the end of a morpheme.
The typically did not distinguish voiced from voiceless consonants, and wrote some syllables with characters that had fewer strokes and were based on older Chinese pronunciations imported via the Korean peninsula.
For example,
* was written with the character , pronounced * in
Old Chinese
Old Chinese, also called Archaic Chinese in older works, is the oldest attested stage of Chinese language, Chinese, and the ancestor of all modern varieties of Chinese. The earliest examples of Chinese are divinatory inscriptions on oracle bones ...
and in Middle Chinese, and
* was written with the character , pronounced * in Old Chinese and in Middle Chinese.
Transcription
Several different notations for the type A/B distinction are found in the literature, including:
Phonology
There is no consensus on the pronunciation of the syllables distinguished by .
One difficulty is that the
Middle Chinese
Middle Chinese (formerly known as Ancient Chinese) or the Qieyun system (QYS) is the historical variety of Chinese language, Chinese recorded in the ''Qieyun'', a rime dictionary first published in 601 and followed by several revised and expande ...
pronunciations of the characters used are also disputed, and since the reconstruction of their phonetic values is partly based on later
Sino-Japanese pronunciations, there is a danger of
circular reasoning
Circular reasoning (, "circle in proving"; also known as circular logic) is a fallacy, logical fallacy in which the reasoner begins with what they are trying to end with. Circular reasoning is not a formal logical fallacy, but a pragmatic defect ...
.
Additional evidence has been drawn from phonological
typology, subsequent developments in the Japanese pronunciation, and the comparative study of the
Ryukyuan languages
The , also Lewchewan or Luchuan (), are the indigenous languages of the Ryukyu Islands, the southernmost part of the Japanese archipelago. Along with the Japanese language and the Hachijō language, they make up the Japonic language family.
Ju ...
.
Consonants
Miyake reconstructed the following consonant inventory:
The voiceless obstruents had voiced prenasalized counterparts .
Prenasalization was still present in the late 17th century (according to the Korean textbook ''
Ch'ŏphae Sinŏ'') and is found in some Modern Japanese and Ryukyuan dialects, but it has disappeared in modern Japanese except for the intervocalic nasal stop allophone of .
The sibilants and may have been palatalized before ''e'' and ''i''.
Comparative evidence from Ryukyuan languages suggests that Old Japanese ''p'' reflected an earlier
voiceless bilabial stop *p.
There is general agreement that word-initial ''p'' had become a
voiceless bilabial fricative by
Early Modern Japanese, as suggested by its transcription as ''f'' in later Portuguese works and as ''ph'' or ''hw'' in the Korean textbook ''Ch'ŏphae Sinŏ''. In Modern Standard Japanese, it is romanized as ''h'' and has different
allophone
In phonology, an allophone (; from the Greek , , 'other' and , , 'voice, sound') is one of multiple possible spoken soundsor '' phones''used to pronounce a single phoneme in a particular language. For example, in English, the voiceless plos ...
s before various vowels. In medial position, it became in Early Middle Japanese and has since disappeared except before ''a''.
Many scholars, following
Shinkichi Hashimoto, argue that ''p'' had already lenited to by the Old Japanese period, but Miyake argues that it was still a stop.
Vowels
The Chinese characters chosen to write syllables with the Old Japanese vowel ''a'' suggest that it was an
open
Open or OPEN may refer to:
Music
* Open (band), Australian pop/rock band
* The Open (band), English indie rock band
* ''Open'' (Blues Image album), 1969
* ''Open'' (Gerd Dudek, Buschi Niebergall, and Edward Vesala album), 1979
* ''Open'' (Go ...
unrounded vowel .
The vowel ''u'' was a
close back rounded vowel , unlike the unrounded of Modern Standard Japanese.
Several hypotheses have been advanced to explain the A/B distinctions made in . The issue is hotly debated, and there is no consensus. The traditional view, first advanced by
Kyōsuke Kindaichi in 1938, is that there were eight pure vowels, with the type B vowels being more central than their type A counterparts. Others, beginning in the 1930s but more commonly since the work of Roland Lange in 1968, have attributed the type A/B distinction to medial or final
glides and . The
diphthong
A diphthong ( ), also known as a gliding vowel or a vowel glide, is a combination of two adjacent vowel sounds within the same syllable. Technically, a diphthong is a vowel with two different targets: that is, the tongue (and/or other parts of ...
proposals are often connected to hypotheses about pre-Old Japanese, but all exhibit an uneven distribution of glides.
The distinction between ''mo
1'' and ''mo
2'' was seen only in ''Kojiki'' and vanished afterwards.
The distribution of syllables suggests that there may have once been *''po
1'', *''po
2'', *''bo
1'' and *''bo
2''.
If that was true, a distinction was made between ''Co
1'' and ''Co
2'' for all consonants C except for ''w''. Some take that as evidence that ''Co
1'' may have represented ''Cwo''.
Accent
Although modern
Japanese dialects have
pitch accent
A pitch-accent language is a type of language that, when spoken, has certain syllables in words or morphemes that are prominent, as indicated by a distinct contrasting pitch (music), pitch (tone (linguistics), linguistic tone) rather than by vol ...
systems, they were usually not shown in . However, in one part of the ''Nihon Shoki'', the Chinese characters appeared to have been chosen to represent a pitch pattern similar to that recorded in the ''
Ruiju Myōgishō'', a dictionary that was compiled in the late 11th century. In that section, a low-pitch syllable was represented by a character with the
Middle Chinese
Middle Chinese (formerly known as Ancient Chinese) or the Qieyun system (QYS) is the historical variety of Chinese language, Chinese recorded in the ''Qieyun'', a rime dictionary first published in 601 and followed by several revised and expande ...
level tone, and a high pitch was represented by a character with one of the other three
Middle Chinese tones.
(A similar division was used in the
tone patterns of Chinese poetry, which were emulated by Japanese poets in the late
Asuka period
The was a period in the history of Japan lasting from 538 to 710, although its beginning could be said to overlap with the preceding Kofun period. The Yamato period, Yamato polity evolved greatly during the Asuka period, which is named after the ...
.)
Thus, it appears that the Old Japanese accent system was similar to that of Early Middle Japanese.
Phonotactics
Old Japanese words consisted of one or more
open syllable
A syllable is a basic unit of organization within a sequence of Phone (phonetics), speech sounds, such as within a word, typically defined by linguists as a ''nucleus'' (most often a vowel) with optional sounds before or after that nucleus (''ma ...
s of the form (C)V, subject to additional restrictions:
* Words did not begin with ''r'' or the voiced obstruents ''b'', ''d'', ''z'', and ''g'', with the exception of a few loanwords.
* A bare vowel did not occur except for word-initially: vowel sequences were not permitted.
In 1934,
Arisaka Hideyo proposed a set of phonological restrictions permitted in a single morpheme. Arisaka's Law states that ''-o
2'' was generally not found in the same morpheme as ''-a'', ''-o
1'' or ''-u''.
Some scholars have interpreted that as a vestige of earlier
vowel harmony
In phonology, vowel harmony is a phonological rule in which the vowels of a given domain – typically a phonological word – must share certain distinctive features (thus "in harmony"). Vowel harmony is typically long distance, meaning tha ...
, but it is very different from patterns that are observed in, for example, the
Turkic languages
The Turkic languages are a language family of more than 35 documented languages, spoken by the Turkic peoples of Eurasia from Eastern Europe and Southern Europe to Central Asia, East Asia, North Asia (Siberia), and West Asia. The Turkic langua ...
.
Morphophonemics
Two adjacent vowels fused to form a new vowel when a consonant was lost within a morpheme, or a compound was lexicalized as a single morpheme.
The following fusions occurred:
;''i
1'' + ''a'' → ''e
1''
:* 'bloom' + 'exist' → 'be blooming'
:* 'wear' + 'be.' → 'wear.'
:Further examples are provided by verbs ending with the retrospective auxiliary - and the verbal suffixes 'conjecture' or 'exist':
:* + → '(it) has surely fallen'
:* 'exist..' + → 'it existed'
;''i
1'' + ''o
2'' → ''e
1''
:* 'real' + 'person' → 'living person'
;''a'' + ''i'' → ''e
2''
:* 'long' + 'breath' → 'sigh'
:* 'high' + 'market' → (place name)
;''o
2'' + ''i'' → ''e
2''
:* 'palace' + 'enter' → 'attendant'
;''o
2'' + ''i'' → ''i
2''
:* 'big' + 'rock' → 'big rock'
;''u'' + ''i'' → ''i
2''
:* 'young' + 'term of veneration (male)' → (title)
;''u'' + ''a'' → ''o
1''
:* 'number' + 'to join' → 'to count'
;''u'' + ''o'' → ''o
1''
:* 'ancient type of native weaving' + 'weaving' → 'native weaving'
Adjacent vowels belonging to different morphemes, or pairs of vowels for which none of the above fusions applied, were reduced by deleting one or other of the vowels.
Most often, the first of the adjacent vowels was deleted:
* 'eternal' + 'rock' → 'eternal rock; everlasting'
* 'heaven' + 'descend' → 'descend from heaven'
The exception to this rule occurred when the first of the adjacent vowels was the sole vowel of a monosyllabic morpheme (usually a
clitic
In morphology and syntax, a clitic ( , backformed from Greek "leaning" or "enclitic"Crystal, David. ''A First Dictionary of Linguistics and Phonetics''. Boulder, CO: Westview, 1980. Print.) is a morpheme that has syntactic characteristics of a ...
), in which case the other vowel was deleted:
* (honorific) + 'horse' → 'honourable horse'
* 'child, egg' + 'birth' → 'give birth, lay an egg'
Cases where both outcomes are found are attributed to different analyses of morpheme boundaries:
* 'my' + 'house' → 'my house'
* 'I' + + 'house' → 'my house'
Pre-Old Japanese
Internal reconstruction
Internal reconstruction is a method of reconstructing an earlier state in a language's history using only language-internal evidence of the language in question.
The comparative method compares variations between languages, such as in sets of co ...
suggests that the stage preceding Old Japanese had fewer consonants and vowels.
Consonants
Internal reconstruction suggests that the Old Japanese voiced obstruents, which always occurred in medial position, arose from the weakening of earlier nasal syllables before voiceless obstruents:
* ''b'' < *-mVp-, *-nVp-: e.g. 'net' + 'pull' → 'trawling'
* ''d'' < *-mVt-, *-nVt-: e.g. 'mountain' + 'path' → 'mountain path'
* ''z'' < *-mVs-, *-nVs-: e.g. 'village' + 'master' → (title)
* ''g'' < *-mVk-, *-nVk-
In some cases, such as 'grain', 'rudder' and 'knee', there is no evidence for a preceding vowel, which leads some scholars to posit final nasals at the earlier stage.
Some linguists suggest that Old Japanese ''w'' and ''y'' derive, respectively, from *b and *d at some point before the oldest inscriptions in the 6th century.
Southern Ryukyuan varieties such as
Miyako,
Yaeyama and
Yonaguni have corresponding to Old Japanese ''w'', but only Yonaguni (at the far end of the chain) has where Old Japanese has ''y'':
* 'I' and 'stomach' corresponding to Old Japanese and
* Yonaguni 'house', 'hot water' and 'mountain' corresponding to Old Japanese , and
However, many linguists, especially in Japan, argue that the Southern Ryukyuan voiced stops are local innovations, adducing a variety of reasons.
Some supporters of *b and *d also add *z and *g, which both disappeared in Old Japanese, for reasons of symmetry.
However, there is very little Japonic evidence for them.
Vowels
As seen in , many occurrences of the rare vowels ''i
2'', ''e
1'', ''e
2'' and ''o
1'' arise from fusion of more common vowels.
Similarly, many nouns having independent forms ending in ''-i
2'' or ''-e
2'' also have bound forms ending in a different vowel, which are believed to be older.
For example, 'rice wine' has the form in compounds such as 'sake cup'.
The following alternations are the most common:
* ''i
2''/''u-'': / 'god, spirit', / 'body', / 'a calm'. / 'moon', / 'stalk'.
* ''i
2''/''o
2-'': / 'tree', / 'Hades',
* ''e
2''/''a-'': / 'eye', / 'heaven', / 'rain', / 'shade', / 'day, sun', / 'nail, hoof', / 'bamboo'.
The widely accepted analysis of this situation is that the most common Old Japanese vowels ''a'', ''u'', ''i
1'' and ''o
2'' reflect earlier *a, *u, *i and *ə respectively, and the other vowels reflect fusions of these vowels:
* ''i
2'' < *ui, *əi
* ''e
1'' < *ia, *iə
* ''e
2'' < *ai
* ''o
1'' < *ua, *uə
Thus the above independent forms of nouns can be derived from the bound form and a suffix *-i.
The origin of this suffix is debated, with one proposal being the ancestor of the obsolescent particle (whose function is also uncertain), and another being a weakened consonant (suggested by proposed Korean cognates).
There are also alternations suggesting ''e
2'' < *əi, such as / 'back' and / 'bud'.
Some authors believe that they belong to an earlier layer than ''i
2'' < *əi, but others reconstruct two central vowels *ə and *ɨ, which merged everywhere except before *i.
Other authors attribute the variation to different reflexes in different dialects and note that *əi yields ''e'' in Ryukyuan languages.
Some instances of word-final ''e
1'' and ''o
1'' are difficult to analyse as fusions, and some authors postulate *e and *o to account for such cases.
A few alternations, as well as comparisons with
Eastern Old Japanese and Ryukyuan languages, suggest that *e and *o also occurred in non-word-final positions at an earlier stage but were raised in such positions to ''i
1'' and ''u'', respectively, in central Old Japanese.
The mid vowels are also found in some early and in some modern Japanese dialects.
Grammar
As in later forms of Japanese, Old Japanese word order was predominantly subject–object–verb, with adjectives and adverbs preceding the nouns and verbs they modify and
auxiliary verbs and
particles consistently appended to the main verb.
Nominals tended to have simple morphology and little fusion, in contrast to the complex inflectional morphology of verbs.
Japanese at all stages has used prefixes with both nouns and verbs, but Old Japanese also used prefixes for grammatical functions later expressed using suffixes.
This is atypical of SOV languages, and may suggest that the language was in the final stage of a transition from a SVO typology.
Nominals
Pronouns
Many Old Japanese pronouns had both a short form and a longer form with attached of uncertain etymology.
If the pronoun occurred in isolation, the longer form was used.
The short form was used with genitive particles or in nominal compounds, but in other situations either form was possible.
Personal pronouns were distinguished by taking the
genitive
In grammar, the genitive case ( abbreviated ) is the grammatical case that marks a word, usually a noun, as modifying another word, also usually a noun—thus indicating an attributive relationship of one noun to the other noun. A genitive can ...
marker , in contrast to the marker used with demonstratives and nouns.
* The first-
person
A person (: people or persons, depending on context) is a being who has certain capacities or attributes such as reason, morality, consciousness or self-consciousness, and being a part of a culturally established form of social relations suc ...
pronouns were and , were used for the singular and plural respectively, though with some overlap. The forms were also used
reflexively, which suggests that was originally an
indefinite pronoun
An indefinite pronoun is a pronoun which does not have a specific, familiar referent. Indefinite pronouns are in contrast to definite pronouns.
Indefinite pronouns can represent either count nouns or noncount nouns. They often have related for ...
and gradually replaced .
* The second-person pronoun was .
* The third-person pronoun was much less commonly used than the non-proximal demonstrative from which it was derived.
* There were also an
interrogative pronoun
An interrogative word or question word is a function word used to ask a question, such as ''what, which'', ''when'', ''where'', '' who, whom, whose'', ''why'', ''whether'' and ''how''. They are sometimes called wh-words, because in English most ...
and a reflexive pronoun .
Demonstrative
Demonstratives (list of glossing abbreviations, abbreviated ) are words, such as ''this'' and ''that'', used to indicate which entities are being referred to and to distinguish those entities from others. They are typically deictic, their meaning ...
s often distinguished proximal (to the speaker) and non-proximal forms marked with and respectively.
Many forms had corresponding interrogative forms .
In Early Middle Japanese, the non-proximal forms were reinterpreted as hearer-based (medial), and the speaker-based forms were divided into proximal forms and distal / forms, yielding the three-way distinction that is still found in Modern Japanese.
Numerals
In later texts, such as the ''Man'yōshū'', numerals were sometimes written using Chinese logographs, which give no indication of pronunciation.
The following numerals are attested phonographically:
The forms for 50 and 70 are known only from Heian texts.
There is a single example of a phonographically recorded compound number, in ''Bussokuseki'' 2:
This example uses the
classifiers (used with tens and hundreds) and (used with digits and hundreds).
The only attested ordinal numeral is 'first'.
In
Classical Japanese, the other ordinal numerals had the same form as cardinals. This may also have been the case for Old Japanese, but there are no textual occurrences to settle the question.
Classifiers
The
classifier system of Old Japanese was much less developed than at later stages of the language, and classifiers were not obligatory between numerals and nouns.
A few bound forms are attested phonographically: (used with digits and hundreds), (used with tens and hundreds), (for people), , (for grassy plants) and (for days).
Many ordinary nouns could also be used either freely or as classifiers.
Prefixes
Old Japanese nominal prefixes included honorific , intensive from 'truth', diminutive or affectionate and a prefix of uncertain function.
Suffixes
Old Japanese nominals had suffixes or particles to mark diminutives, plural number and case.
When multiple suffixes occurred, case markers came last. Unmarked nouns (but not pronouns) were neutral as to number.
The main plural markers were the general-purpose and two markers restricted to animate nouns, (limited to five words) and .
The main case particles were
*
accusative marked objects (as in later Japanese) but also adverbials of duration.
*
genitive
In grammar, the genitive case ( abbreviated ) is the grammatical case that marks a word, usually a noun, as modifying another word, also usually a noun—thus indicating an attributive relationship of one noun to the other noun. A genitive can ...
(unrestricted) and (restricted to people). In
Late Middle Japanese, shifted to a
nominative case
In grammar, the nominative case ( abbreviated ), subjective case, straight case, or upright case is one of the grammatical cases of a noun or other part of speech, which generally marks the subject of a verb, or (in Latin and formal variants ...
marker.
*
dative or
locative
*
ablative ~ ~ ~ from 'after(wards)'. Only the form survived in Early Middle Japanese.
*
comitative
In grammar, the comitative case (abbreviated ) is a grammatical case that denotes accompaniment. In English, the preposition "with", in the sense of "in company with" or "together with", plays a substantially similar role. Other uses of "with", l ...
The subject of a sentence was usually not marked.
There are a few cases in the ''Senmyō'' of subjects of active verbs marked with a suffix , which is thought to be an archaism that was obsolete in the Old Japanese period.
Verbs
Old Japanese had a richer system of verbal suffixes than later forms of Japanese.
Old Japanese verbs used
inflection
In linguistic Morphology (linguistics), morphology, inflection (less commonly, inflexion) is a process of word formation in which a word is modified to express different grammatical category, grammatical categories such as grammatical tense, ...
for
modal and
conjunctional purposes.
Other categories, such as
voice
The human voice consists of sound made by a human being using the vocal tract, including talking, singing, laughing, crying, screaming, shouting, humming or yelling. The human voice frequency is specifically a part of human sound produ ...
,
tense,
aspect and
mood, were expressed by using optional suffixed
auxiliaries, which were also inflected:
Inflected forms
As in later forms of Japanese, Old Japanese verbs had a large number of inflected forms.
In traditional Japanese grammar, they are represented by six forms (, ) from which all the others may be derived in a similar fashion to the
principal parts used for
Latin
Latin ( or ) is a classical language belonging to the Italic languages, Italic branch of the Indo-European languages. Latin was originally spoken by the Latins (Italic tribe), Latins in Latium (now known as Lazio), the lower Tiber area aroun ...
and other languages:
; (irrealis)
:This form never occurs in isolation but only as a stem to which several particles and auxiliaries are attached. This stem originated from resegmentation of an initial of several suffixes (auxiliary verbs) as part of the stem.
; (adverbial, infinitive)
:This form was used as the
infinitive
Infinitive ( abbreviated ) is a linguistics term for certain verb forms existing in many languages, most often used as non-finite verbs that do not show a tense. As with many linguistic concepts, there is not a single definition applicable to all ...
. It also served as a stem for auxiliaries expressing tense and aspect.
; (conclusive, predicative)
:This form was used as the main verb concluding a declarative sentence. It was used also before modal extensions, final particles, and some conjunctional particles. The conclusive form merged with the attributive form by about 1600, but the distinction is preserved in the Ryukyuan languages and the
Hachijōjima dialects.
; (attributive, adnominal)
:This form was used as the verb in a nominalized clause or a clause modifying a noun. It was also used before most conjunctional particles.
; (realis, exclamatory, subjunctive)
:This form was used as the main verb in an exclamatory sentence or as the verb in an adverbial clause. It also served as a stem for the particles (provisional) and (concessive).
; (imperative)
:This form expressed the
imperative mood
The imperative mood is a grammatical mood that forms a command or request.
The imperative mood is used to demand or require that an action be performed. It is usually found only in the present tense, second person. They are sometimes called ' ...
.
This system has been criticized because the six forms are not equivalent, with one being solely a combinatory stem, three solely word forms, and two being both.
It also fails to capture some inflected forms.
However, five of the forms are basic inflected verb forms, and the system also describes almost all extended forms consistently.
Conjugation classes
Old Japanese verbs are classified into eight conjugation classes that were originally defined for the classical Japanese of the late Heian period. In each class, the inflected forms showed a different pattern of rows of a kana table.
These rows correspond to the five vowels of later Japanese, but the discovery of the A/B distinction in Old Japanese showed a more refined picture.
Three of the classes are grouped as consonant bases:
; (quadrigrade)
:This class of regular consonant-base verbs includes approximately 75% of verbs. The class is so named because the inflections in later forms of Japanese span four rows of a table, corresponding to four vowels. However, the discovery of the A/B distinction revealed that this class actually involved five different vowels in Old Japanese, with distinct vowels ''e
1'' and ''e
2'' in the exclamatory and imperative forms respectively. The bases are almost all of the form (C)VC-, with the final consonant being ''p'', ''t'', ''k'', ''b'', ''g'', ''m'', ''s'' or ''r''.
; (''n''-irregular)
:The three ''n''-base verbs form a class of their own: 'die', 'depart' and the auxiliary expressing completion of an action. They are often described as a "hybrid" conjugation because the adnominal and exclamatory forms followed a similar pattern to vowel-base verbs.
; (''r''-irregular)
:The irregular ''r''-base verbs were 'be, exist' and other verbs that incorporated it, as well as 'be sitting', which became the existential verb in later forms of Japanese.
The distinctions between ''i
1'' and ''i
2'' and between ''e
1'' and ''e
2'' were eliminated after ''s'', ''z'', ''t'', ''d'', ''n'', ''y'', ''r'' and ''w''.
There were five vowel-base conjugation classes:
; (lower bigrade or ''e''-bigrade)
:The largest regular vowel-base class ended in ''e
2'' and included approximately 20% of verbs.
; (upper bigrade or ''i''-bigrade)
:This class of bases ended in ''i
2'' and included about 30 verbs.
; (upper monograde or ''i''-monograde)
:This class contains about 10 verbs of the form (C)''i
1-''. Some monosyllabic ''i''-bigrade verbs had already shifted to this class by Old Japanese, and the rest followed in Early Middle Japanese.
; (''k''-irregular)
:This class consists of the single verb 'come'.
; (''s''-irregular)
:This class consists of the single verb 'do'.
Early Middle Japanese also had a (lower monograde or ''e''-monograde) category, consisting of a single verb 'kick', which reflected the Old Japanese lower bigrade verb .
The bigrade verbs seem to belong to a later layer than other verbs.
Many ''e''-bigrade verbs are
transitive or
intransitive counterparts of consonant-base verbs.
In contrast, ''i''-bigrade verbs tend to be intransitive.
Some bigrade bases also appear to reflect pre-Old-Japanese adjectives with vowel stems combined with an
inchoative *-i suffix:
* *-a-i > ''-e
2'', e.g. 'redden, lighten' vs 'red'.
* *-u-i > ''-i
2'', e.g. 'get desolate, fade' vs 'lonely'.
* *-ə-i > ''-i
2'', e.g. 'get big, grow' vs 'big'.
Copulas
Old Japanese had two copulas with limited and irregular conjugations:
The form had a limited distribution in Old Japanese, and disappeared in Early Middle Japanese. In later Japanese, the form became , but these forms have otherwise endured to modern Japanese.
Verbal prefixes
Japanese has used verbal prefixes conveying emphasis at all stages, but Old Japanese also had prefixes expressing grammatical functions, such as reciprocal or cooperative (from 'meet, join'), stative (from 'exist'), potential (from 'get') and prohibitive , which was often combined with a suffix .
Verbal auxiliaries
Old Japanese had a rich system of auxiliary elements that could be suffixed to verb stems and were themselves inflected, usually following the regular consonant-stem or vowel-stem paradigms, but never including the full range of stems found with full verbs.
Many of these disappeared in later stages of the language.
Tense and aspect were indicated by suffixes attached to the infinitive.
The tense suffixes were:
* the simple past (conclusive), (adnominal), (exclamatory). The variation may indicate an origin in multiple forms.
* the modal past or retrospective , a fusion of the simple past with 'exist'.
* the past conjectural , a fusion of the simple past with the conjectural suffix .
The perfective suffixes were and .
During the
Late Middle Japanese period, the tense and aspect suffixes were replaced with a single past-tense suffix , derived from + 'exist' > .
Other auxiliaries were attached to the irrealis stem:
* the negative and < *
* the passive and
* the causative
* the honorific
* the conjectural or tentative
* the subjunctive
Adjectives
Old Japanese adjectives were originally nominals and, unlike in later periods, could be used uninflected to modify following nouns.
They could also be conjugated as
stative verb
In linguistics, a stative verb is a verb that describes a state of being, in contrast to a dynamic verb, which describes an action. The difference can be categorized by saying that stative verbs describe situations that are static, or unchangin ...
s in two classes:
The second class, with stems ending in , differed only in the conclusive form, whose suffix was dropped by
haplology.
Adjectives of this class tended to express more subjective qualities.
Many of them were formed from a verbal stem by the addition of a suffix of uncertain origin.
Towards the end of the Old Japanese period, a more expressive conjugation was formed by adding the verb 'be' to the infinitive, with the sequence reducing to :
Many
adjectival nouns of Early Middle Japanese were based on Old Japanese adjectives that were formed with suffixes , or .
Focus construction
Old Japanese made extensive use of a
focus construction, known as ('hanging-tying'), that established a copular relation between a constituent marked with a focus particle and a predicate in the adnominal form, instead of the conclusive form usually found in declarative sentences.
The marked constituent was also typically fronted in comparison with its position in a corresponding declarative sentence.
The semantic effect (though not the syntactic structure) was often similar to a
cleft sentence in English:
The particles involved were
* , marking the focus of a
yes–no question. The particle could also be used as a sentence-final marker of a yes–no question, in which case the verb would be in the usual conclusive form.
* , marking the
interrogative word
An interrogative word or question word is a function word used to ask a question, such as ''what, which'', ''when'', ''where'', '' who, whom, whose'', ''why'', ''whether'' and ''how''. They are sometimes called wh-words, because in English most ...
of an
open question or the focus of a yes–no question.
* ~ , the usual declarative focus marker. By Early Middle Japanese, this had standardized as .
* , soliciting agreement, was rare in poetry but occurred in some prose works. By Early Middle Japanese, it had become .
* , making a more emphatic focus. In Early Middle Japanese, this particle occurred with a verb in the exclamatory form.
The focus construction was common in Old Japanese and
Classical Japanese, but disappeared after the Early Middle Japanese period.
It is still found in Ryukyuan languages, but is much less common there than in Old Japanese.
Dialects

Although most Old Japanese writing represents the language of the
Nara
The National Archives and Records Administration (NARA) is an independent agency of the United States government within the executive branch, charged with the preservation and documentation of government and historical records. It is also task ...
court in central Japan, some sources come from eastern Japan:
* 230 'eastern songs', making up volume 14 of the ''Man'yōshū'',
* 93 (101 according to some authors) 'borderguard songs' in volume 20 of the ''Man'yōshū'', and
* 9 songs in the ''Hitachi Fudoki'' (recorded 714–718, but the oldest extant manuscripts date from the late 17th century and show significant corruption).
They record Eastern Old Japanese dialects, with several differences from central Old Japanese (also known as Western Old Japanese):
* There is no type A/B distinction on front vowels ''i'' and ''e'', but ''o
1'' and ''o
2'' are distinguished.
* Pre-Old Japanese *ia yielded ''a'' in the east, where central Old Japanese has ''e
1''.
* The adnominal form of consonant-base verbs ended in ''-o
1'', but central Old Japanese ended in ''-u'' for both the adnominal and the conclusive forms. A similar difference is preserved in Ryukyuan languages, suggesting that central Old Japanese had innovated by merging those endings.
* The imperative form of vowel-base verbs attached , instead of the used in central Old Japanese. This difference has persisted into modern eastern and western dialects.
* There was a group of distinctive negative auxiliaries and , but they do not seem to be the source of the different negatives in the modern eastern and western
Japanese dialects.
* A significant number of words borrowed from
Ainu.
See also
*
Classical Japanese language
Notes
References
Works cited
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Further reading
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External links
* Old Japanese poems, in original script and transcription, with morphological and syntactic analysis, and a linked dictionary.
Japanese Historical Linguistics– collection of materials at Cornell University, including drafts of the Old Japanese chapters of .
{{Authority control
Japanese, Old
Japanese, Old
Ancient Japan
Archaic Japanese language
Japonic languages
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Japanese, Old
Japanese, Old