Hokuriku dialect
Hokuriku Japanese | |
---|---|
Native to | Japan |
Region | Hokuriku |
Japonic
| |
Language codes | |
ISO 639-3 | – |
Glottolog |
hoku1242 [1] |
Hokuriku dialect |
The Hokuriku dialect (北陸方言 Hokuriku hÅgen) is a Japanese dialect group spoken in Hokuriku region, consists of northern Fukui Prefecture, Ishikawa Prefecture, Toyama Prefecture, and Sado Island in Niigata Prefecture. Mainland Niigata dialect is classified into TÅkai-TÅsan dialect and TÅhoku dialect and southern Fukui dialect is classified into Kansai dialect.
Subdialects
- Kaga dialect (southern Ishikawa Prefecture, formerly known as Kaga Province)
- Kanazawa dialect (Kanazawa)
- Noto dialect (northern Ishikawa Prefecture, formerly known as Noto Province)
- Toyama dialect or Etchū dialect (Toyama Prefecture, formerly known as Etchū Province)
- Fukui dialect (northern Fukui Prefecture, formerly known as Echizen Province except Tsuruga)
- Sado dialect (Sado Island, Niigata Prefecture)
Phonology
In Hokuriku dialect, vowels at the end of monomoraic nouns often lengthen as well as Kansai dialect, while vowel reduction frequently occurs as well as Eastern Japanese including Standard Japanese.
Some phonetic features are close to TÅhoku dialect. The high vowels "i" and "u" are sometimes pronounced central vowels. "shi" and "su", "chi" and "tsu", "ji" and "zu" are confused in Sado, Toyama, Noto dialects. "i" and "e" are also confused in Toyama and Noto dialects.
In Hokuriku region, various pitch accents can be heard. Varieties of Kyoto-Osaka type accent are heard in Sado, Toyama and eastern Fukui such as Katsuyama and ÅŒno. In Izumi, easternmost village of Fukui, Tokyo type accent is heard. In central Fukui such as Fukui city and Echizen, monotonous accent is heard - there is no contrast between words based on accent. In Noto, varieties of Kyoto-Osaka type, monotonous accent and Tokyo type accent are heard to each village. In Kaga and part of Fukui, an intermediate accent between Tokyo type and Kyoto-Osaka type is heard.
Except for Sado dialect, intonation in pause of phase is often undulated.
Grammar
Many grammatical features are common to other Western Japanese dialects and see Japanese dialects#Eastern and Western Japanese. Special features of Hokuriku dialect are follows:
- In Toyama and Ishikawa, the nominalization and question particle no is replaced with ga.
- Except for Sado, the interrogative particle ke is used as well as ka.
- Except for Sado, the sentence-final particle ma is added to imperative sentences.
- In Sado, Toyama and Noto, the emphatic sentence-final particle cha is used.
Regional differences
Fukui
The dialects of Fukui Prefecture are Fukui dialect (ç¦äº•å¼ Fukui-ben) spoken in the northern part, and the Wakasa dialect (è‹¥ç‹å¼ Wakasa-ben) spoken in the southern part. Because Fukui is close to Kansai on the south, Wakasa-ben resembles Kansai-ben closely, while Fukui-ben exhibits changes in pronouncing the sounds of words to make the pronunciation more convenient.
Fukui dialect | Standard Japanese | English meaning (rough translation) |
---|---|---|
ã»ã‚„ã»ã‚„ (hoyahoya) | ã¯ã„ (hai) or ãã†ã§ã™ã‚ˆ
(soodesuyo) |
"Yes," or "That's true." |
ã¤ã‚‹ã¤ã‚‹ã„ã£ã±ã„ (tsurutsuruippai) | used when a cup is very full, almost overflowing | |
ã‚‚ã¤ã‘ãー (motsukenee) | ã–ã‚“ãん(ã§ã™ã)(zannen) (desure) | "That's too bad." |
ã¦ããー (tekinee) | ãã¶ã‚“ãŒã‚ã‚‹ã„ (kibungawarui) | "I don't feel good." |
ãŽã‚‡ã†ã•ã‚“ (gyoosan) | ãŸãã•ã‚“ (takusan) | many |
ãŠãŠãã« (ookini) | ã‚りãŒã¨ã† (arigatoo) | "Thank you." |
ãã‚“ã® (kinno) | ãã®ã†
(kinoo) |
yesterday |
ã‚‚ã®ã”ã„ (monogoi) or ãˆã‚‰ã„ (erai) | ã¤ã‚‰ã„ (tsurai) | painful |
ãã¾ã‚‹ (nemaru) | ã™ã‚ã‚‹ (suwaru) | sit down |
ãŠãžã„ (ozui) | ãµã‚‹ã„ (furui) or よããªã„ (yokunai) | old, or not good |
ã˜ã‚ƒã¿ã˜ã‚ƒã¿ (jamijami) | ã™ãªã‚ら㗠(sunaarashi) | TV static (onomatopoeia) |
ã¦ãªã‚ã‚“ (tenawan) | ã„ã˜ã‚ã‚‹ã„ (ijiwarui) or ã‚„ã‚“ã¡ã‚ƒãª (yanchana) | naughty or mischievous |
ãˆã‚“ (en) | ã„ãªã„ (inai) | is not (people or animals only) |
ã‚‚ãŸã‚‚㟠(motamota) | ããšããš (guzuguzu) | slowly |
よã•り (yosari) | よる (yoru) | night |
ãªã’ã‚‹ (nageru) | ã™ã¦ã‚‹ (suteru) | throw away |
ãŠã¨ã¾ã—ã„ (otomashii) | ã‚‚ã£ãŸã„ãªã„ (mottainai) | wasteful |
Ishikawa
The dialects of Ishikawa Prefecture are Kaga dialect (åŠ è³€å¼ Kaga-ben), spoken in the southern part, and the Noto dialect (èƒ½ç™»å¼ Noto-ben), spoken in the northern part. Kaga-ben has the Kanazawa dialect (é‡‘æ²¢å¼ Kanazawa-ben) spoken in Kanazawa and the Shiramine dialect (ç™½å³°å¼ Shiramine-ben), also Gige dialect (ã‚¸ã‚²å¼ Gige-ben) spoken in Shiramine, a village at the foot of Mount Haku. Kanazawa is a capital of Ishikawa, so Kanazawa-ben is an influential dialect.
The most famous phrase in Kanazawa-ben is the soft imperative suffix -masshi (~ã¾ã£ã—), meaning -nasai (~ãªã•ã„) in standard Japanese. This phrase is often used in catch phrases for visitors of Kanazawa, for example, Kimasshi Kanazawa! (æ¥ã¾ã£ã—ã€é‡‘æ²¢! Come to Kanazawa!).
- Recent works on Kanazawa-ben
- Savage, Colin (2009). 金沢å¼ã®æœ¬ - The Dialect of Kanazawa. London (UK) and Los Angeles (USA): Lulu Publishing Inc.
Toyama
The dialect of Toyama is called Toyama dialect (å¯Œå±±å¼ Toyama-ben) or Etchu dialect (è¶Šä¸å¼ Etchu-ben) and consists of West (Gosei, 呉西), East (GotÅ, 呉æ±) and Gokayama.
Instead of the colloquial shitte iru ka? (知ã£ã¦ã„ã‚‹ã‹ï¼Ÿ Do you know?), speakers of the Toyama-ben will ask, shittokke? (知ã£ã¨ã£ã‘?).
When expressing that something is incorrect, instead of saying the standard phrase iie (ã„ã„ãˆ), users of the dialect will say naan (ãªã‚ã‚“), with a rising tone.
Other regional distinctions include words like kitokito (ã‚トã‚ト fresh or delicious) and ikiiki (イã‚イ゠energetic).
Other features : "kore" (ã“れ "this")/"ka" or "ko", "sore" (ãれ "that")/"sa" or "so".
Toyama-ben speakers sometimes put "ze" instead of "ne" at the end of the sentence.
References
- ↑ Nordhoff, Sebastian; Hammarström, Harald; Forkel, Robert; Haspelmath, Martin, eds. (2013). "Hokuriku". Glottolog. Leipzig: Max Planck Institute for Evolutionary Anthropology.
External links
- Modern Fukui dialect Course
- Let's use everyone Kanazawa speech (Japanese)
- Verb Inflection in Classical Gokayama Dialect, KUROKI Kunihiko (2013)