沖縄方言の漢字音(ウチナーヤマトゥグチ)

Sino-Japanisch (Okinawa)

Japonic > Japanese (Okinawan-substrate variety)

SprachfamilieJaponic > Japanese (Okinawan-substrate variety) Sprecher約100万人 (沖縄県内の話者推定) RegionOkinawa Prefecture, Japan UmschriftHepburn romanization with Ryukyuan substrate rules LesungSino-Japanese readings as adapted in Okinawan-substrate Japanese

This is NOT Okinawan proper (Uchinaaguchi 沖縄口, a separate Ryukyuan language with its own Sino-Ryukyuan readings); it is the variety of MODERN JAPANESE spoken in Okinawa with substrate influence from Okinawan phonology — sometimes called Uchinaa-yamatuguchi (ウチナーヤマトゥグチ, 'Okinawan-flavoured Japanese'). The single most pervasive substrate effect on Sino-Japanese citation forms is the canonical Ryukyuan three-vowel raising: short /e/ → /i/, short /o/ → /u/, long /eː/ → /iː/, long /oː/ → /uː/. Thus 月 getsu → gitsu, 東 tō → tū, 西 sei → sii, 見 ken → kin, 木 boku → buku, 五 go → gu. Diphthongs /ai au/ are typically preserved (海 kai, 来 rai). This raising affects every vowel in the inventory and so reshapes a large fraction of common on-yomi, making it the most systematic Sino-Japanese reading difference of any Japanese dialect. Data here follow the substrate phonology described by Shimoji (2010) for Okinawan and Pellard for Ryukyuan, applied to standard Hepburn citation forms.

Wo es gesprochen wird

Lesungen der Han-Zeichen in Sino-Japanisch (Okinawa)

Schriftzeichen Bedeutung Lesung Form IPA
one イツitsu /it͡sɯ/
two ji /d͡ʑi/
three サンsan /saɴ/
four shi /ɕi/
five gu /gu/
six リクriku /ɾikɯ/
seven シツshitsu /ɕit͡sɯ/
eight ハツhatsu /hat͡sɯ/
nine キュウkyū /kjɯː/
ten シュウshū /ɕɯː/
sun ジツjitsu /d͡ʑit͡sɯ/
moon ギツgitsu /git͡sɯ/
mountain サンsan /saɴ/
water スイsui /sɯi/
fire ka /ka/
tree ブクbuku /bukɯ/
soil tu /tu/
sky ティンtin /tiɴ/
ground chi /t͡ɕi/
sea キー /kiː/
dragon リュウryū /ɾjuː/
tiger ku /ku/
dog キンkin /kiɴ/
horse ba /ba/
bird チュウchū /t͡ɕuː/
fish ギュgyu /gju/
ox ギュウgyū /gjɯː/
sheep ユウ /juː/
cat ビュウbyū /bjuː/
person ジンjin /d͡ʑiɴ/
hand シュウshū /ɕɯː/
foot スクsuku /sukɯ/
eye ブクbuku /bukɯ/
ear ji /d͡ʑi/
mouth クウ /kuː/
head ツウ /tuː/
heart シンshin /ɕiɴ/
blood キツkitsu /kit͡sɯ/
meat ジクjiku /d͡ʑikɯ/
up シュウshū /ɕuː/
down ka /ka/
middle チュウchū /t͡ɕɯː/
hit チュウchū /t͡ɕɯː/
center ウウū /uː/
left sa /sa/
right ユウ /jɯː/
east ツウ /tuː/
西 west シー /siː/
south ダンdan /daɴ/
north フクhuku /hukɯ/
go ギョウgyō /ɡʲoː/
row クウ /kuː/
come リー /ɾiː/
leave キュkyu /kju/
see キンkin /kiɴ/
hear ブンbun /bɯɴ/
eat シュクshuku /ɕukɯ/
drink インin /iɴ/
run スウ /suː/
sit sa /sa/
stand リツritsu /ɾit͡sɯ/

Quellen

Han-Lesungen im Vergleich

Verglichen mit verwandten Japonic > Japanese (Okinawan-substrate variety)-Sprachen

Schriftzeichen Sino-Japanisch (Okinawa)JapanischSino-Japanisch (Kagoshima)Sino-Japanisch (Tōhoku)zainichi-koreanisches Sinoaltjapanisch (Sino)Koreanisch (Nordkorea)
itsu /it͡sɯ/ 漢音 / Kan-onitsu /it͡sɯ/呉音 / Go-onichi /it͡ɕi/ it /it̚/ itsu /id͡zɯ̈/ il /iɾɯ/ iti /iti/ il /il/
ji /d͡ʑi/ 漢音 / Kan-onji /d͡ʑi/呉音 / Go-onni /ni/ ji /d͡ʑi/ ji /zɯ̈/ i /i/ ni /ɲi/ i /i/
san /saɴ/ san /saɴ/ san /saɴ/ san /saɴ/ sam /sam/ sam /sam/ sam /sam/
shi /ɕi/ shi /ɕi/ shi /ɕi/ si /sɯ̈/ sa /sa/ si /ɕi/ sa /sa/
gu /gu/ go /go/ go /go/ go /ŋo/ o /o/ go /ŋo/ o /o/
riku /ɾikɯ/ 漢音 / Kan-onriku /ɾikɯ/呉音 / Go-onroku /ɾokɯ/ rik /ɾik̚/ rigu /ɾiɡɯ/ yuk /jukɯ/ roku /roku/ ryuk /ɾjuk̚/
shitsu /ɕit͡sɯ/ 漢音 / Kan-onshitsu /ɕit͡sɯ/呉音 / Go-onshichi /ɕit͡ɕi/ shit /ɕit̚/ shitsu /sɯ̈t͡sɯ̈/ chil /t͡ɕiɾɯ/ siti /ɕiti/ ch'il /tsʰil/
hatsu /hat͡sɯ/ 漢音 / Kan-onhatsu /hat͡sɯ/呉音 / Go-onhachi /hat͡ɕi/ hat /hat̚/ hatsu /hat͡sɯ/ pal /paɾɯ/ pati /pati/ p'al /pʰal/
kyū /kjɯː/ 漢音 / Kan-onkyū /kjɯː/呉音 / Go-onku /kɯ/ kyū /kjɯː/ kyū /kjɯː/ gu /ku/ kiu /kiu/ ku /ku/
shū /ɕɯː/ 漢音 / Kan-onshū /ɕɯː/呉音 / Go-on /d͡ʑɯː/ shū /ɕɯː/ shū /ɕɯː/ sip /ɕipɯ/ zipu /ʑipu/ sip /ɕip̚/
Seite 1/7

Teil von LangMap — einem Projekt zur Sprachvisualisierung. Dies ist eine statische, crawlbare Zusammenfassung; die interaktiven Karten bieten Ausspracheaudio, Filter und eine Globusansicht.