Using Tonal Data to Recover Japanese Language History

Author
ORCID logoElisabeth M. de Boer | Ruhr-Universität Bochum
HardboundForthcoming
ISBN 9789027214966 | EUR 105.00 | USD 135.00
 
e-Book Open Access
ISBN 9789027246776
 
Google Play logo
This book challenges several assumptions commonly encountered in Japanese dialectology: that the pitch-accent analysis of modern Tōkyō Japanese is an appropriate basis for describing the suprasegmental phonology of other dialects and earlier stages of Japanese; that the Kyōto-type dialects have been more conservative than dialects to their east and west; that the first split in proto-Japanese was the separation of proto-Ryūkyūan; and so on. De Boer brings together evidence from recent fieldwork, premodern texts, and other sources to establish a theory of dialect divergence that avoids the problems these assumptions entail. Building on De Boer 2010, this book brings the author’s theory up to date with research published in the interim, explains why Japanese is best understood as a restricted tone language, and why mergers in the large tone classes of nouns and verbs are especially reliable markers of dialect divergence.
[Current Issues in Linguistic Theory, 365]  Expected August 2024.  viii, 130 pp.
Publishing status: Printing

For any use beyond this license, please contact the publisher at [email protected].

Table of Contents
Subjects

Main BIC Subject

CFF: Historical & comparative linguistics

Main BISAC Subject

LAN009010: LANGUAGE ARTS & DISCIPLINES / Linguistics / Historical & Comparative
ONIX Metadata
ONIX 2.1
ONIX 3.0
U.S. Library of Congress Control Number:  2024025641