An introduction to Japanese linguistics

Bibliographic Information

An introduction to Japanese linguistics

Natsuko Tsujimura

(Blackwell textbooks in linguistics, 10)

Blackwell, 2007

2nd ed

  • : hbk
  • : pbk

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Note

First published 1996 by Blackwell

Includes bibliographical references (p. [477]-494) and index

Description and Table of Contents

Description

The new edition of An Introduction to Japanese Linguistics gives an updated, comprehensive account of Japanese linguistics, covering phonetics, phonology, morphology, syntax, semantics, language change, dialect variation, and gender differences. * Changes in the new edition include a new chapter on language acquisition, which includes experimental research and its implications for phonological, syntactic, and semantic issues * Introduces linguistic notions and terminology and discusses theoretical analyses of linguistic phenomena in the Japanese language * Focuses primarily on phonology and syntax, and adopts a generative grammar framework * Includes exercises exploring descriptive and theoretical issues and reading lists which introduce students to the research literature

Table of Contents

List of Figures, Tables, and Maps. Preface to the Second Edition. Acknowledgments. 1. Introduction. Suggested Readings. 2. Phonetics. 1. Phonetic Inventory. 1.1. Place/Manner of Articulation and Voicing. 1.2. Phonetic Inventory of English - Consonants. 1.3. Phonetic Inventory of Japanese - Consonants. 1.4. Phonetic Inventory of English - Vowels. 1.5. Phonetic Inventory of Japanese - Vowels. Notes. Suggested Readings. Exercises. 3. Phonology. 1. Phonological Rules in Japanese. 1.1. Devoicing of High Vowels. 1.2. Nasal Assimilation. 1.3. Alveolar Alternations. 1.4. Alternations. 1.5. Digression on the Phoneme Status of. 1.6. Verbal Conjugation Rules. 1.7. Rule Ordering. 2. Sequential Voicing - "Rendaku". 3. Mora vs. Syllable. 3.1. Speech Errors. 3.2. Language Games: "Babibu" Language. 4. Accentuation in Japanese. 4.1. Stress vs. Pitch. 4.2. Accentuation in Japanese. 4.3. Mora vs. Syllable. 4.4. Accentuation of Long Nominal Compounds. 4.5. Accentuation of Short Nominal Compounds. 4.6. Accentual Variation Among Endings. 5. Mimetics. 6. Loan Words. 7. Casual Speech and Fast Speech. 8. Length Requirements. Notes. Suggested Readings. Exercises. 4. Morphology. 1. Parts of Speech Categories. 1.1. Nouns. 1.2. Verbs. 1.3. Adjectives. 1.4. Adverbs. 1.5. Postpositions. 1.6. Case Particles. 1.7. Adjectival Nouns. 1.8. Verbal Nouns. 2. Morpheme Types. 3. Word Formation. 3.1. Affixation. 3.2. Compounding. 3.3. Reduplication. 3.4. Clipping. 3.5. Borrowing. 4. Head. 5. Issues in Japanese Morphology (1): Transitive and Intransitive Verb Pairs. 6. Issues in Japanese Morphology (2): Nominalization. 7. Issues in Japanese Morphology (3): Compounding. 7.1. Background. 7.2. N-V Compounds. 7.3. V-V Compounds. Notes. Suggested Readings. Exercises. 5. Syntax. 1.Syntactic Structures. 1.1. Syntactic Constituency. 1.2. Phrase Structures. 1.3. Phrase Structure Rules. 1.4. The Notion of Head. 1.5. Subcategorization. 1.6. Structural Relations. 2. Transformational Rules. 2.1. Yes-No Question. 2.2. WH-Movement. 3. Word Order and Scrambling. 3.1. Scrambling Phenomenon. 3.2. Configurationality. 3.3. Evidence for the Movement Analysis. 3.4. Some Restrictions on Scrambling. 4. Null Anaphora. 4.1. Syntactic Representation of Null Anaphora. 4.2. Interpretation of Null Anaphora. 5. Reflexives. 5.1. Zibun. 5.2. Zibun-Zisin. 6.The Notion of Subject. 6.1. Reflexivization. 6.2. Subject Honorification. 7. Passives. 7.1. Direct Passives. 7.2. Indirect Passives (Adversative Passives). 7.3. Ni Yotte-Passives. 8. Causatives. 8.1. O-Causatives and Ni-Causatives. 8.2. The Double-O Constraint. 8.3. The Structure of Causatives. 8.4. Causative Passives. 8.5. Adversative Causatives. 8.6. Lexical Causatives. 9. Relative Clauses (Sentence Modifiers). 9.1. The Ga/No Conversion. 9.2. Relative Clauses without Gaps. 9.3. Internally Headed Relative Clauses. 10. Unaccusativity. 11. The Light Verb Construction. 12. Further Issues on Phrase Structure. 12.1. X'-Theory. 12.2. Application to Japanese. Notes. Suggested Readings. Exercises. 6. Semantics. 1. Word Meaning and Sentence Meaning. 1.1. Word/Phrase Meaning and Types of Relationships. 1.2. Sentence Meaning. 1.3. Metaphors and Idioms. 1.4. Deixis. 1.5. Mimetics. 2. Tense and Aspect. 2.1. Tense. 2.2. Aspect. 3. Verb Semantics. 3.1. Linking Regularity and Unaccusativity. 3.2. Semantic Classes of Verbs and their Syntactic Patterns. 3.3. Lexicalization. 4. Pragmatics. 4.1. Speaker's Meaning. 4.2. The Nature of Information. 4.3. Relevance of Contextual Information. Notes. Suggested Readings. Exercises. 7. Language Variation. 1.Dialectal Variation. 2. Styles and Levels of Speech. 3. Gender Differences. Notes. Suggested Readings. Exercises. 8. Language Acquisition. 1. Regularity in Language Acquisition. 1.1. Phonological Unit - Mora. 1.2. Lexicalization Pattern and Mimetics. 1.3. Tense/Aspect Marking. 2. Generalizations in Children's Errors. 2.1. Inflectional Morphology. 2.1. Case Particles. 2.3. Prenominal Modification. 3. Theoretical Approaches to Verb Acquisition. 4. Pragmatic Acquisition. Suggested Readings. Exercises. Bibliography. Index.

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Details

  • NCID
    BA78428371
  • ISBN
    • 9781405110662
    • 9781405110655
  • LCCN
    2006017116
  • Country Code
    us
  • Title Language Code
    eng
  • Text Language Code
    eng
  • Place of Publication
    Malden, Mass.
  • Pages/Volumes
    xiv, 501 p.
  • Size
    26 cm
  • Classification
  • Subject Headings
  • Parent Bibliography ID
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