A practical guide for scholarly reading in Japanese

著者

書誌事項

A practical guide for scholarly reading in Japanese

Fumiko Nazikian, Keiko Ono, Naofumi Tatsumi

(Routledge practical academic reading skills)

Routledge, 2023

  • : hbk

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注記

Includes bibliographical references and indexes

内容説明・目次

内容説明

Designed for students of premodern Chinese literature/history/etc. to read modern Japanese academic prose. Practical - the grammatical explanations are clear and relevant, the exercises are useful, and the answer key allows for self-study Aimed at all sinologists; those in Chinese, Korean and Japanese Studies

目次

  • Contents Preface To the Reader List of Abbreviations Acknowledgements Chapter 1: "Toolbox": Essential Grammar for Scholarly Reading 1 1. Understanding Written Style 2. Finding the Predicate and the Subject 2.1 Finding the Predicate: The Ending of a Sentence 2.2 Finding the Subject 2.2.1 When the Particle Marks the Subject 2.2.2 When the Particle Marks the Subject 2.2.3 When the Particle Marks the Subject 2.2.4 When the Particle Marks the Subject 2.2.5 Other Particles That Mark the Subject 2.2.6 Cases in Which the Subject is Omitted 3. Separating Sentences Based on Meaning (Chunking) 3.1 Compound Sentences: Listing with the -Form 3.1.1 Connecting Verbs 3.1.2 Connecting I-adjectives 3.1.3 Connecting Na-adjectives 3.1.4 Connecting Nouns 3.2 The Suspended Form Method ( ) 3.2.1 Verbs 3.2.2 I-adjectives 3.3 ~ 'what's more
  • not only ~ but also.' 3.4 X Y 'Y called X' 3.4.1 X (Clause) Y (Noun) 3.4.2 X (Noun) Y (Noun) 3.5 S1 S2 'S1, but / and S2' 3.5.1 BUT / (Concessive Connection) 3.5.2 AND / (Simple Connection) 3.6 Conditional Expressions 20 3.6.1 S , S / N , S , and S 'If / When' 3.6.2 Other Often-Used Conditional Expressions, ~ 'in case of
  • in the case (of)' and ~ 4. Sentence-Ending Expressions 4.1 Explaining a Circumstance / / 4.2 Rhetorical Questions ~( ) / 4.3 Softening of a Claim/Conclusion 4.3.1 ~ / 4.3.2 ~ / 5. Defining Expressions X Y 'regard X as Y' 6. Particles 6.1 Compound Particles 6.2 Particle Equivalent Phrases 7. Kanji 7.1 (Kanji Made in Japan) 7.2 Chinese Character(s) Used for Its Phonetic Sound 7.3 Simplified Kanji 7.4 Japanese-Chinese Homographs 7.5 Japanese-Chinese Homophones 8. Classical Japanese Grammar (for Reading Academic Articles from the Meiji Era Onwards) 8.1 Historical Kana Orthography 8.2 Inflected Forms 8.3 Verbs 8.4 Adjectives and Adjectival Verbs 8.4.1 Adjectives (i-adjectives) 8.4.2 Adjectival Verbs (na-adjectives) 8.5 Auxiliary Verbs 8.5.1 Negative 8.5.2 and Recollective 8.5.3 and Copular/Declarative 8.5.4 , , and Perfective 8.5.5 Advice, Appropriateness, Potential, Intentional, Speculative, and Command 8.5.6 and Passive, Potential, Honorific, and Spontaneous 8.5.7 Comparative 8.5.8 Causative 8.5.9 Speculative, Intentional, and Circumlocution 8.5.10 Negative Speculative and Negative Intentional 8.6 Conjunctive Particles 8.6.1 Hypothetical / Logical Connections 8.6.2 , , , and Concessive Connections 8.6.3 and Causal, Concessive, and Simple Connections 8.6.4 Causal, Concessive, and Simple Connections 8.7 Attributive Form + Particle 9. The Influence of Chinese Texts in Japanese 9.1 Expressions Used for Japanese Readings 9.1.1 Causative Expressions 9.1.2 9.2 Verbification, Adjectivization, and Adverbization Chapter 2 Section 1: What Are Modifiers? (Mechanisms of Modifying Sentences in Japanese) 1.1 Modifying Nouns 1.2 The Particle 1.3 The -Form as a Conjunction 1.4 Subordinate Clauses: Clauses with Conjunctive Particles 1.4.1 Concessive 1.4.2 Reason Clause 1.4.3 Conjunctive Particle '(and) what is more' 2. Summary 3. Exercises Chapter 2 Section 2: Chapter 2 Section 3: Chapter 2 Section 4: Chapter 2 Section 5: Chapter 2 Section 6: Chapter 2 Section 7: Chapter 2 Section 8: Answers Bibliography Index Chapter 1 Index (Expressions) Auxiliary Verb Conjugations

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