The Accentual History of the Japanese and Ryukyuan Languages
A Reconstruction
Moriyo Shimabukuro, University of Ryukyus
Biographical note
Moriyo Shimabukuro is Associate Professor at The University of the Ryukyus, in Okinawa, Japan. He received his Ph.D. in Linguistics from The University of Hawai’i at Manoa and has been teaching at The University of the Ryukyus since 2002. His major research interests are historical linguistics, phonology (especially suprasegmental phenomena), the English language, and the languages of Japan.
Alexander Vovin, Professor of East Asian Languages at the University of Hawai’i at Manoa, has published extensively on Japanese, Ainu, Korean and Tungusic, as well as other languages of East and Inner Asia. Among his major works are A Reconstruction of Proto-Ainu (Brill, 1993), A Reference Grammar of Classical Japanese Prose (RoutledgeCurzon, 2003) and Nihongo Keitoron no Genzai/Perspectives on the Origins of the Japanese Language (co-edited with Osada Toshiki, the International Center for Japanese Studies, Kyoto, 2003).
Alexander Vovin, Professor of East Asian Languages at the University of Hawai’i at Manoa, has published extensively on Japanese, Ainu, Korean and Tungusic, as well as other languages of East and Inner Asia. Among his major works are A Reconstruction of Proto-Ainu (Brill, 1993), A Reference Grammar of Classical Japanese Prose (RoutledgeCurzon, 2003) and Nihongo Keitoron no Genzai/Perspectives on the Origins of the Japanese Language (co-edited with Osada Toshiki, the International Center for Japanese Studies, Kyoto, 2003).
Readership
Professional and scholarly
Table of contents
Preface; List of Abbreviations and Notations; 1 Introduction; 2 Previous Scholarship: A Critical Review; 3 Historical Linguistic Methods; 4 Accent Change; 5 Reconstruction of Proto-Ryukyuan Accent; 6 Reconstruction of Proto-Mainland Japanese Accent; 7 Reconstruction of Proto-Japonic Accent; 8 Conclusion; References; Appendix: Japonic Cognates and Reconstructed Forms
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