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Early Modern Japanese (近世日本語, kinsei nihongo) was the stage of the Japanese language after Middle Japanese and before Modern Japanese.[1] It is a period of transition that shed many of the language's medieval characteristics and became closer to its modern form.

Early Modern Japanese
近世日本語
RegionJapan
EraEvolved into Modern Japanese in the mid-19th century
Language family
Japonic
Early forms
Writing system
Hiragana, Katakana, and Kanji
Language codes
ISO 639-3
GlottologNone

The period spanned roughly 250 years and extended from the 17th century to the first half of the 19th century. Politically, it generally corresponded to the Edo period.


Background


At the beginning of the 17th century, the center of government moved to Edo from Kamigata under the control of the Tokugawa shogunate. Until the early Edo period, the Kamigata dialect, the ancestor of the modern Kansai dialect, was the most influential dialect. However, in the late Edo period, the Edo dialect, the ancestor of the modern Tokyo dialect, became the most influential dialect, and Japan closed its borders to foreigners. Compared to the previous centuries, the Tokugawa rule brought about much newfound stability. That made the importance of the warrior class gradually fall and replaced it with the merchant class. There was much economic growth, and new artistic developments appeared, such as Ukiyo-e, Kabuki, and Bunraku. New literary genres such as Ukiyozōshi, Sharebon (pleasure districts), Kokkeibon (commoners), and Ninjōbon also developed. Major authors included Ihara Saikaku, Chikamatsu Monzaemon, Matsuo Bashō, Shikitei Sanba, and Santō Kyōden.


Phonology



Consonants


Middle Japanese had the following consonants:

Bilabial Alveolar Postalveolar Palatal Velar Uvular Glottal
Stop p  b t  d     k  ɡ    
Affricate   t͡s  d͡z t͡ʃ  d͡ʒ        
Nasal m n       ɴ  
Fricative ɸ s  z ɕ ç     h
Liquid     r        
Approximant       j ɰ    

/t, s, z, h/ all have a number of allophones before the high vowels [i, ɯ]:

Several major developments occurred:

Middle Japanese had a syllable final -t, which was gradually replaced by the open syllable /tu/.


Labialization


The labial /kwa, gwa/ merged with their non-labial counterparts into [ka, ga].[2]


Palatalization


The consonants /s, z/, /t/, /n/, /h, b/, /p/, /m/, and /r/ could be palatalized.

Depalatalization could also be seen in the Edo dialect:


Prenasalization


Middle Japanese had a series of prenasalized voiced plosives and fricatives: [ŋɡ, ⁿz, ⁿd, ᵐb]. In Early Modern Japanese, they lost their prenasalization, which resulted in ɡ, z, d, b.


Grammar



Verbs


Early Modern Japanese has five verbal conjugations:

Verb Class Irrealis
未然形
Adverbial
連用形
Conclusive
終止形
Attributive
連体形
Hypothetical
仮定形
Imperative
命令形
Quadrigrade (四段) -a -i -u -u -e -e
Upper Monograde(上一段) -i -i -iru -iru -ire -i(yo, ro)
Lower Monograde (下一段) -e -e -eru -eru -ere -e(yo, ro)
K-irregular (カ変) -o -i -uru -uru -ure -oi
S-irregular (サ変) -e, -a, -i -i -uru -uru -ure -ei, -iro

As had already begun in Middle Japanese, the verbal morphology system continued to evolve. The total number of verb classes was reduced from nine to five. Specifically, the r-irregular and n-irregular regularized as quadrigrade, and the upper and lower bigrade classes merged with their respective monograde. That left the quadrigrade, upper monograde, lower monograde, k-irregular, and s-irregular.[3]


Adjectives


There were two types of adjectives: regular adjectives and adjectival nouns.

Historically, adjectives were subdivided into two classes: those whose adverbial form ended in -ku and those that ended in –siku. That distinction was lost in Early Modern Japanese.

Irrealis
未然形
Adverbial
連用形
Conclusive
終止形
Attributive
連体形
Hypothetical
仮定形
Imperative
命令形
-kara -ku -i -i -kere -kare

Historically, the adjectival noun was sub-divided into two categories: -nar and -tar. In Early Modern Japanese, -tar vanished and left only -na.

Irrealis
未然形
Adverbial
連用形
Conclusive
終止形
Attributive
連体形
Hypothetical
仮定形
Imperative
命令形
-da ra -ni
-de
-na
-da
-na -nare
-nara
 

Notes


  1. Shibatani (1990: 119)
  2. Yamamoto (1997: 147-148)
  3. Yamaguchi (1997:129)

References



На других языках


[de] Frühneujapanische Sprache

Frühneujapanisch (japanisch 近世日本語 .mw-parser-output .Latn{font-family:"Akzidenz Grotesk","Arial","Avant Garde Gothic","Calibri","Futura","Geneva","Gill Sans","Helvetica","Lucida Grande","Lucida Sans Unicode","Lucida Grande","Stone Sans","Tahoma","Trebuchet","Univers","Verdana"}kinsei nihongo) war eine Sprachstufe der japanischen Sprache zwischen Mitteljapanisch und Neu- bzw. Gegenwartsjapanisch.[1] Sie war eine Übergangsperiode, in der die Sprache viele ihrer mittelalterlichen Merkmale ablegte und sich ihrer modernen Form annäherte.
- [en] Early Modern Japanese

[es] Japonés moderno temprano

El japonés moderno temprano (近世日本語, kinsei nihongo?) es una etapa del idioma japonés posterior al japonés medio y previa al japonés moderno.[1] Es un periodo de transición en el cual el lenguaje perdió muchas de sus características medievales y se volvió más cercano a la forma moderna.



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