Äynu language
Ablative case
Acute accent
Affix
Affricate consonant
Ainu Times
Ainu language
Ainu languages
Ainu music
Ainu people
Allative case
Allophone
Alveolar consonant
Applicative voice
Approximant consonant
Back vowel
Bilabial consonant
Bronisław Piłsudski
Central vowel
Chōon
Circumflex
Close vowel
Combining character
Comitative case
Consonant cluster
Cyrillic alphabet
Dative case
Derivation (linguistics)
Endangered language
Ethnic group
Flap consonant
Fricative consonant
Front vowel
Genetic relationship (linguistics)
Glottal consonant
Grammatical gender
Handakuten
Hokkaidō
ISO 639-1
ISO 639-2
ISO 639-3
Incorporation (linguistics)
Instrumental case
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Japan
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Kannari Matsu
Katakana
Kuril Islands
Kyōsuke Kindaichi
Labiovelar consonant
Language family
Language isolate
Language revitalization
Latin alphabet
Lenition
Linguasphere Observatory
Linguistic typology
List of Ainu terms
Locative case
Macron
Main Page
Mid vowel
Morpheme
Nasal consonant
Nasal vowel
Nibutani
Noun
Oblique case
Open vowel
Oral literature
Palatal consonant
Pitch accent
Plural verb
Polysynthetic
Preposition
Sakhalin
Sapporo
Shigeru Kayano
Stop consonant
Subject Object Verb
Suppletion
Syllable
Syllable coda
Syllable onset
Transitivity (grammatical category)
Unicode
Velar consonant
Vowel
Wikipedia
Writing system
Yukar
Ablative case
Acute accent
Affix
Affricate consonant
Ainu Times
Ainu language
Ainu languages
Ainu music
Ainu people
Allative case
Allophone
Alveolar consonant
Applicative voice
Approximant consonant
Back vowel
Bilabial consonant
Bronisław Piłsudski
Central vowel
Chōon
Circumflex
Close vowel
Combining character
Comitative case
Consonant cluster
Cyrillic alphabet
Dative case
Derivation (linguistics)
Endangered language
Ethnic group
Flap consonant
Fricative consonant
Front vowel
Genetic relationship (linguistics)
Glottal consonant
Grammatical gender
Handakuten
Hokkaidō
ISO 639-1
ISO 639-2
ISO 639-3
Incorporation (linguistics)
Instrumental case
International Standard Book Number
Japan
Japanese Diet
Japanese language
Japanese writing system
Kannari Matsu
Katakana
Kuril Islands
Kyōsuke Kindaichi
Labiovelar consonant
Language family
Language isolate
Language revitalization
Latin alphabet
Lenition
Linguasphere Observatory
Linguistic typology
List of Ainu terms
Locative case
Macron
Main Page
Mid vowel
Morpheme
Nasal consonant
Nasal vowel
Nibutani
Noun
Oblique case
Open vowel
Oral literature
Palatal consonant
Pitch accent
Plural verb
Polysynthetic
Preposition
Sakhalin
Sapporo
Shigeru Kayano
Stop consonant
Subject Object Verb
Suppletion
Syllable
Syllable coda
Syllable onset
Transitivity (grammatical category)
Unicode
Velar consonant
Vowel
Wikipedia
Writing system
Yukar
For the language family, see Ainu languages.
Not to be confused with the Äynu language.
Ainu
アイヌ・イタㇰ Aynu itak
Pronunciation
[ˈainu iˈtak]
Spoken in
Japan
Region
Hokkaidō
Total speakers
~100s
Language family
Ainu. When considered a single language, classified as a language isolate
Writing system
Japanese katakana syllabaries, Latin alphabet
Language codes
ISO 639-1
None
ISO 639-2
ain[2]
ISO 639-3
ain
Linguasphere
–
Note: This page may contain IPA phonetic symbols in Unicode.
Ainu (Ainu: アイヌ・イタㇰ, Aynu itak; Japanese: アイヌ語 Ainu-go; Cyrillic alphabet: Аину итак) is one of the Ainu languages, spoken by members of the Ainu ethnic group on the northern Japanese island of Hokkaidō.
Until the twentieth century, Ainu languages were also spoken throughout the southern half of the island of Sakhalin and by small numbers of people in the Kuril Islands. All but the Hokkaidō language are extinct, with the last speaker of Sakhalin Ainu having died in 1994; and Hokkaidō Ainu is moribund, though there are ongoing attempts to revive it.
Ainu has no generally accepted genealogical relationship to any other language family. For the most frequent proposals, see Ainu languages.
Contents
1 Speakers
2 Phonology
2.1 Vowels
2.2 Consonants
3 Typology and grammar
4 Writing
4.1 Special katakana for the Ainu language
4.2 Basic syllables
4.3 Diphthongs
4.4 Long vowels
5 Oral literature
6 Notes
7 References and further reading
8 See also
9 External links
Speakers
Pirka Kotan museum, Ainu language and cultural center in Sapporo (Jozankei area)
Ainu language - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia (Redirected from Aynu itak) ... to represent the separate small katakana glyph ㇰ ku used as in アイヌイタㇰ (Aynu itak) ...
Ainu is a moribund language, and has been endangered for at least the past few decades. Most of the 25,000 – 200,000 ethnic Ainu in Japan speak only Japanese. In the town of Nibutani (part of Biratori, Hokkaidō) where many of the remaining native speakers live, there are 100 speakers, out of which only 15 used the language every day in the late 1980s.
However, use of the language is on the rise. There is currently an active movement to revitalize the language — mainly in Hokkaidō but also elsewhere — to reverse the centuries-long decline in the number of speakers. This has led to an increasing number of second-language learners, especially in Hokkaidō, in large part due to the pioneering efforts of the late Ainu folklorist, activist and former Diet member Shigeru Kayano, himself a native speaker.
Phonology
Ainu syllables are CV(C) (that is, they have an obligatory syllable onset and an optional syllable coda) and there are few consonant clusters.
Vowels
There are five vowel sounds in Ainu:
Front
Central
Back
Close
i
u
Mid
e
o
Open
a
Consonants
Bilabial
Labio-
velar
Alveolar
Palatal
Velar
Glottal
Stop
p
t
k
Affricate
ts
Nasal
m
n
Fricative
s
h
Approximant
w
j
Tap/flap
ɾ
Bahasa Ainu - Wikipedia bahasa Indonesia, ensiklopedia bebas
Bahasa Ainu (Ainu: アイヌ イタク, aynu itak; bahasa Jepang: アイヌ語 ainu-go; aksara Sirilik: Айну ... Dalam bahasa Ainu, ainu atau aynu (アイヌ) berarti orang atau manusia. ...
Plosives /p t ts k/ may be voiced [b d dz ɡ] between vowels and after nasals. Both /ti/ and /tsi/ are realized as [t͡ʃi], and /s/ becomes [ʃ] before /i/ and at the end of syllables. There is some variation among dialects; in the Sakhalin dialect, syllable-final /p, t, k, r/ lenited and merged into /x/. After an /i/, this /x/ is pronounced [ç]. A glottal stop [ʔ] is often inserted at the beginning of words, before an accented vowel, but is non-phonemic.
There is a pitch accent system. The accentuation of specific words varies somewhat from dialect to dialect. Generally, words including affixes have a high pitch on the stem, or on the first syllable if it is closed or has a diphthong, while other words have the high pitch on the second syllable, although there are exceptions to this generalization.
Typology and grammar
Typologically, Ainu is similar in word order (and some aspects of phonology) to Japanese.
Ainu has a canonical word order of SOV,1 and it uses postpositions rather than prepositions. Nouns can cluster to modify one another; the head comes at the end. Verbs, which are inherently either transitive or intransitive, accept various derivational affixes. Ainu does not have grammatical gender. Plurals are indicated by a suffix.1
Classical Ainu, the language of the yukar, is polysynthetic, with incorporation of nouns and adverbs; this is greatly reduced in the modern colloquial language.
File:Aynu itak ce.svg - Wikimedia Commons
Aynu itak ce.svg. 日本語: 「セ゚」(セ ゚)の画像. Date. 2009.12.6. Source. 自作. Author. Hakatanoshio117117. Permission (Reusing this file) See below. [edit] Licensing ...
Applicatives may be used in Ainu to place nouns in the dative, instrumental, comitative, locative, allative, or ablative roles. Besides freestanding nouns, these roles may be assigned to incorporated nouns, and such use of applicatives is in fact mandatory for incorporating oblique nouns. Like incorporation, applicatives have grown less common in the modern language.
Ainu has a closed class of plural verbs, and some of these are suppletive.
Writing
Officially,vague the Ainu language is written in a modified version of the Japanese katakana syllabary. There is also a Latin-based alphabet in use. The Ainu Times publishes in both. In the Latin orthography, /ts/ is spelt c and /j/ as y; /ʔ/, which only occurs initially before accented vowels, is not written. Other phonemes use the same character as the IPA transcription given above. An equals sign (=) is used to mark morpheme boundaries, such as after a prefix. Its pitch accent is denoted by acute accent in Latin (e.g., á). This is usually not denoted in katakana.
Special katakana for the Ainu language
A Unicode standard exists for a set of extended katakana (Katakana Phonetic Extensions) for transliterating the Ainu language and other languages written with katakana.2 These characters are used to write final consonants and sounds that cannot be expressed using conventional katakana. The extended katakana are based on regular katakana and either are smaller in size or have a handakuten. As few fonts yet support these extensions, workarounds exist for many of the characters, such as using a smaller font with the regular katakana ク ku to produce ク to represent the separate small katakana glyph ㇰ ku used as in アイヌイタㇰ (Aynu itak).
File:Aynu itak tu.svg - Wikimedia Commons
Aynu itak tu.svg. 日本語: 「ツ゚」(ツ ゚)の画像. Date. 2009.12.6. Source. 自作. Author. Hakatanoshio117117. Permission (Reusing this file) See below. [edit] Licensing ...
This is a list of special katakana used in transcribing the Ainu language. Most of the characters are of the extended set of katakana, though a few have been used historically in Japanesecitation needed, and thus are part of the main set of katakana. A number of previously proposed characters have not been added to Unicode as they can be represented as a sequence of two existing codepoints.
Character
Unicode
Appearance
Name
Ainu usage
ㇰ
31F0
ク
Katakana Letter Small Ku
Final k
ㇱ
31F1
シ
Katakana Letter Small Shi
Final s [ɕ]
ㇲ
31F2
ス
Katakana Letter Small Su
Final s, used to emphasize it's pronounced [s] rather than normal [ɕ]. [s] and [ʃ] are allophones in Ainu.
ㇳ
31F3
ト
Katakana Letter Small To
Final t
ㇴ
31F4
ヌ
Katakana Letter Small Nu
Final n
ㇵ
31F5
ハ
Katakana Letter Small Ha
Final h [x], succeeding the vowel a. (e.g. アㇵ ah) Sakhalin dialect only.
ㇶ
31F6
ヒ
Katakana Letter Small Hi
Final h [ç], succeeding the vowel i. (e.g. イㇶ ih) Sakhalin dialect only.
ㇷ
31F7
フ
Katakana Letter Small Fu
Final h [x], succeeding the vowel u. (e.g. ウㇷ uh) Sakhalin dialect only.
ㇸ
31F8
ヘ
Katakana Letter Small He
Final h [x], succeeding the vowel e. (e.g. エㇸ eh) Sakhalin dialect only.
ㇹ
31F9
ホ
Katakana Letter Small Ho
Final h [x], succeeding the vowel o. (e.g. オㇹ oh) Sakhalin dialect only.
ㇺ
31FA
ム
Katakana Letter Small Mu
Final m
ㇻ
31FB
ラ
Katakana Letter Small Ra
Final r [ɾ], succeeding the vowel a. (e.g. アㇻ ar)
ㇼ
31FC
リ
Katakana Letter Small Ri
Final r [ɾ], succeeding the vowel i. (e.g. イㇼ ir)
ㇽ
31FD
ル
Katakana Letter Small Ru
Final r [ɾ], succeeding the vowel u. (e.g. ウㇽ ur)
ㇾ
31FE
レ
Katakana Letter Small Re
Final r [ɾ], succeeding the vowel e. (e.g. エㇾ er)
ㇿ
31FF
ロ
Katakana Letter Small Ro
Final r [ɾ], succeeding the vowel o. (e.g. オㇿ or)
Rejected characters (Unicode represents them using combining characters)
ㇷ゚
31F7 + 309A
プ
Katakana Letter Small Pu
Final p
セ゚
30BB + 309A
セ゜
Katakana Letter Se With Semi-Voiced Sound Mark
ce [tse]
ツ゚
30C4 + 309A
ツ゜
Katakana Letter Tu With Semi-Voiced Sound Mark
tu. ツ゚ and ト゚ are interchangeable.
ト゚
30C8 + 309A
ト゜
Katakana Letter To With Semi-Voiced Sound Mark
tu. ツ゚ and ト゚ are interchangeable.
Basic syllables
a
[a]
i
[i]
u
[u̜]
e
[e]
o
[o]
a ア
[a]
i イ
[i]
u ウ
[u̜]
e エ
[e]
o オ
[o]
k
[k] 1
ka カ
[ka]
ki キ
[ki]
ku ク
[ku̜]
ke ケ
[ke]
ko コ
[ko]
-k ク
-k̚]
s
[s] ~ [ʃ]
sa シャ/サ 2
[sa] ~ [ʃa]
si シ
[ʃi]
su シュ/ス 2
[su̜] ~ [ʃu̜]
se シェ/セ 2
[se] ~ [ʃe]
so ショ/ソ 2
[so] ~ [ʃo]
-s シ/ス 2
-ɕ]
t
[t] 1
ta タ
[ta]
ci チ
[tʃi]
tu ト゜/ツ゜ 2
[tu̜]
te テ
[te]
to ト
[to]
-t ト/ッ 3
-t̚]
c
[ts] ~ [tʃ] 1
ca チャ
[tsa] ~ [tʃa]
ci チ
[tʃi]
cu チュ
[tsu̜] ~ [tʃu̜]
ce チェ
[tse] ~ [tʃe]
co チョ
[tso] ~ [tʃo]
n
[n]
na ナ
[na]
ni ニ
[nʲi]
nu ヌ
[nu̜]
ne ネ
[ne]
no ノ
[no]
-n ヌ/ン 4
-n, -m-, -ŋ- 5
h 6
[h]
ha ハ
[ha]
hi ヒ
[çi]
hu フ
[ɸu̜]
he ヘ
[he]
ho ホ
[ho]
-h 6
-x]
-ah ハ
-ax]
-ih ヒ
-iç]
-uh フ
-u̜x]
-eh ヘ
-ex]
-oh ホ
-ox]
p
[p] 1
pa パ
[pa]
pi ピ
[pi]
pu プ
[pu̜]
pe ペ
[pe]
po ポ
[po]
-p プ
-p̚]
m
[m]
ma マ
[ma]
mi ミ
[mi]
mu ム
[mu̜]
me メ
[me]
mo モ
[mo]
-m ム
-m]
y
[j]
ya ヤ
[ja]
yu ユ
[ju̜]
ye イェ
[je]
yo ヨ
[jo]
r
[ɾ]
ra ラ
[ɾa]
ri リ
[ɾi]
ru ル
[ɾu̜]
re レ
[ɾe]
ro ロ
[ɾo]
-ar ラ2
-aɾ]
-ir リ2
-iɾ]
-ur ル2
-u̜ɾ]
-er レ2
-eɾ]
-or ロ2
-oɾ]
-r ル2
-ɾ]
w
[w]
wa ワ
[wa]
wi ウィ/ヰ 2
[wi]
we ウェ/ヱ 2
[we]
wo ウォ/ヲ 2
[wo]
1: k, t, c, p are sometimes voiced [ɡ], [d], [dz] ~ [dʒ], [b], respectively. It doesn't change the meaning of a word, but it sounds more rough/masculine. When they are voiced, they may be written as g, d, j, dz, b, ガ, ダ, ヂャ, ヅァ, バ, etc.
2: Both used according to actual pronunciations, or to writer's preferred styles.
3: ッ is final t at the end of a word. (e.g. pet = ペッ = ペト) In the middle of a polysyllabic word, it's a final consonant preceding the initial with a same value. (e.g. orta /otta/ = オッタ. オロタ is not preferred.)
4: At the end of a word, n can be written either ヌ or ン. In the middle of a polysyllabic word, it's ン. (e.g. tan-mosir = タンモシリ = タヌ+モシリ, but not タヌモシリ.)
5: [m] before [p], [ŋ] before [k], [n] elsewhere. Unlike Japanese, it does not become other sounds such as nasal vowels.
6: Initial h [h] and final h [x] are different phenomes. Final h exists in Sakhalin dialect only.
Diphthongs
耿君春秋 : aynu itak와 그 표기법
aynu가 '사람', '인간'이란 뜻이고 itak이 '말하다', '말' 등의 뜻을 가집니다. 아이누어는 고립어의 일종으로, 일본어와 유사한 점이 있으면서도 또 많이 다릅니다. 바로 옆에 일본어를 사용하는 언중이 있었기 때문에 서로 영향을 주고 받았겠지요? ...
Final [ɪ] is spelled y in Latin, small ィ in katakana. Final [ʊ] is spelt w in Latin, small ゥ in katakana. [ae] is spelt ae, アエ, or アェ.
Example with initial k:
[kaɪ]
[ku̜ɪ]
[koɪ]
[kaʊ]
[kiʊ]
[keʊ]
[koʊ]
[keɪ]
kay
kuy
koy
kaw
kiw
kew
kow
key
カィ
クィ
コィ
カゥ
キゥ
ケゥ
コゥ
ケィ
Since the above rule is used systematically, some katakana combinations have different sounds from conventional Japanese.
ウィ
クィ
スィ
ティ
トゥ
フィ
Ainu
[wi], [u̜ɪ]
[ku̜ɪ]
[su̜ɪ]
[teɪ]
[toʊ]
[ɸu̜ɪ]
Japanese
[wi]
[kɰi] ~ [kwi]
[si]
[ti]
[tɯ]
[ɸi]
Long vowels
There are long vowels in Sakhalin dialect. Either circumflex or macron is used in Latin, long vowel sign (ー) is used in katakana.
Example with initial k:
[kaː]
[kiː]
[kuː]
[keː]
[koː]
kâ
kî
kû
kê
kô
kā
kī
kū
kē
kō
カー
キー
クー
ケー
コー
Oral literature
The Ainu have a rich oral tradition of hero-sagas called Yukar, which retain a number of grammatical and lexical archaisms.
Notes
^ a b [1]
^ See this page at alanwood.net and this section of the Unicode specification.
References and further reading
Refsing, Kirsten (1986). The Ainu Language: The Morphology and Syntax of the Shizunai Dialect. Aarhus: Aarhus University Press. ISBN 8-772-88020-1.
Refsing, Kirsten (1996). Early European Writings on the Ainu Language. London: Routledge. ISBN 0-700-70400-0.
Shibatani, Masayoshi (1990). The Languages of Japan. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press. ISBN 0-521-36918-5.
Tamura, Suzuko (2000). The Ainu Language. Tokyo: Sanseido. ISBN 4-385-35976-8.
See also
List of Ainu terms
Ainu music
Kannari Matsu
Kyōsuke Kindaichi
Bronisław Piłsudski
External links
Ainu language test of Wikipedia at Wikimedia Incubator
Literature and materials for learning Ainu
The Book of Common Prayer in Ainu
Ethnologue entry for Ainu
Information at the Rosetta Project
Institute for the Study of Languages and Cultures of Ainu in Samani, Hokkaidō
A Grammar of the Ainu Language by John Batchelor
An Ainu-English-Japanese Dictionary, including A Grammar of the Ainu Language by John Batchelor
"The 'Greater Austric' hypothesis" by John Bengtson (undated)
Ainu for Beginners by Kane Kumagai, translated by Yongdeok Cho
(Japanese) Radio lessons on Ainu language presented by Sapporo TV
(Japanese) Ainu word list (Archived 2009-10-24)
(無題)
repa etoko ta tan"itak=an ro"otta aynu-itak ani Short play ku=nukare. ... aynu-itak nakka,aynu puri nakka pirkano ku=eraman ka easkay somo ki. ...
Ainu language at AllExperts
For the language spoken in Central Asia see Aini language Aynu itak pronunciation=aiÌ ̄nu itakÌš states= Japan Russia region= Hokkaido formerly Sakhalin the Kuril ...
aynu itak
aynu itak (小坂に)戻る. 日本語を母語とする人から見た場合、アイヌ語は母語ではないが「
Ainu language | TripAtlas.com
:For the language spoken in Central Asia, see Aini language.The Ainu language (Ainu: ã_ ¢ã_ ¤ã_ _ ã_ ¤ã_ ¿ã_ ̄, aynu itak; Japanese: ã_ ¢ã_ ¤ã ...
