Hokkaido University Collection of Scholarly and Academic Papers >
Graduate School of Humanities and Human Sciences / Faculty of Humanities and Human Sciences >
北方言語研究 = Northern Language Studies >
第13号 >
アイヌ語諸方言の語形の類似に関する基礎データの復元 : 論文に書ききれなかった研究者の判断・思考に迫る
Title: | アイヌ語諸方言の語形の類似に関する基礎データの復元 : 論文に書ききれなかった研究者の判断・思考に迫る |
Other Titles: | Reconstruction of Original Data on Similarity between Word Forms in Ainu Dialects : Approaching the Researcher's Unwritten Judgment and Thoughts |
Authors: | 小野, 洋平1 Browse this author | 深澤, 美香2 Browse this author |
Authors(alt): | ONO, Yohei1 | FUKAZAWA, Mika2 |
Keywords: | Ainu language | dialectology | data-driven approach | inverse problem | mathematical humanities | アイヌ語 | 方言学 | データ駆動型 | 逆問題 | 数理人文学 |
Issue Date: | 20-Mar-2023 |
Publisher: | 日本北方言語学会 |
Journal Title: | 北方言語研究 |
Journal Title(alt): | Northern Language Studies |
Volume: | 13 |
Start Page: | 213 |
End Page: | 246 |
CiNii Research CRID: | 1050014481143482624 |
Abstract: | In this paper, we added linguistic insight to a preliminary study of Ono’s (2020b) algorithm and identified the 110 words of the basic Ainu vocabulary, which was used in the cluster analysis of Ainu dialects in Asai (1974). We also revealed some of the information on which word forms were judged to be similar and which lexical items were excluded from the calculation. In Ainu, Asai (1974) proposed a “major division” of the Hokkaido dialects, the Sakhalin dialects, and the northern Kuril dialects, which used the dialect data of Hattori and Chiri’s (1960) basic vocabulary. His classification continues to be referred to today, but Asai’s detailed “minor division” from the three categories is at odds with the intuition of Ainu language researchers (see Tamura (1988)). However, in order to examine the classification of Ainu dialects proposed by Asai (1974), it is necessary to read his difficult statistical paper. It was most difficult to identify 110 of the 200 basic lexical items that Asai (1974) supposedly used in his calculations. Only recently Ono’s (2020b) algorithm was able to identify some of the 110 items, and also pointed out that there were calculation errors in Asai (1974). In other words, it is possible to change the results of Asai’s (1974) dialect classification simply by identifying all 110 words and recalculating them. Therefore, this study identifies Asai’s (1974) 110 lexical items in order to consider and examine the classification of Ainu dialects. |
Type: | bulletin (article) |
URI: | http://hdl.handle.net/2115/89066 |
Appears in Collections: | 北方言語研究 = Northern Language Studies > 第13号
|
|