Presentation is loading. Please wait.

Presentation is loading. Please wait.

Class Session 1a Introduction to Class/Chapter 1 Textbook: Japanese Demystified, Dr. Eriko Sato (McGraw Hill, ISBN: 978-0-07-147726—0) Syllabus: On-line;

Similar presentations


Presentation on theme: "Class Session 1a Introduction to Class/Chapter 1 Textbook: Japanese Demystified, Dr. Eriko Sato (McGraw Hill, ISBN: 978-0-07-147726—0) Syllabus: On-line;"— Presentation transcript:

1 Class Session 1a Introduction to Class/Chapter 1 Textbook: Japanese Demystified, Dr. Eriko Sato (McGraw Hill, ISBN: 978-0-07-147726—0) Syllabus: On-line; Angel site at my.sinclair.edu Attendance: Attendance in class is essential for learning; 30 class sessions x 10 points each Homework: 10 homework assignments (10 points each) Lab assignments: 5 assignments (20 points each) Tests: 4 grammar tests (25 points each) Quizes: 10 vocabulary quizzes (10 points each) Exams: Mid-term exam - 100 points; final exam - 100 points. Grading: 900 total possible points: 90% = A, 80% = B, 70% = C, 60% = D; less than 60% = F Make-up work: Missed work cannot be made up without valid excuse for absence. Extra credit work: Extra credit cannot be earned if regular assignments are incomplete Language laboratory/Aya conversation practice site On-line Japanese dictionary: www.jisho.orgwww.jisho.org If you do not intend to complete the class you should formally withdraw. Focus on the spoken (conversational) language; some discussion of the written language. Priority objectives: (1) pronunciation (2) vocabulary (3) grammar Japanese 1100-L1a-06-21-20121

2 The Japanese-Speaking World Japanese – the official language of Japan One of top 10 most influential languages in the world: number of primary and secondary speakers and socioeconomic/sociocultural factors Population of Japan is 128 million people Total area of Japan is 377,835 km 2 (145,882 m 2 ) 1/25 of the total area of the United States More than 2/3 of the total area is mountainous 128 million people live in ~125,819 km 2 (48,579 miles 2 ) - population is dense: – ~1,017 people/ km 2 – ~2,635 people/m2 Smaller than the state of California; about same size as the state of Montana Four main islands are (from north to south): – Hokkaidō 北海道 (northern sea route) – Honshū 本州 (main state) – Shikoku 四国 (four countries) – Kyūshū 九州 (nine countries) About 3,000 miles from north (about same latitude as Montreal, Canada) to south (about same latitude as southern part of Florida) Closest neighbors are Korea, Russia and China Greatest cultural impact on Japan has been from China (initially through Korea, then later directly from China) Japanese 1100-L1a-06-21-20122

3 3

4 4

5 A Note on Romanization In this class we will use rōmaji (Romanized Japanese) (even though the textbook shows all three kinds of Japanese writing: Kanji - characters originally borrowed from China Katakana - a syllabary used mostly for foreign words Hiragana – a syllabary used for particles, verb/adjective endings, and words not written in kanji today Dr. Sato uses the Hepburn system of rōmaji, with some modifications A vowel with a macron (i.e., ō) indicates a long vowel (o and ō are pronounced differently) An n with an apostrophe (i.e., n’) shows the consonant n separated from the following vowel or y (xxn’ya is not the same as nya) Japanese 1100-L1a-06-21-20125

6 6 Japanese Cities Tōkyō 東京 (eastern capital)(the capital of Japan) Ōsaka 大阪 (large slope) Kyōto 京都 (capital) Nagoya 名古屋 (distinguished old shop) Kōbe 神戸 (gods door) Yokohama 横浜 (side beach) Fukushima 福島 ( lucky island) Sendai 仙台 (hermit stand) Naha (Okinawa) 那覇 ( 沖縄 ) (what champion) (offshore rope)

7 Vowels There are five vowels in Japanese. They are pronounced more crisply and with more rounding than English vowels: aas in English aha ias in the vowel in English eat uas in the initial part of the vowel in English boot eas in the initial part of the vowel in English eight oas in the initial part of the vowel in oats Japanese 1100-L1a-06-21-20127

8 Long Vowels In Dr. Sato’s book, indicated with a macron over the letter (a and ā) (except for ii) Sometimes represented by doubling the vowel (aa, ee (or ei) ii, uu, oo (or ou)) – obasan – auntobāsan - grandmother – ojisan – uncleojiisan – grandfather – shujin – one’s husbandshūjin – prisoner – e – paintingē – yes – tori – birdtōri - street Japanese 1100-L1a-06-21-20128

9 Devoiced Vowels i and u tend to be dropped (whispered or devoiced) when they occur between two voiceless consonants (i.e., p, t, k, s, sh, ch, ts, and h) or at the end of a word preceded by a voiceless consonant. You may not hear the i and u in the following words spoken by a native speaker: kushisukiyaki hitodesu Japanese 1100-L1a-06-21-20129

10 Consonants Consonants: B, CH, D, F, G, H, J, K, M, N, P, R, S, T, TS, W, Y, Z All consonants, except n, are followed by a vowel (ka, ki, ku, ke, ko; na, ni, nu, ne, no, etc.) Most consonants are read as in English r and f are different (covered shortly) w, sh, and ch are pronounced without lip rounding n changes to m when it is followed by consonant formed with the lips (p, b, or m): enpitsu is pronounced empitsu (and may sometimes be written that way) kenbutsu is pronounced kembutsu h becomes f when followed by u (ha, hi, FU, he, ho) t becomes ch when followed by i and ts when followed by u (ta, CHI, TSU, te, to) ts is pronounced like the ts in cats ch is pronounced like the ch in church Some consonants can be doubled (p, t, k, s) – tappuri – kitte – gakki – kesshite Japanese 1100-L1a-06-21-201210

11 The Japanese Consonant f In English the consonant f is formed by touching the upper teeth to the lower lip and forcing air out through the mouth (a labio-dental fricative). In Japanese the consonant f is formed by bringing the upper and lower lips close to each other and gently forcing air out through the mouth (no teeth used) hahifuheho fusumafutatsufushigifukufue Japanese 1100-L1a-06-21-201211

12 The Japanese Consonant r Japanese r is formed by tapping the tip of the tongue behind the upper teeth Resembles the brief tt sound in the English words lettuce and letter Similar, but not the same as, the English consonant d – ranbō – ringo – rusu – rentai – roku Japanese 1100-L1a-06-21-201212

13 Japanese Pitch Accent Japanese is an unaccented language Japanese is unaccented—each syllable is spoken with the same level of accent Japanese does have some pitch patterns: ame (rain) has high pitch on the first syllable and a low pitch on the second syllable: A-me ame (candy) has low pitch on the first syllable and high pitch on the second syllable: a-ME hana (flower) has low pitch on the first syllable and high pitch on the second syllable: ha-NA hana (nose) has no pitch accent ha-na shita (tongue) has low pitch on the first syllable and high pitch on the second syllable shi-TA shita (bottom) has no pitch accent shi-ta For all practical purposes we can ignore this in our study of Japanese; sentence context will normally make the distinction between similar words clear. Japanese 1100-L1a-06-21-201213

14 Japanese 1100-L1a-06-21-201214 Pronunciation Practice Unvoiced Sounds (Seion) * These characters are no longer used in modern Japanese, but may be seen in older written material.

15 Japanese 1100-L1a-06-21-201215 Pronunciation Practice Voiced Sounds (Dakuon) ** By official decree of the Ministry of Education, these characters are not to be used in modern writing; they have been replaced by じ JI and ず ZU.

16 Japanese 1100-L1a-06-21-201216 Pronunciation Practice Palatized Sounds (Yō’on) ** By official decree of the Ministry of Education, these characters are not to be used in modern writing; they have been replaced by じゃ JA and じゅ JU.


Download ppt "Class Session 1a Introduction to Class/Chapter 1 Textbook: Japanese Demystified, Dr. Eriko Sato (McGraw Hill, ISBN: 978-0-07-147726—0) Syllabus: On-line;"

Similar presentations


Ads by Google