Description |
1 online resource (xvi, 489 pages) : maps |
Series |
Contributions to the sociology of language ; 81 |
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Contributions to the sociology of language ; 81.
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Contents |
Table of contents -- FOREWORD -- 0. DR. TAKESI SIBATA AND THE PRINCIPAL TRENDS IN JAPANESE SOCIOLINGUISTICS -- 1. Purpose of this chapter -- 2. The importance of Dr. Sibata in sociolinguistics -- 2.1. The quantity of Dr. Sibata�s contributions -- 2.2. The quality of Dr. Sibata�s contribution -- 3. Dr. Sibata�s life history and sociolinguistics -- 3.1. Romanization -- 3.2. The “Literacy Survey� -- 3.3. Surveys of language standardization -- 3.4. Survey of Honorifics -- 3.5. Linguistic Atlas of Japan and Linguistic Atlas of Itoigawa |
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3.6. Dr. Sibata�s surveys as a University Professor4. Characteristics of Dr. Sibata�s Research -- 4.1. Inductive methodology -- 4.2. Using the “scientific� method -- 4.3. Exhaustiveness -- 4.4. Secular linguistics -- 4.5. Originality -- 4.6. The scholastic endeavor -- (I) THE STUDY OF SOCIOLINGUISTICS -- 1. THE LANGUAGE LIFE OF THE JAPANESE -- 0. Introductory notes by the editors -- 1. What is �language life�? -- 2. The structure of life and linguistic behavior -- 3. Communication which relies on speech -- 4. Situations of linguistic communication |
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5. Special characteristics of the language life of the Japanese2. THE SURVEY OF A SPEECH COMMUNITY AND ITS METHODOLOGY -- 0. Introductory notes by the editors -- 1. Introduction -- 2. Dialectology, linguistic geography, and the survey of speech communities -- 3. The procedure for studying a speech community -- 4. One method of investigating a speech community -- 3. A 24 HOUR SURVEY OF THE LANGUAGE LIFE OF THE JAPANESE -- 0. Introductory notes by the editors -- 1. The language life of the Japanese and the 24 hour survey -- 2. The method of “the 24 hour survey� |
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3. The content of the recordings4. Aims of analysis -- 5. For future investigation -- 4. INDIVIDUAL DIFFERENCES AMONG INVESTIGATORS OF LINGUISTIC GEOGRAPHY -- 0. Introductory notes by the editors -- 1. Introduction -- 2. Individual differences between speakers and between interviewers -- 3. Simple individual differences -- 4. Individual differences reflecting language history -- 5. Analysis of survey materials and analysis of individual differences -- (II) HONORIFICS -- 5. HONORIFICS AND HONORIFICS RESEARCH -- 0. Introductory notes by the editors |
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1. Special Treatment2. Diversity of treatment expressions -- 3. Methods of “keeping distance� -- 6. THE HONORIFIC PREFIX “O-� IN CONTEMPORARY JAPANESE -- 0. Introductory notes by the editors -- 1. Introduction -- 2. Lexical factors governing the use of o-. � The 4830 word / 18 informant survey � -- 3. Social factors governing the use of o- � The 49 word / 472 informant survey � -- Appendix I: Words with which o- is frequently used -- Appendix II: Distribution of informants by district (ch�) -- 7. LEARNING TO SAY “HAHA� |
Bibliography |
Includes bibliographical references (pages 409-414) and index |
Notes |
Master and use copy. Digital master created according to Benchmark for Faithful Digital Reproductions of Monographs and Serials, Version 1. Digital Library Federation, December 2002. http://purl.oclc.org/DLF/benchrepro0212 MiAaHDL |
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digitized 2010 HathiTrust Digital Library committed to preserve pda MiAaHDL |
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Print version record |
Subject |
Sociolinguistics -- Japan
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POLITICAL SCIENCE -- Public Policy -- Cultural Policy.
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SOCIAL SCIENCE -- Anthropology -- Cultural.
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SOCIAL SCIENCE -- Popular Culture.
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Sociolinguistics
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Soziolinguistik
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Japans.
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Taalvariatie.
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Taalverandering.
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Sociale aspecten.
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Sociolinguistique -- Japon.
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Language et culture -- Japon.
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Japonais (langue) -- Aspect social.
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Japan
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Japanisch.
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Form |
Electronic book
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Author |
Kunihiro, Tetsuya, 1929-2022
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Inoue, Fumio, 1942-
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Long, Daniel, 1963-
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ISBN |
9783110821307 |
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3110821303 |
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