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Full-Text Articles in Arts and Humanities
Beginning Japanese For Professionals: Book 3, Emiko Konomi
Beginning Japanese For Professionals: Book 3, Emiko Konomi
PDXOpen: Open Educational Resources
This is the final book in a three book series and includes Lessons 9 - 10. Book 1 and Book 2 are also available for download.
This textbook is designed for beginning learners who want to learn basic Japanese for the purpose of living and working in Japan. Unlike textbooks written primarily for students, whose content largely centers on student life, this book focuses more on social and professional life beyond school.
As a beginning level textbook, this book includes many elementary grammar patterns (Japanese Language Proficiency Test Levels 5 and 4), but the vocabulary and situations are selected specifically …
Stance-Taking: Jfl Learners And Benefactive Verbs, Kumiko Takizawa
Stance-Taking: Jfl Learners And Benefactive Verbs, Kumiko Takizawa
Dissertations and Theses
This study explores how JFL learners take a benefactive stance in Japanese. As Jaffe (2009) observes, stance-taking "plays a complex role with respect to the naturalization of social and linguistic ideologies and the social structures they legitimate." The way in which language is used to take a stance always concerns the social context in which a speaker finds her/himself. In Japanese, benefactive verbs (kureru, ageru, morau and their honorific and humble equivalents) are indispensable stance indicators for showing gratitude or indebtedness. Such expressions do not really exist in English and their grammar is complex. It is assumed that JFL learners …
X-Rated And Excessively Long: Ji-Amari In Hayashi Amari's Tanka, Jon P. Holt
X-Rated And Excessively Long: Ji-Amari In Hayashi Amari's Tanka, Jon P. Holt
World Languages and Literatures Faculty Publications and Presentations
As a fixed 31-syllable form of short poetry, Japan's tanka is one of the world's oldest forms of still-practiced poetry, with examples perhaps dating back to the fifth century. In the modern periods of Meiji (1868-1912) and Taishō (1912-1926), poets radically reformed the genre, expanding diction beyond millennium-old classical limits, thereby allowing poets to write not only about cherry blossoms and tragic love but also about things like steam trains and baseball games; although today many tanka poets in practicing circles still employ classical Japanese, many modern masters innovated the genre by skillfully blending in colloquial language. Like their modern …