Yaeyama Language (rys)

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Also Known As: Yayeyama


Description:

Yaeyama (八重山語; Yaeyama: yaimamunii) is a language spoken by around 44,650 people in the Yaeyama Islands, south of the Miyako area of the Ryukyus. It is a Ryukyuan language, most closely related to Miyako. Yaeyama has three dialects, named after the islands they are found on: The speech of the Yaeyaman island of Yonaguni, while closely related, is usually classified as a separate language. The Ryukyuan language split from Proto-Japonic when its speakers migrated to the Ryukyu Islands. Some of the pronunciations that disappeared from Japanese around the 8th century, Japan's Nara period, can still be found in the Yaeyama languages. One example is the initial "p" sound, which in Japanese became an "h," while remaining a "p" in Yaeyama.

While the Yaeyama language was more "conservative" in some aspects, in the sense of preserving certain pronunciations, in other aspects it was more innovative. One example is the vowel system. Old Japanese had 5-8 vowels; this has been reduced to 5 in modern Japanese, but in Yaeyaman , vowel reduction has progressed further, to 3 vowels. Generally, when modern Japanese has an "e," the Yaeyama cognate will have an "i" (this is seen in "puni," above); and..... full article at Wikipedia

Location of Yaeyama Language Speakers

http://llmap.org/languages/rys/static_map.png?width=400&height=300&kilroywashere=.png

Overview

Main Country: Japan
Spoken In:

Regions: Asia

ISO 639-3 Code: rys

Classification Taxonomy

All Languages

  Japanese Family Group

    Ryukyuan Group

      Sakishima Group

        Yaeyama Language