ANALYSIS OF LEXICON IN JAPANESE ADULT AND CHILDREN’S LITERATURE. Comparison of Kawauso and Serohiki no Gauche
Abstract
This paper investigates the usage of Japanese vocabulary in two different texts:
Kawauso (The Otter) by Kuniko Mukōda and Serohiki no Gauche (Gauche the
cellist) by Kenji Miyazawa.
Japanese vocabulary is commonly divided into three main lexical classes:
Native Japanese words (NJ, 和語), Sino-Japanese Words (SJ, 漢語) and
foreign loan words (FL, 外来語). In addition, many scholars consider
onomatopoeia as a fourth lexical class. It has therefore been considered as such
in this study.
The framework for this study is based on the work of Yamaguchi (2007) and
the frequency of appearance of the four lexical classes in each of the texts is
measured and compared between each other. The results show that with respect to the total number of words in each
respective text, Mukōda more frequently used NJ, SJ than Miyazawa while FL
was used more frequently by Miyazawa. Both authors however used many
hybrid words, which were not included in this study. Nonetheless, when
comparing the number of appearance of NJ, SJ and FL with respect to the
appearance of those three categories in the texts, the results show very similar
results between both texts. Finally, onomatopoeia was used infrequently, with
Miyazawa using much more than Mukōda.
Degree
Student essay
View/ Open
Date
2016-09-05Author
Widestrand, Mimmi
Keywords
japanska
Japanese vocabulary
native Japanese words
Sino- Japanese words
foreign loan words
onomatopoeia
Mukōda
Miyazawa
Series/Report no.
SPL kandidatuppsats japanska
SPL 2016-044
Language
eng