HOW CAN WE CHOOSE AN ORTHOGRAPHY FOR OKINAWAN? Adapting the concepts of acceptability and usability to assist Okinawan orthography development
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Date
2025-06-19
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Abstract
Okinawan, one of the Ryukyuan languages, is in the process of being replaced by Japanese. While there
are ongoing revitalization efforts, large-scale education has yet to be introduced. One hindrance to this
is the lack of a standard orthography, causing anything written in the language to differ greatly
depending on the author. In this thesis, whether Cahill’s (2018) theory of orthography acceptability and
usability should be adapted as a framework for the development of a standard Okinawan orthography
was assessed by examining how the glottal stop and soft vowel onset, a phonemic pair not existing in
Standard Japanese, is represented in Okinawan educational materials. For acceptability assessment, a
dictation task with a native Okinawan was carried out. In addition to this, the orthographies of the two
beginner level teaching materials of Okinawan, Shokyuu Okinawago (Hanazono 2020) and Shimakutuba
Dokuhon -Chuugakusei- (Miyagi 2021), were analyzed. The acceptability of the orthographies was
analyzed with the help of an interview with the informant, and the usability by step-by-step analysis. In
this study the importance of using the concepts of acceptability and usability together was confirmed;
orthography conventions that were suitable from the viewpoint of usability were still rejected due to
acceptability factors, and vice versa. By using both concepts a wide discussion was achieved and
potential points of conflict between the two were successfully discovered, allowing for the pinpointing
of areas that need further study.
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Okinawan language, Ryukyuan languages, Orthography, Phonology, Endangered Languages, Japonic languages, Glottal stop, Soft vowel onset, うちなーぐち, 沖縄語, 琉球諸語, 表記法