Hachijō grammar

The Hachijō language shares much of its grammar with its sister language of Japanese—having both descended from varieties of Old Japanese—as well as with its more distant relatives in the Ryukyuan language family.[1] However, Hachijō grammar includes a substantial number of distinguishing features from modern Standard Japanese, both innovative and archaic.

Hachijō is head-final, left-branching, topic-prominent, often omits nouns that can be understood from context, and has default subject–object–verb word order. Nouns do not exhibit grammatical gender, nor do they usually indicate grammatical number.

Pronouns and demonstratives

[edit]

Like Japanese, Hachijō distinguishes first and second person pronouns, and has proximal, mesial, distal, and interrogative demonstratives. Hachijō uses demonstrative pronouns in place of third-person pronouns.

Pronouns

[edit]

The pronominal system of Hachijō has been partly inherited from Old Japanese and partly borrowed from Modern Japanese:[2]

Personal Pronouns
Singular Plural[a]
1st Person[b] ware[c] warera[c]
are[c] arera[c]
2nd Person unu unura ~ una ~ unara
omee omeera
omi omira
omaĭ omaĭra
nare[c] narera[c]
Interrogative: "who" dare[c] darera[c]
Interrogative: "what" ani
  1. ^ In the Uphill and Sueyoshi dialects, a different plural marker -Nsjee ~ -ĭsjee is preferred over the -ra listed here. Due to dialectal differences, it appears in Kashitate as [iɕaː], Nakanogō as [nɕaː], and Sueyoshi as [nɕeː].
  2. ^ Both ware and are are used as first-person pronouns across Hachijō, varying depending on dialect and speaker.
  3. ^ a b c d e f g h The pronominal endings -re and -rera are sometimes contracted to and -ĭra.

The pronouns ware, are, unu, and dare often use irregular nominative/genitive forms with ga: waga, aga, uNga, and daga. The form uNga [uŋ.ɡa] can also be pronounced NNga [ŋ̍ː.ɡa].

Hachijō has a variety of nuances among many of its personal pronouns:

First-person pronouns

[edit]

Unlike Japanese, both ware and are (and their variants) are considered ordinary and show no particular variations with regard to politeness, honorifics, or humility. Instead, they vary in usage based on the speaker, dialect, and context. For example, it is possible for both to appear in the same utterance:

arja waga esjaN topite ikaadaazjaN. (Sueyoshi dialect)

are=(w)a

me=TOP

wa=ga

me=GEN

e=sjaN

house=ORNT

topi-te

dash-PTCP

ik-a(r)-o

go-STAT-ATTR(NMLZ)

=da(r)-o=zjaN

=COP-ATTR=DECL

are=(w)a wa=ga e=sjaN topi-te ik-a(r)-o =da(r)-o=zjaN

me=TOP me=GEN house=ORNT dash-PTCP go-STAT-ATTR(NMLZ) =COP-ATTR=DECL

"I really dashed off towards my house, huh?"
が家へ駆けて行ったんだよね。[3]

Other variations include the contraction of -re to , and the contraction of -re-wa to -ra or -rja when combined with the topic marker wa. For example, uncontracted ware and warewa would be considered more feminine than contracted waĭ and wara in the Mitsune dialect, whereas in the Uphill dialects, ware and warewa would be the norm (with the contracted forms generally unused).

Second-person pronouns

[edit]

Like in Japanese, it is most common to refer to an addressee by name rather than by using a pronoun. Nevertheless, several second-person pronouns do exist:

  • The pronoun omee is honorific, used for individuals of superior status. As the subject of a clause, omee is generally used with other honorific vocabulary such as the verbs ozjarowa ("to go, to come") and tamourowa ("to give").
  • The pronoun omi is polite, used for individuals whom the speaker wants to respect, but for whom the honorific omee would be excessively formal. Aside from a handful of polite verbs like wasowa ("to go, to come") and gouzirowa ("to see"), sentences with omi generally use ordinary vocabulary. The form omi is never seen without a particle.
  • The pronoun omaĭ is between omi and unu, used of those of equal or lower status. It is mildly informal or neutral, and it is often used in place of unu when people outside of the speaker's in-group are present. It is a comparatively new pronoun.
  • The pronoun unu is very informal or familiar, and it is used for family members, and close friends. However it can be somewhat rude or vulgar, depending on the dialect.
  • The pronoun nare is offensive and shows contempt, being used when fighting, arguing, scolding, etc.

The second-person pronouns omee, omi and omaĭ originate in borrowings of Japanese お前 omae "you." In modern Japanese, omae is familiar or derogatory, but it formerly had a respectful meaning, and it is in this respectful usage that it was borrowed into Hachijō.

The pronoun unu has cognates in Old and Middle Japanese 己 ono2 ~ unu "yourself, myself, oneself." Similarly, 汝 na ~ nare "you" is found in Old Japanese (including Eastern Old Japanese) and Early Middle Japanese.

Third-person pronouns

[edit]

Hachijō has no dedicated third-person pronouns. When necessary, demonstratives—most often distal ones—are employed to indicate the equivalent of the third person. For example, when referring to people:

  • ure~uĭ and uĭcu are informal, used for people within one's in-group, as well as for people whom the speaker does not care about showing respect to.
  • The form uno hito (plural uno hitora) is polite, used for people outside of one's in-group. It comes from a compound of uno "that" and hito "person."
  • The form uno kata (plural uno katara) is honorific, used for referring to superiors. It comes from a compound of uno "that" and kata "person (honorific)."

Interrogative pronouns

[edit]

The interrogative personal pronouns are dare "who" for human referents and ani "what" for non-human referents (cognate to Japanese 誰 dare "who" and 何 nani "what"). The pronoun ani is often contracted to aN- when consonant-initial particles are adjoined to it.

Hachijō dare is related to the Old Japanese pronoun ta ~ tare "who," but it is unclear whether the change of initial t to d was borrowed from Japanese or was an independent parallel innovation.

Hachijō ani derives directly from Eastern Old Japanese *ani "what," which is attested indirectly in Eastern Old Japanese compounds like aze "why" and ado2 "whatever" (contrast the Western Old Japanese forms naze and nado2, whence Modern Japanese なぜ naze "why" and など nado "et cetera").[4] There are also a handful of other Hachijō interrogatives historically derived from compounds with ani, such as ada "how," aNde "why," and aNsei "why."

To form indeterminate pronouns from interrogatives, the suffix -ka is added. In contrast to Japanese, this -ka is added after any case suffix, not before, e.g., Hachijō anjoka (ani=o=ka) vs. Japanese 何かを nani-ka o, both "something (accusative case)."

Demonstratives

[edit]

A series of demonstratives similar to modern Japanese's ko-so-a-do series (proximal-mesial-distal-interrogative) also exists in Hachijō:[5]

Proximal (ko-) Mesial (so-) Distal (u-)[a] Interrogative (do-) Japanese Equivalent
Nominal (sg.) -re[b]
"this, that"
kore sore ure dore ~れ -re
Nominal (pl.) -rera[b][c]
"these, those"
korera sorera urera ~ ura dorera ~れら -rera
Person (sg.) -ĭcu
"this person, that person"
koĭcu soĭcu uĭcu doĭcu ~いつ -itsu
Person (pl.) -ĭcura[c]
"these people, those people"
koĭcura soĭcura uĭcura doĭcura ~いつら -itsura
Determiner -no
"this ~, that ~"
kono sono uno dono ~の -no
Location -ko
"here, there"
koko sono uku doko ~こ -ko
Direction -Qci/-QcjaN
"hither, thither"
koQci, koQcjaN soQci, soQcjaN uQci, uQcjaN
aQci, aQcjaN
doQci, doQcjaN ~っち、~ちら(に) -cchi, -chira (ni)
Direction -gata
"hither, thither"
kogata sogata ugata dogata ~っち、~ちら -cchi, -chira
Amount, Extent -odo
"this much, that much"[6]
koudo, koQdo, koroudo soudo, soQdo, soroudo uudo, uQdo, uroudo doudo, doQdo, doroudo
ikura
~れほど -rehodo
Manner, Extent -go͡oN[d]
"in this way, in that way"
kogo͡oN sogo͡oN ugo͡oN dogo͡oN
adaN[e]
~う、~んなに -u, -nnani
Type -go͡oNdoo[d][f]
"this kind of, that kind of"
kogo͡oNdoo sogo͡oNdoo ugo͡oNdoo dogo͡oNdoo
adaNdoo[e]
~んな -nna
  1. ^ In the Kashitate dialect, distal demonstratives are formed with o- rather than u-.
  2. ^ a b Just as with personal pronouns, these -re and -rera can contract to and -ĭra. The form -rera can also become -rara.
  3. ^ a b Plurality is only distinguished for humans; all nonhuman antecedents use singular pronouns regardless of their number.
  4. ^ a b This -go͡oN is shortened from -gooni "in a ~ way, in a ~ manner," a bound morpheme which is perhaps a contraction from a form related to Early Middle Japanese ~が様に ga yaũ ni, akin to Modern Japanese ~のように no yō ni.[7]
  5. ^ a b The form adaN is a compound of ada "how, in what way" and the dative -N.
  6. ^ This -doo is the attributive form of the copular verb dara "to be."

Particles

[edit]

Like Japanese, Hachijō makes extensive use of grammatical particles, which indicate a variety of meanings and grammatical functions. Most parts of speech can use some particles, but the majority of particles are used with nominals (nouns and pronouns). Hachijō's noun-marking particles are classified similarly to their Japanese counterparts into the following categories:

  • Enumerating particles (並べ助詞, narabe-joshi), which mark items in lists.[8]
  • Case particles (格助詞, kaku-joshi), which mark the grammatical cases of nominials. These are further divided into:[9]
    • Standalone cases (連用格, ren'yō-kaku), which indicate self-contained phrases such as the subject or object of a sentence.[10]
    • Adjoining cases (連体格, rentai-kaku), which indicate phrases that are semantically linked to another part of the sentence, e.g., to express possession.[11]
  • Prominence particles (取り立て助詞, toritate-joshi), a broad category that is further divided into:[12]
    • Topic-focus particles (係り助詞, kakari-joshi), which emphasize, restrict, or otherwise indicate a kind of topic or focus related to the words they mark.[13]
    • Adverbial particles (副助詞, fuku-joshi), which turn words into adverbs of degree, extent, etc.[14]

When multiple particles are used on the same noun, they are generally found in the order Adverbial → Case → Topic-Focus.

Enumerating particles

[edit]

Enumerating particles (並べ助詞, narabe-joshi, enum) are few in number, and they are used as conjunctions to join nominals into lists. The main particles of this type are to, ni, toka, da, and ja.

Both to and ni are used for making exhaustive lists, and are used more or less the same as in Japanese. The more usual way to form an exhaustive list is by using to, which is generally placed after every element of a list except the last (where it is optional):

(1)
サトイモサツマイモを煮ておけ。

imoto

imo=to

taro=ENUM

kaNmou

kaNmo=o

sweet.potato=ACC

nitoke.

ni-t(e)-ok-e

boil-PTCP-put-IMP

imoto kaNmou nitoke.

imo=to kaNmo=o ni-t(e)-ok-e

taro=ENUM sweet.potato=ACC boil-PTCP-put-IMP

"Boil a taro and a sweet potato."[15]

(2)
イヌサルキジに引かせて帰って来て

inumeto

inume=to

dog=ENUM

sarumeto

sarume=to

monkey=ENUM

kizimeN

kizime=ni

pheasant=DAT

hikeete

hik-a(s)e-te

pull-CAUS-PTCP

keete

keer-te

go.home-PTCP

kite

ki-te

come-PTCP

inumeto sarumeto kizimeN hikeete keete kite

inume=to sarume=to kizime=ni hik-a(s)e-te keer-te ki-te

dog=ENUM monkey=ENUM pheasant=DAT pull-CAUS-PTCP go.home-PTCP come-PTCP

"Having the dog, and the monkey, and the pheasant pull it, and then coming back home..."[15]

The enumerating particle ni, on the other hand, is used in two main ways; the first use of ni emphasizes that the speaker is recalling the elements of the list, in which emphasized elements of the list are marked by ni and other elements left unmarked:

(3)
紅、白粉、櫛、かんざし、重ねの晴れ着、雪駄の草履、筥迫、鏡、扇、しごき

bene,

bene,

rouge,

osiroini,

osiroĭ=ni,

face.powder=ENUM,

kusi,

kusi,

comb,

kaNzasi,

kaNzasi,

hair.ornament,

kasaneno

kasane=no

layer=GEN

madarani,

madara=ni,

fine.clothes=ENUM,

seQtano

seQta=no

leather.soled.sandal=GEN

zjouri,

zjouri,

sandal,

hakoseko,

hakoseko,

decorative.pouch,

kagamini,

kagami=ni,

mirror=ENUM,

ougini,

ougi=ni,

hand.fan=ENUM,

sigoki...

sigoki

waistband

bene, osiroini, kusi, kaNzasi, kasaneno madarani, seQtano zjouri, hakoseko, kagamini, ougini, sigoki...

bene, osiroĭ=ni, kusi, kaNzasi, kasane=no madara=ni, seQta=no zjouri, hakoseko, kagami=ni, ougi=ni, sigoki

rouge, face.powder=ENUM, comb, hair.ornament, layer=GEN fine.clothes=ENUM, leather.soled.sandal=GEN sandal, decorative.pouch, mirror=ENUM, hand.fan=ENUM, waistband

"rouge, and face powder, a comb, a hair ornament, and a fine layered dress, leather-soled sandals, a decorative pouch, and a mirror, and a hand fan, a waistband..."[16]

The second use of ni is found in binomial expressions such as mesini okazuおかず "rice and a side dish".[16] Unlike the case particle N~ni, the enumerating particle ni is not reduced to N after light syllables.

The particles toka, da, and ja, on the other hand, are used for making inexhaustive lists:

(4)
日傭取りとか何とかの人

hijootoritoka

hijootori=toka

day.laboring=ENUM

aNtokano

an(i)=toka=no

what=ENUM=GEN

hito

hito

person

hijootoritoka aNtokano hito

hijootori=toka an(i)=toka=no hito

day.laboring=ENUM what=ENUM=GEN person

"A person who (does) day labor and whatever else"[16]

(5)
、手鍬、草かきと言って、揃えなくちゃだよ。

magamadaa,

magama=da,

sickle=ENUM,

tegagadaa,

tegaga=da,

hoe=ENUM,

kusakakidaateQte

kusakaki=da=tew-te

grass.cutter=ENUM=QUOT.say-PTCP

soreizunjadoozja

sorei-zu=nja=da(r)-o=zja

gather-NEG.INF=DAT.TOP=COP-ATTR=DECL

jou.

jou

DM

magamadaa, tegagadaa, kusakakidaateQte soreizunjadoozja jou.

magama=da, tegaga=da, kusakaki=da=tew-te sorei-zu=nja=da(r)-o=zja jou

sickle=ENUM, hoe=ENUM, grass.cutter=ENUM=QUOT.say-PTCP gather-NEG.INF=DAT.TOP=COP-ATTR=DECL DM

"When it comes to sickles, and hoes, and grass-cutters, and such, you've got to have them all."[17]

(6)
何か落ちれば

hasija

hasi=ja

chopstick=ENUM

aniQka

ani=ka

what=INDET

otereba

ote-reba

fall-PROV

hasija aniQka otereba

hasi=ja ani=ka ote-reba

chopstick=ENUM what=INDET fall-PROV

"If a chopstick or something falls..."[17]

Case Particles

[edit]

The majority of case particles (格助詞, kaku-joshi) in Hachijō indicate standalone cases (連用格, ren'yō-kaku). The most common standalone case particles are:

Particle Japanese Cognate Explanation and Examples
ga ga Both particles of these particles mark the nominative case (nom), often used to indicate the subject of a clause.
The particle ga is more common than no, but the choice between ga and no is influenced by the subject's animacy (human & proper nouns vs. other nouns) and the type of predicate in the clause. Generally, ga is universally appropriate:

waga

wa=ga

me=NOM

学問嫌いで

gakumoNgireede...

gakumoNgiree=de

learning.hating=COP.PTCP

学問嫌いで

waga gakumoNgireede...

wa=ga gakumoNgiree=de

me=NOM learning.hating=COP.PTCP

"I hate(d) school, and..."[18]

However, inanimate subjects (that is, non-human and non-proper noun subjects) have the option of using no when used with a verb or verbal adjective predicate, especially (but not necessarily) when the predicate is subordinate:

あいつこそ

uika

uĭ=ka

that.person=FOC

asino

asi=no

foot=NOM

速い。

hajake.

haja-ke.

fast-ADJ.EXCL

あいつこそ 足 速い。

uika asino hajake.

uĭ=ka asi=no haja-ke.

that.person=FOC foot=NOM fast-ADJ.EXCL

"That person, for sure, is quick-footed."[19]

(1)
宿と言ってね、宿あったんだよ。

jadoteQte

jado=tew-te

house=QUOT.say-PTCP

noo

nou

DM

jadono

jado=no

house=NOM

aroadoazja.

ar-a(r)-o=da(r)-o=zja

be-STAT-ATTR(NMLZ)=COP-ATTR=DECL.

(Nakanogō dialect)

 

 

jadoteQte noo jadono aroadoazja.

jado=tew-te nou jado=no ar-a(r)-o=da(r)-o=zja

house=QUOT.say-PTCP DM house=NOM be-STAT-ATTR(NMLZ)=COP-ATTR=DECL.

"(He) said (there was) a house, you see, and there was one!"[19]

家は舅親建ててくれて

iiwa

e=o=wa

house=ACC=TOP

sjuutoojano

sjuutouja=no

father.in.law=NOM

tatete

tate-te

build-PTCP

kete

ke-te

give-PTCP

(Sueyoshi dialect)

 

 

iiwa sjuutoojano tatete kete

e=o=wa sjuutouja=no tate-te ke-te

house=ACC=TOP father.in.law=NOM build-PTCP give-PTCP

"This house, my father-in-law built for me, and..."[19]

However, when a predicate is of the form nominal+copula, the subject of its clause generally does not use no.

(Both ga and no also serve as markers for the genitive case—see below in the "adjoining cases" table for more details.)

no no
o~jo o Marks the accusative case (acc), usually used to indicate the direct object of a clause. Due to fusing morphophonemically with its host noun, this particle has several allomorphs, and it has been leveled to jo after non-light syllables (see the section on particle fusion for more details on the various forms of this particle). For an example of direct object use:
(1)
聞きながら、これ食べなさい/つまみなさい。

kikoutei

kik-ou-tei

listen-VOL-SIMUL

korei

kore=o

this=ACC

cumitate

cumitate

snack.on.INF

jare.

jar-e

do(HON)-IMP

kikoutei korei cumitate jare.

kik-ou-tei kore=o cumitate jar-e

listen-VOL-SIMUL this=ACC snack.on.INF do(HON)-IMP

"While you're listening, snack on this."[20]

Like Japanese を wo, it can also be used perlatively, indicating a place through which an action takes place:

(1)
鳥が空飛んでいるよ。

toricubosaga

toricubosa=ga

bird=NOM

teNneijo

teNnei=jo

sky=ACC

makimiQte

mak-i-mik-te

fly-INF-walk-PTCP

arowa.

ar-o=wa

be-ATTR=DECL

toricubosaga teNneijo makimiQte arowa.

toricubosa=ga teNnei=jo mak-i-mik-te ar-o=wa

bird=NOM sky=ACC fly-INF-walk-PTCP be-ATTR=DECL

"Birds are flying around through the sky."[21]

However, contrary to Japanese を wo, Hachijō o~jo is also used with non-verbal and stative predicates like hosikja "to want" (a verbal adjective) and sukidara "to like" (an adjectival noun) to indicate the object of desire, affection, etc.:

(1)
歌や太鼓好きなので

utaja

uta=ja

song=ENUM

teekou

teeko=o

drum=ACC

sukidoode

suki=da(r)-o=de

liking=COP-ATTR(NMLZ)=COP.PTCP

utaja teekou sukidoode

uta=ja teeko=o suki=da(r)-o=de

song=ENUM drum=ACC liking=COP-ATTR(NMLZ)=COP.PTCP

"I like songs and drums, so..."[22]

It can also be used in some situations where Japanese uses the dative-locative に ni instead, such as when marking a person to whom something is said:

(1)
「集まって」と言って

hitou

hito=o

person=ACC

acumaQtouteQte

acumar-tou=tew-te

gather-REQ=QUOT.say-PTCP

hitou acumaQtouteQte

hito=o acumar-tou=tew-te

person=ACC gather-REQ=QUOT.say-PTCP

"telling the person 'Group up!' ..."[21]

Finally, o~jo can attach to nouns in order to show mirativity:

(1)
まぁ、きれいな花!

ai,

wow

deecike

deeci-ke

pretty-ADJ.ATTR

hanoo!

hana=o

flower=ACC

ai, deecike hanoo!

aĭ deeci-ke hana=o

wow pretty-ADJ.ATTR flower=ACC

"My, what a pretty flower!"[23]

(1)

わぁ、

ai,

wow

速い!

hajasoo!

haja-sa=o

fast-ADJ.NMLZ=ACC

わぁ、 速い!

ai, hajasoo!

aĭ haja-sa=o

wow fast-ADJ.NMLZ=ACC

"Wow, how fast!"[23]

This mirative function of o~jo can be used with nominalized attributive forms of verbs. When used without a stative suffix, it expresses surprise at the continuation of an action, and when with a stative suffix, it expresses surprise at the resulting state of an action:

(1)

まぁ、

baa,

baa

oh.my

この人、

kora

kor(e=w)a

this.person=TOP

飲んでる!

nomou!

nom-o=o

drink-ATTR(NMLZ)=ACC

(変化の進行)

 

 

 

まぁ、 この人、 飲んでる!

baa, kora nomou!

baa kor(e=w)a nom-o=o

oh.my this.person=TOP drink-ATTR(NMLZ)=ACC

"Oh my, this person is drinking!" (continuing state)[23]

(1)

もう、

haa,

haa

geez

乾いてる!

kookarou!

kook-ar-o=o

dry-STAT-ATTR(NMLZ)=ACC

(洗濯物が)(変化の結果の状態)

 

 

 

もう、 乾いてる!

haa, kookarou!

haa kook-ar-o=o

geez dry-STAT-ATTR(NMLZ)=ACC

"Geez, (the laundry) is already dry?!" (resulting state)[24]

Mirative o~jo can also be used with the infinitive form, also expressing surprise at a resulting state (similar to using it with the stative & nominalized attributive). This emphasizes the intensity of the action that led to the state:

(1)
まあ、私へたに書いてる!

ai,

wow

aga

a=ga

me=NOM

hetaN

heta=N

unskillful=DAT

kakjo!

kak-i=o

write-INF(NMLZ)=ACC

ai, aga hetaN kakjo!

aĭ a=ga heta=N kak-i=o

wow me=NOM unskillful=DAT write-INF(NMLZ)=ACC

"Wow, I wrote that really badly!"[25]

N~ni ni Marks the dative (dat), used for indicating the recipient of an action, the destination of an action, or the location of a state. In passive sentences, it instead marks the agent of an action. Generally, the form N is usually found after light syllables, whereas ni is usually seen after heavy syllables, though there are exceptions (such as in the second example below). This particle overlaps in usage with the allative i~jii and lative gee.
私の隣に住んでいたオホヨおばさん[26]

waga

wa=ga

me=GEN

tonariN

tonari=N

next.door=DAT

suNde

sum-te

reside-PTCP

aroo

ar-a(r)-o

be-STAT-ATTR

ohojo-obasaN

ohojo-oba-saN

Ohoyo-aunt-HON

waga tonariN suNde aroo ohojo-obasaN

wa=ga tonari=N sum-te ar-a(r)-o ohojo-oba-saN

me=GEN next.door=DAT reside-PTCP be-STAT-ATTR Ohoyo-aunt-HON

"Ms. Ohoyo, the older woman who used to live next to me"

この兄は私二つ年上だ。[26]

kono

kono

this.ATTR

aseiwa

asei=wa

older.brother=TOP

wareni

ware=ni

me=DAT

hutacu

hutacu

two.things

anedaraa

ane=dar-(o=w)a

senior=COP-ATTR=DECL

kono aseiwa wareni hutacu anedaraa

kono asei=wa ware=ni hutacu ane=dar-(o=w)a

this.ATTR older.brother=TOP me=DAT two.things senior=COP-ATTR=DECL

"This older brother is two years older than me."

私は母叱られた。[27]

ara

ar(e=w)a

me=TOP

hooni

hoo=ni

mother=DAT

waikjuuretara

waĭkjuw-are-tar-(o=w)a

scold-PASS-STAT-ATTR=DECL

ara hooni waikjuuretara

ar(e=w)a hoo=ni waĭkjuw-are-tar-(o=w)a

me=TOP mother=DAT scold-PASS-STAT-ATTR=DECL

"I was scolded by my mother."

それが決められない。[27]

areN

are=N

me=DAT

soiga

soĭ=ga

that=NOM

kimerareisi

kime-rare-isi

decide-PASS-DUB

areN soiga kimerareisi

are=N soĭ=ga kime-rare-isi

me=DAT that=NOM decide-PASS-DUB

"That can't be decided by me."

When the dative ni is followed by the topic-marking particle wa, they often coalesce into nja:

(に)は松の木が一本も無くて[28]

manja

ma=nja

now=DAT.TOP

macuno

macu=no

pine=GEN

kiwa

ki=wa

tree=TOP

iQpoNmo

iQpoN=mo

one=even

nakute

na-kute

not-ADJ.PTCP

manja macuno kiwa iQpoNmo nakute

ma=nja macu=no ki=wa iQpoN=mo na-kute

now=DAT.TOP pine=GEN tree=TOP one=even not-ADJ.PTCP

"Now, there isn't even one pine tree left, and..."

今朝(に)は6時に起きた。[28]

toNmetenja

toNmete=nja

morning=DAT.TOP

rokuziN

roku-zi=N

six-o'clock=DAT

okitara.

oki-tar-(o=w)a

awaken-STAT-ATTR=DECL

toNmetenja rokuziN okitara.

toNmete=nja roku-zi=N oki-tar-(o=w)a

morning=DAT.TOP six-o'clock=DAT awaken-STAT-ATTR=DECL

"This morning, I woke up at 6 o'clock."

This case marker is cognate or identical with the infinitive form ni of the copula dara.

i~jii e Marks the allative (all), used for indicating motion toward a place or the purpose for which an action is done. Etymologically from the same source as Japanese へ e, but after phonemically fusing with its host noun and undergoing historical sound shifts, it was leveled to i in most cases and thence became jii after non-light syllables (see the section on particle fusion for more details on the various forms of this particle). Overlaps in usage with the dative N~ni and lative gee.
おばあさんは川洗濯に行ったそうだが[29]

baasamawa

baa-sama=wa

grandma-HON=TOP

kooii

koo=jii

river=ALL

seNtakuN

seNtaku=N

laundry=DAT

ikaraQteiga

ik-ar-ar-(u)=tew-o=ga

go-STAT-STAT-FIN=QUOT.say-ATTR=but

baasamawa kooii seNtakuN ikaraQteiga

baa-sama=wa koo=jii seNtaku=N ik-ar-ar-(u)=tew-o=ga

grandma-HON=TOP river=ALL laundry=DAT go-STAT-STAT-FIN=QUOT.say-ATTR=but

"I hear that Grandma went to the river to do laundry, but..."

後ろ下がれ。[29]

siQtei

siQte=i

back=ALL

sikero

sike-ro

withdraw-IMP

siQtei sikero

siQte=i sike-ro

back=ALL withdraw-IMP

"Step back!"

Hachijō sometimes prefers i~jii to mark the infinitive of purpose, rather than using the dative N~ni:

今日は草取り行くが…[29]

keiwa

kei=wa

today=TOP

kusatorii

kusator-i=i

cut.grass-INF=ALL

ikoga

ik-o=ga

go-ATTR=but

keiwa kusatorii ikoga

kei=wa kusator-i=i ik-o=ga

today=TOP cut.grass-INF=ALL go-ATTR=but

"I will/would go in order to cut the grass today, but..."

gee (?) がり gari Marks the lative case (lat), used for indicating the intended direction or destination of an action.
Overlaps in usage with the dative N~ni and allative i~jii.
その縄板をしいて、乗って揺れるんだよ。[30]

sono

sono

that.ATTR

noogee

noo=gee

rope=LAT

itoo

ita=o

board=ACC

suQtotei,

suk-totei

lay-ANT

noQte

nor-te

ride-PTCP

jurerodara

jur-e-ro=dar-(o=w)a

swing-POT-ATTR(NMLZ)=COP-ATTR=DECL

sono noogee itoo suQtotei, noQte jurerodara

sono noo=gee ita=o suk-totei nor-te jur-e-ro=dar-(o=w)a

that.ATTR rope=LAT board=ACC lay-ANT ride-PTCP swing-POT-ATTR(NMLZ)=COP-ATTR=DECL

"After laying a board on that rope, you can ride it and swing."

この管糸を通して[30]

kono

kono

this.ATTR

kudagee

kuda=gee

pipe=LAT

itou

ito=o

thread=ACC

touii

tous-(te)

put.through-PTCP

kono kudagee itou touii

kono kuda=gee ito=o tous-(te)

this.ATTR pipe=LAT thread=ACC put.through-PTCP

"putting a thread through this pipe..."

Comparisons have been drawn between Hachijō gee, dialectal mainland Japanese gai~gee~gyaa, and Okinawan Nkai—all of allative or directive meaning—tentatively connecting them with the Old Japanese directive suffix ~がり -gari.[31][32]

sjaN さまに sama ni Marks the orientative case (ornt), indicating a direction facing which an action is performed or a state exists. In the Sueyoshi dialect, this particle can instead take the form sima.
カニは横歩く。[33]

garimewa

garime=wa

crab=TOP

jokosjaN

joko=sjaN

side=ORNT

eemowa

eem-o=wa

walk-ATTR=DECL

garimewa jokosjaN eemowa

garime=wa joko=sjaN eem-o=wa

crab=TOP side=ORNT walk-ATTR=DECL

"Crabs walk sideways."

回せば[3]

migisjaN

migi=sjaN

right=ORNT

mawaseba

mawas-eba

turn-PROV

migisjaN mawaseba

migi=sjaN mawas-eba

right=ORNT turn-PROV

"if/when you turn it to the right..."

私が我が家駆けて行ったんだよね。[3]

arja

are=wa

me=TOP

waga

wa=ga

me=GEN

esjaN

e=sjaN

house=ORNT

topite

topi-te

dash-PTCP

ikaadaazjaN

ik-a(r)-o=da(r)-o=zja-N

go-STAT-ATTR(NMLZ)=COP-ATTR=DECL-Q

(Sueyoshi dialect)

 

 

arja waga esjaN topite ikaadaazjaN

are=wa wa=ga e=sjaN topi-te ik-a(r)-o=da(r)-o=zja-N

me=TOP me=GEN house=ORNT dash-PTCP go-STAT-ATTR(NMLZ)=COP-ATTR=DECL-Q

"I really dashed off towards my house, huh?"

[3]

jamasima

jama=sima

fields=ORNT

(Sueyoshi dialect)

 

 

jamasima

jama=sima

fields=ORNT

"towards the fields"

de de Marks the locative-instrumental case (loc), used to indicate the location or situation in which an action is done, or an instrument with which an action is performed.
柄杓水を飲むな。[34]

sjakude

sjaku=de

ladle=LOC

mizuu

mizu=o

water=ACC

nomuna

nom-una

drink-PROH

sjakude mizuu nomuna

sjaku=de mizu=o nom-una

ladle=LOC water=ACC drink-PROH

"Don't drink water with a ladle."

倉の出入口お父さんをぶっ殺して[34]

kurano

kura=no

storehouse=GEN

toboude

tobou=de

entrance=LOC

otoQcaNjo

otoQcaN=jo

father.HON=ACC

buQkoreite

buQ-koros-te

INTS-kill-PTCP

kurano toboude otoQcaNjo buQkoreite

kura=no tobou=de otoQcaN=jo buQ-koros-te

storehouse=GEN entrance=LOC father.HON=ACC INTS-kill-PTCP

"slaughtering his father at the entrance of the storehouse..."

病気血の色が変わったそうだ。[34]

bjoukide

bjouki=de

illness=LOC

cino

ci=no

blood=GEN

iroga

iro=ga

color=NOM

kooraQteija

koor-ar-(u)=tew-o=wa

change-STAT-FIN=QUOT.say-ATTR=DECL

bjoukide cino iroga kooraQteija

bjouki=de ci=no iro=ga koor-ar-(u)=tew-o=wa

illness=LOC blood=GEN color=NOM change-STAT-FIN=QUOT.say-ATTR=DECL

"I hear that his blood changed color when he was sick."

This case marker is cognate or identical with the participle form de of the copula dara.

to to Marks the comitative case com, used to indicate together with whom or what an action is performed, or to indicate the object of comparisons or contrasts in state. Related or identical to the enumerating particle to, but distinct from the quotative particle to and the suffix -to used in certain conditional statements.
どうもおまえとは飲めない。[34]

adaN

adaN

however

nareto

nare=to

you(OFNS)=COM

nomeisi

nom-e-isi

drink-POT-DUB

adaN nareto nomeisi

adaN nare=to nom-e-isi

however you(OFNS)=COM drink-POT-DUB

"There's no way I could ever drink with you."

これ違うのを持って来い。[35]

koito

koĭ=to

this=COM

cigoujo

cigaw-o=jo

differ-ATTR(NMLZ)=ACC

moQte

mot-te

hold-PTCP

ko

ko

come.IMP

koito cigoujo moQte ko

koĭ=to cigaw-o=jo mot-te ko

this=COM differ-ATTR(NMLZ)=ACC hold-PTCP come.IMP

"Bring one that's different from this one."

kara~kaa から kara Marks the ablative case (abl), used to indicate motion away from a place, or a time after which an action progresses. When following the participle form of a verb, it always expresses the meaning "after." The form kaa is a variant with r-elision.
井戸から汲んで[36]

judokara

judo=kara

well=ABL

kuQde

kum-te

draw.water-PTCP

(Nakanogō dialect)

 

 

judokara kuQde

judo=kara kum-te

well=ABL draw.water-PTCP

"Drawing water from a well..."

これはモモから生まれたから。[36]

kora

kor(e=w)a

this=TOP

momokaa

momo=kaa

peach=ABL

umaretoote

um-are-ta(r)-o=(N)te

give.birth-PASS-STAT-ATTR=because

kora momokaa umaretoote

kor(e=w)a momo=kaa um-are-ta(r)-o=(N)te

this=TOP peach=ABL give.birth-PASS-STAT-ATTR=because

"This was because he was born from a peach."

倉の下から臼を転がし出して[36]

kuraN

kura=n(o)

storehouse=GEN

sitakara

sita=kara

underneath=ABL

usuu

usu=o

millstone=ACC

hiQkorogasi-deete

hiQ-korogas-i-das-te

INTS-roll-INF-take.out-PTCP

kuraN sitakara usuu hiQkorogasi-deete

kura=n(o) sita=kara usu=o hiQ-korogas-i-das-te

storehouse=GEN underneath=ABL millstone=ACC INTS-roll-INF-take.out-PTCP

"rolling a millstone out from under the storehouse..."

jori~jei より yori Marks the comparative case (cmpr), indicating a noun that is inferior in a comparison or that is being compared against. The form jei, now old-fashioned, is a variant with r-elision.
あなたのほうが詳しいよ、私より[37]

omeega

omee=ga

you(HON)=GEN

hou

hou

part

kuwasikja,

kuwasi-ke=(w)a

knowledgeable-ADJ.ATTR=DECL

waijori

waĭ=jori

me=CMPR

omeega hou kuwasikja, waijori

omee=ga hou kuwasi-ke=(w)a waĭ=jori

you(HON)=GEN part knowledgeable-ADJ.ATTR=DECL me=CMPR

"You're more knowledgeable—more than me."

今年のサツマイモは去年より少ない。[37]

koNdaNno

koNdaN=no

this.year=GEN

kaNmowa

kaNmo=wa

sweet.potato=TOP

kjoneNjei

kjoneN=jei

last.year=CMPR

kosidara

kosi=dar-(o=w)a

few=COP-ATTR=DECL

koNdaNno kaNmowa kjoneNjei kosidara

koNdaN=no kaNmo=wa kjoneN=jei kosi=dar-(o=w)a

this.year=GEN sweet.potato=TOP last.year=CMPR few=COP-ATTR=DECL

"There are fewer sweet potatoes this year compared to last year."

This particle can also be used like to to indicate an object of contrast:

これ別を持って来い。[37]

koijei

koĭ=jei

this.one=CMPR

becjo

becu=o

different=ACC

moQte

mot-te

hold-PTCP

ko

ko

come.IMP

koijei becjo moQte ko

koĭ=jei becu=o mot-te ko

this.one=CMPR different=ACC hold-PTCP come.IMP

"Bring one that's different from this one."

made まで made Marks the terminative case (term), used to indicate an action or state's progression up until a place or time.
八重根まで行っても[38]

jeenemade

jeene=made

Yaene=TERM

iQtemo

ik-te=mo

go-PTCP=even

jeenemade iQtemo

jeene=made ik-te=mo

Yaene=TERM go-PTCP=even

"Despite going as far as Yaene..."

あなたはここからあそこまでなさってね。[38]

omeewa

omee=wa

you(HON)=TOP

koQkaa

kok(o)=kaa

here=ABL

ukumade

uku=made

there=TERM

sijare

s-i-jar-e

do-INF-HON-IMP

omeewa koQkaa ukumade sijare

omee=wa kok(o)=kaa uku=made s-i-jar-e

you(HON)=TOP here=ABL there=TERM do-INF-HON-IMP

"Please do it from here to over there."

madeN~madeni までに madeni Marks a deadline before which an action takes place or is expected to take place (glossed as "by" below). Etymologically a combination of the terminative case made and the dative case N~ni.
12時までに[37]

zjuunizimadeN

zjuuni-zi=madeN

twelve-o'clock=by

zjuunizimadeN

zjuuni-zi=madeN

twelve-o'clock=by

"by twelve o'clock"

gara~gaa (?) がり gari Marks a noun whose portion, function, or location is being considered (glossed as "portion" in the examples below). The form gaa is a variant with r-elision, and the forms nogara~nogaa (combined with the genitive no) are also seen.
(反物)一尺分、(糸)三匁だよ。[37]

iQsjakugara

iQsjaku=gara

one.shaku=portion

saNmoNmedaraa

saN-moNme=dar-(o=w)a

three-monme=COP-ATTR=DECL

(Nakanogō dialect)

 

 

iQsjakugara saNmoNmedaraa

iQsjaku=gara saN-moNme=dar-(o=w)a

one.shaku=portion three-monme=COP-ATTR=DECL

"For one shaku (of fabric), it's three momme (of thread)."

(魚を)綺麗にして売る人のもとへ持って行って[11]

diaciku

deeci-ku

clean-ADJ.INF

site

si-te

do-PTCP

uro

ur-o

sell-ATTR

hitonogaa

hito=no=gaa

person=GEN=portion

moQte

mot-te

hold-PTCP

iQte

ik-te

go-PTCP

(Nakanogō dialect)

 

 

diaciku site uro hitonogaa moQte iQte

deeci-ku si-te ur-o hito=no=gaa mot-te ik-te

clean-ADJ.INF do-PTCP sell-ATTR person=GEN=portion hold-PTCP go-PTCP

"Cleaning up (the fish) and bringing it to a seller..."

継子の分は三粒粥を炊いて[11]

mamakonogaawa

mamako=no=gaa=wa

stepchild=GEN=portion=TOP

miQcubugeejo

miQcubugee=jo

three.grain.gruel=ACC

nitoQtei

ni-t(e)-ok-te

boil-PTCP-put-PTCP

mamakonogaawa miQcubugeejo nitoQtei

mamako=no=gaa=wa miQcubugee=jo ni-t(e)-ok-te

stepchild=GEN=portion=TOP three.grain.gruel=ACC boil-PTCP-put-PTCP

"boiling three grains' worth of rice gruel for the stepchild's portion..."

Kaneda (2001) notes that gara is unlikely to be a true case-marking particle, but as it occupies a similar spot in the particle hierarchy, it is tentatively included with them. He also notes that gara probably has some relationship with the Old Japanese directive suffix ~がり -gari.

The smaller class of adjoining case (連体格, rentai-kaku) particles is largely based around the genitive case (marked by ga or no) and compounds thereof:

Particle Japanese Cognate Explanation and Examples
ga ga Both particles mark the genitive case (gen), used to indicate possession and similar relationships. Generally, humans use ga, while non-humans use no; The major exceptions are that long-dead historical figures and ancestors can optionally use no, and individualized animals such as pets tend to use ga instead of no. The particle no is also preferred when another particle comes between no and the nominal, such as in the compounds karano and madeno (listed below).
おまえ腰を見ろ。[18]

narega

nare=ga

you(OFNS)=GEN

kosjo

kosi=o

lower.back=ACC

miro

mi-ro

look-IMP

narega kosjo miro

nare=ga kosi=o mi-ro

you(OFNS)=GEN lower.back=ACC look-IMP

"Look at your lower back."

サダイチ家でも[18]

sadaiciga

sadaici=ga

Sadaichi=GEN

edemo

e=de=mo

house=COP.PTCP=even

sadaiciga edemo

sadaici=ga e=de=mo

Sadaichi=GEN house=COP.PTCP=even

"Despite it being Sadaichi's house..."

袋の底無いので[19]

hukurono

hukuro=no

bag=GEN

sokoga

soko=ga

bottom=NOM

naQkede

na-ke=de

not-ADJ.ATTR(NMLZ)=COP.PTCP

hukurono sokoga naQkede

hukuro=no soko=ga na-ke=de

bag=GEN bottom=NOM not-ADJ.ATTR(NMLZ)=COP.PTCP

"Because the bag has no bottom..."

Though it is not common, the genitive no can occasionally be reduced to N:

下から臼を転がし出して[36]

kuraN

kura=n(o)

storehouse=GEN

sitakara

sita=kara

underneath=ABL

usuu

usu=o

millstone=ACC

hiQkorogasi-deete

hiQ-korogas-i-das-te

INTS-roll-INF-take.out-PTCP

kuraN sitakara usuu hiQkorogasi-deete

kura=n(o) sita=kara usu=o hiQ-korogas-i-das-te

storehouse=GEN underneath=ABL millstone=ACC INTS-roll-INF-take.out-PTCP

"rolling a millstone out from under the storehouse..."

Ga is usually preferred over no in the phrase -ga hou (Japanese ~のほう no hou), used to mark something that is superior in a comparison; the hou in this phrase also usually takes no case marker of its own:

あそこのほうはもう少し遠い畑だ。[39]

ukuga

uku=ga

there=GEN

hou

hou

part

maciQto

maciQto

somewhat

toujamadara

tou-jama=dar-(o=w)a

far-field=COP-ATTR=DECL

ukuga hou maciQto toujamadara

uku=ga hou maciQto tou-jama=dar-(o=w)a

there=GEN part somewhat far-field=COP-ATTR=DECL

"That place over there is a field that is a little more distant."

Lastly, the genitive does not necessarily require a noun to follow it, if it can be inferred from context:

あの猫をこの猫に飲まれた。[40]

uno

uno

that.ATTR

neQkomegoo

neQkome=ga=∅=o

cat=GEN=∅=ACC

kono

kono

this.ATTR

neQkomeN

neQkome=N

cat=DAT

nomaretara

nom-are-tar-(o=w)a

drink-PASS-STAT-ATTR=DECL

uno neQkomegoo kono neQkomeN nomaretara

uno neQkome=ga=∅=o kono neQkome=N nom-are-tar-(o=w)a

that.ATTR cat=GEN=∅=ACC this.ATTR cat=DAT drink-PASS-STAT-ATTR=DECL

"This cat drank that cat's (drink)."

no no
karano~kaano からの kara no A combination of the ablative kara~kaa and the genitive no. Means roughly "which is from" or "who is from."
東京からの[11]

kunikarano

kuni=kara=no

mainland=ABL=GEN

kjaku

kjaku

guest

kunikarano kjaku

kuni=kara=no kjaku

mainland=ABL=GEN guest

"a guest from Tokyo"

3時からの宴会[11]

saNzikaano

saN-zi=kaa=no

three-o'clock=ABL=GEN

nigijaka

nigijaka

party

saNzikaano nigijaka

saN-zi=kaa=no nigijaka

three-o'clock=ABL=GEN party

"the party that starts at 3 o'clock"

madeno までの made no A combination of the terminative made and the genitive no. Means roughly "which is until."
出発までの時間[11]

dehunemadeno

de-hune=made=no

go.out.INF-ship=TERM=GEN

ito

ito

timespan

dehunemadeno ito

de-hune=made=no ito

go.out.INF-ship=TERM=GEN timespan

"the time until the boat's departure"

夕方までの宴会[11]

kuregatamadeno

kuregata=made=no

evening=TERM=GEN

nigijaka

nigijaka

party

kuregatamadeno nigijaka

kuregata=made=no nigijaka

evening=TERM=GEN party

"the party that lasts until the evening"

Prominence Particles

[edit]

The first type of prominence particles (取り立て助詞, toritate-joshi) are known as topic-focus particles (係り助詞, kakari-joshi), which introduce either a topic or focus component of a sentence. The particles wa, mo, sika, made, and see do not affect the conjugation of a sentence's verb, while the focus particles ka & koo and the interrogative particle ka do affect it.

Particle Japanese Cognate Explanation and Examples
wa wa (top) Introduces a contrastive topic or new information, often translatable as "as for ~" or "when it comes to ~."
mo mo Introduces an inclusive topic or something related to previously established information, often translatable as "~ also" or "~ too."

When following the participle form of a verb or adjective, mo can be translated with a meaning like "even though" or "even if." The form demo, a compound with the participle de of the copula dara, is a specialized use of this particle.

sika しか shika Used with negative sentences to indicate a sole exception, often translatable as "nothing but ~" or "except ~."
made まで made The same as the terminative case particle made listed previously, but used with a topic-focus meaning. Used to emphasize that even the marked element is to be included despite expectation, often translatable as "even ~."
see さえ sae Shows a similar but stronger type of emphasis as made, again often translatable as "even ~."

Finally, the following three particles affect the inflection of the subsequent verb:

Particle Japanese Cognate Explanation and Examples
ka (?) こそは koso wa (foc) Generally equivalent in use to Classical Japanese こそ koso. Marks a noun as a focused element in the sentence, often translatable as "it is ~ that" or "~ is that which." Requires the main verb of the sentence to be in its exclamatory form rather than a declarative form. To make such sentences tag questions or to add emphasis, the sentence-final particle ga can be added after the verb. Examples can be found in the section on exclamatory kakari-musubi. Sample sentences from NINJAL (1950) show this particle used both in combination with and interchangeably with koso~koo.[41]

Kaneda (2001) hypothesizes that this ka originally comes from an extreme contraction of koso wa.[42]

koo (?) こそは+は koso wa + wa (foc) A contraction of the focus particle ka and the topic-marking wa. Marks a noun as a focused element in the sentence, often translatable as "it is ~ that" or "~ is that which." Requires the main verb of the sentence to use the focalizing extension -naw- in its exclamatory form -nee. To make such sentences tag questions or to add emphasis, the sentence-final particle goo (a contraction of ga and wa) can be added after the verb. Examples can be found in the section on focalized exclamatory kakari-musubi below.[41]

Kaneda (2001) hypothesizes that ka originally comes from an extreme contraction of koso wa, meaning that etymologically, koo (itself from ka-wa) would contain wa twice.[42]

ka ka (q) Although questions in Hachijō can often be expressed without being marked by an interrogative particle, this particle ka serves to explicitly mark questions, particularly yes–no questions. The forms kaa and kaĭ can also be seen in cases where this particle is sentence-final. Details on the usage of this particle can be found in the section on interrogative sentences.

Adverbial particles (副助詞, fuku-joshi) express adverbs of degree, extent, etc.

Particle Japanese Cognate Explanation and Examples
guree ぐらい gurai Expresses that a stated amount or measurement is approximate:
三寸ぐらいに切ってあったかねえ。[43]

saNzuNgureeni

saNzuN=guree=ni

three.sun=about=DAT

kirete

kire-te

be.cut-PTCP

aQtaka

ar-ta=ka

be-JPST=Q

noo

noo

QT

saNzuNgureeni kirete aQtaka noo

saNzuN=guree=ni kire-te ar-ta=ka noo

three.sun=about=DAT be.cut-PTCP be-JPST=Q QT

"I think it might've been cut into roughly 3-sun-long pieces."

It can also be used to indicate something of lowly status:

ぐらいには教えてもいいだろう。[43]

aregureenja

are=guree=nja

me=about=DAT.TOP

oseitemo

osei-te=mo

teach-PTCP=even

jokaNnouzja

jo-kar-(u)-naw-o=zja

good-ADJ-FIN-CNJEC-ATTR=DECL

aregureenja oseitemo jokaNnouzja

are=guree=nja osei-te=mo jo-kar-(u)-naw-o=zja

me=about=DAT.TOP teach-PTCP=even good-ADJ-FIN-CNJEC-ATTR=DECL

"You could at least tell the likes of me."

(In the previous example, areNguree (are=N=guree, me=dat=about) would also be acceptable in place of aregureenja.)

dake だけ dake Expresses that the marked word is unique or exclusive:
私はね、足だけは達者だ。[44]

warja

ware=wa

me=TOP

no,

no

DM

asidakewa

asi=dake=wa

leg=only=TOP

taQsjada

taQsja=da

robust=COP.JPRS

warja no, asidakewa taQsjada

ware=wa no asi=dake=wa taQsja=da

me=TOP DM leg=only=TOP robust=COP.JPRS

"My legs are only thing about me that's strong."

When combined with the demonstratives kore, sore, ure, or dore, this particle instead indicates the extent of an action:

よくあれほど書けたなと思って、私も驚いて[45]

joku

jo-ku

good-ADJ.INF

uidake

uĭ=dake

that=extent

kaketaNnouto

kak-e-tar-(u)-naw-u=to

write-POT-STAT-FIN-FOCLZ-FIN=QUOT

moQte

(o)mow-te

think-PTCP

waimo

waĭ=mo

me=also

sobeite

sobei-te

be.surprised-PTCP

joku uidake kaketaNnouto moQte waimo sobeite

jo-ku uĭ=dake kak-e-tar-(u)-naw-u=to (o)mow-te waĭ=mo sobei-te

good-ADJ.INF that=extent write-POT-STAT-FIN-FOCLZ-FIN=QUOT think-PTCP me=also be.surprised-PTCP

"Even I was surprised, wondering how was I able to write that much, and..."

In older speech, koudake "to this extent" and doudake "to what extent" can also be seen. These are believed to be contracted from earlier forms *ko(re)-hodo-dake and *do(re)-hodo-dake.[46]

baQkari ~ baQkaĭ 許り bakari Expresses the current limit, current extent, etc. of something:
あいつは図体ばかり大きくなって、まだ子供っぽくてダメだ。[46]

ura

ur(e=w)a

that.person=TOP

gakeebaQkai

gakee=baQkaĭ

body=just

bouku

bou-ku

big-ADJ.INF

naQte

nar-te

become-PTCP

maada

maada

still

cigocigosite

cigocigo=si-te

childishness=do-PTCP

damedara

dame=dar-(o=w)a

no.good=COP-ATTR=DECL

ura gakeebaQkai bouku naQte maada cigocigosite damedara

ur(e=w)a gakee=baQkaĭ bou-ku nar-te maada cigocigo=si-te dame=dar-(o=w)a

that.person=TOP body=just big-ADJ.INF become-PTCP still childishness=do-PTCP no.good=COP-ATTR=DECL

"He's grown up in appearance only; he's still childish, so he's no good."

よってたかって私をばかりせめるよ。[46]

horikotonaQtotei

horikotonaQtotei

in.a.crowd

wareibaQkai

ware=o=baQkaĭ

me=ACC=just

semerowa

seme-ro=wa

assail-ATTR=DECL

horikotonaQtotei wareibaQkai semerowa

horikotonaQtotei ware=o=baQkaĭ seme-ro=wa

in.a.crowd me=ACC=just assail-ATTR=DECL

"They all gang up together on just me."

畑で昔はね、春山節ばかりコソ歌ったよね。[47]

jamade

jama=de

field=LOC

mukasiwa

mukasi=wa

long.ago=TOP

noo

nou

DM

harujamapusibaQkarikoa

haru-jama-pusi=baQkari=koo

spring-mountain-melody=just=FOC

utoaNnee

utaw-ar-(u)-naw-e

sing-STAT-FIN-FOCLZ-EXCL

noo

nou

DM

(Nakanogō dialect)

 

 

jamade mukasiwa noo harujamapusibaQkarikoa utoaNnee noo

jama=de mukasi=wa nou haru-jama-pusi=baQkari=koo utaw-ar-(u)-naw-e nou

field=LOC long.ago=TOP DM spring-mountain-melody=just=FOC sing-STAT-FIN-FOCLZ-EXCL DM

"In the old days, the only thing we sang in the fields was 'Spring Mountain Melody,' you know."

あなたがね、百姓をするのも容易じゃないよ、毎日毎日天気だと畑ばかりでね。[6]

omiga

omi=ga

you(POL)=NOM

noo

nou

DM

hjakusjoojo

hjakusjou=jo

peasant=ACC

sjomo

sj-o=mo

do-ATTR(NMLZ)=also

jooizja

joui=de=(w)a

simple=COP.PTCP=TOP

naQkja.

na-ke=(w)a

not-ADJ.ATTR=DECL

mainici hinici

maĭnici-hinici

every.day-date

teNkidato

teNki=da=to

weather=COP.JPRS=if

jamabaQkaride

jama=baQkari=de

field=just=COP.PTCP

naa

naa

DM

(Sueyoshi dialect)

 

 

omiga noo hjakusjoojo sjomo jooizja naQkja. {mainici hinici} teNkidato jamabaQkaride naa

omi=ga nou hjakusjou=jo sj-o=mo joui=de=(w)a na-ke=(w)a maĭnici-hinici teNki=da=to jama=baQkari=de naa

you(POL)=NOM DM peasant=ACC do-ATTR(NMLZ)=also simple=COP.PTCP=TOP not-ADJ.ATTR=DECL every.day-date weather=COP.JPRS=if field=just=COP.PTCP DM

"It's not easy to be a lowly farmer, you know. If it's (hot and sunny) weather day in and day out, all (that there is) is the fields."

hodo hodo Expresses an adverb of degree or extent in comparison to the marked word:
あの人ほどは飲まないよ。[6]

unohitohodowa

uno-hito=hodo=wa

that.ATTR-person=extent=TOP

nomiNnaka

nom-i-Nnak-(o=w)a

drink-INF-NEG-ATTR=DECL

unohitohodowa nomiNnaka

uno-hito=hodo=wa nom-i-Nnak-(o=w)a

that.ATTR-person=extent=TOP drink-INF-NEG-ATTR=DECL

"I won't/don't drink as much as that person."

This particle hodo has specialized forms when combined with demonstratives, and these forms depend on dialect. The major variants are koudosoudouudo, koQdosoQdouQdo, and koroudosoroudouroudo.[6]

(椿油の)二番(搾り)がこのくらい。[6]

nibaNga

nibaN=ga

second.one=NOM

koraodo

koroudo

this.extent

(Aogashima dialect)

 

 

nibaNga koraodo

nibaN=ga koroudo

second.one=NOM this.extent

"The second (squeezing of tea seed oil) (is) about this much."

Nsee ~ Ncjee Broadens the meaning of a noun phrase to include other examples of the same thing or similar things. The form -Ncjee is found in the Sueyoshi dialect. Following the restriction on superheavy syllables, this suffix becomes -see ~ -cjee following a heavy syllable. Cognate with the plural suffix -Nsjee ~ -isjee used for pronouns in the Uphill Dialects and Sueyoshi.

Particle Fusion

[edit]

Some particles, particularly o~jo, i~jii, and N~ni, regularly undergo fusion with their host word:[48]

Bare Form With o~jo (を) With i~jii (へ) With N~ni (に)
a-final ...a ...oo ...ee ...aN
i-final ...i ...jo[a] ...ii ...iN
u-final ...u ...uu ...ii ...uN
e-final ...e ...ei ...ei ...eN
o-final ...o ...ou ...ei ...oN
long vowel-final ...VV ...VVjo ...VVjii[b] ...VVni[c]
N-final ...N ...Njo ...Njii[b] ...Nni
  1. ^ In the Aogashima and Sueyoshi dialects, the sequence ...i + -o yields ...ii rather than ...jo.[20]
  2. ^ a b In the Aogashima dialect, these cases of jii [iː] instead become rii [ɾiː].[49]
  3. ^ In rare and fossilized situations, a long vowel followed by the N~ni particle can instead become a shortened long vowel followed by N. For example, the ending -gooni "in ~ way, in ~ manner" found after demonstratives can be shortened to -go͡oN.[50]

In summary, words ending in light syllables undergo fusion with underlying *o, *i, and *N; whereas words ending in non-light syllables use the static longer forms jo, jii (Aogashima dialect rii), and ni.

In some older texts, the topic-marking particle wa (corresponding to Japanese は wa) can also be seen contracting with host nominals it follows (for example, ...ci + wa...cja), but most such contractions with wa have fallen out of use in the present day.[26] Surviving exceptions generally involve the pronominal ending -re (see below) contracting with wa to make -ra or -rja, or the combination of wa with other particles like -ni-wa-nja.

Verbals

[edit]

Verbal chains

[edit]

All Hachijō verbals (verbs and verbal adjectives) make use of a variety of suffixes to indicate the verb's grammatical and semantic function. Suffixes attach to a phonological base form called the stem, occasionally triggering minor allophony; this combination of a stem and various suffixes creates a verb chain, which is one polymorphemic word. Verbal suffixes can be broadly classified into derivations, endings, auxiliaries, extensions, and postfixes:

Verb derivations attach to the stem and create a longer verb stem to which further suffixes can attach. They can combine with each other, in the order (Stem →) Causative → Passive or Potential → Stative → Retrospective or Past Subjunctive.

Verbal endings are always mandatory, with each verb using one. Endings generally end verb chains, but there are certain suffixes (auxiliaries and extensions) that can restart the verb chain. Depending on the exact function of the ending, the resulting verb can be finite or non-finite.

Verbal auxiliaries are verbs or verblike forms that attach to the infinitive, forming serial verb constructions. Being verbals, they themselves take endings of their own, restarting the verb chain. Verbal extensions are similar to auxiliaries, but attaching to the final form (or a Japanese-style tense) instead.

Verbal postfixes are like auxiliaries and verbal extensions in that they attach verb endings to extend the verb chain, but are also like verbal endings in that they conclude a verb chain.

Derivations Endings Auxiliaries[a] Extensions[b] Postfixes
  • Causative -ase-
  • Passive -are-
  • Potential -e-
  • Stative -ar- ~ -tar-
  • Retrospective -ci
  • Past Subjunctive -oositar- ~ -isitar- ~ -roositar-
  • attributive form -o ~ -ro
  • final form -u ~ -ru
  • infinitive -i
  • negative infinitive -izu ~ -azu ~ -zu
  • conditional gerund -aba ~ -ba
  • imperative form -e ~ -ro
  • exclamatory form -e ~ -re
  • provisional gerund -eba ~ -reba
  • concessive gerund -edou ~ -redou
  • dubitative -oosi ~ -isi ~ -roosi
  • optative -oosunou ~ -isunou ~ -roosunou
  • intentional gerund -oosjaate ~ -isjaate ~ -roosjaate
  • volitional form -ou ~ -rou
  • participle -te
  • requisitional form -tou
  • anterior gerund -toQtei ~ -totei
  • futile-hypothetical gerund -jaatei ~ -rjaatei
  • Japanese-style present -u ~ -ru
  • Japanese-style past -ta and -taQta
  • Japanese-style representative gerund -tari
  • New-Type negative -Nnak-
  • Old-Type negative -Nzjar-
  • -genar- "seems to"
  • honorific -jar-
  • humble -itas-
  • non-intentional -imadow-[c]
  • lexical auxiliaries (-mik-, -das-, etc.)
  • conjectural -naw-
  • focalizing -naw-
  • suppositional -rasi-kja
Attaching to the final form:
  • prohibitive -na
  • jussive -beki
  • Japanese-style negative presumptive -mee

Attaching to the infinitive:

  • simultaneous gerund -gacu ~ -gacura
  • simultaneous gerund -nagara

Attaching to the volitional form:

  • simultaneous gerund -tei

Attaching to a Japanese-style tense:

  • Japanese-style present presumptive -darou
  • Japanese-style past presumptive -rou
  1. ^ Attach to infinitives.
  2. ^ Attach to final forms.
  3. ^ Only attaches to negative infinitive -zu, making -ziimadow-.

While most suffixes follow the above categories and combination rules, there are exceptions, such as nomiziisi "won't not drink," which contains two endings in a row: the negative infinitive -izu and the dubitative -isi.

Lastly, there are several particles that can attach to certain verb forms, usually the attributive, infinitive, or participle. These are considered to be clitics that attach themselves to verb chains, not part of the chain themselves:

  • declarative particles -wa, -zja
  • question particles -ka, -kaN, -ĭ, etc.
  • conjunctional particles -Nte, -karanja, -ni, -de, -ga, -to, etc.
  • case particles -i, -ni, -kara, -o, etc.

Conjugation classes

[edit]

Due to sound changes and other historical developments, the conjugation patterns found in Eastern Old Japanese have separated into several more distinct patterns in Hachijō. The following list of conjugation classes is derived from Kaneda (2001):[51]

Class 1.1A Verbs — Strong Consonant-Stem, Participle Qte
Consonant-stem verbs whose stem ends in a light syllable followed by k, t, r, or a strong w. It also includes the verb jowa "to say," whose stem is nominally *iw- but becomes j- when followed by a vowel. Class 1.1A verbs with stems in w all have only a single short syllable before the w; other w-stem verbs are of Class 1.1A'.
Examples: kakowa "write," katowa "win," torowa "take," kawowa "buy," macikowa "curse," jowowa "get drunk," butowa "hit," jowa "say."
Class 1.1A-uw Verbs — Strong uw-Stem, Participle Qte
Consonant-stem verbs whose stem ends in u followed by a mostly-strong w. They differ from Class 1.1A w-stem verbs only in the attributive and final forms (and derived forms), where uw-o and uw-u contract to uu. Like w-stem Class 1.1A verbs, this class consists of verbs that have only a single syllable before the w. Kaneda classifies these verbs as a special subclass of 1.1A' verbs (subclass 1.1A'a), but they are separated here for clarity.
Examples: nuuwa "sew," kuuwa "eat," suuwa "suck," juuwa "tie up."
Class 1.1A' Verbs — Weak w-Stem, Participle Qte
Consonant-stem verbs whose stem ends in a light syllable followed by a weak w. They can be subclassified into 1.1A'b (stem-final uw-), 1.1A'c (stem-final ow-), and 1.1A'd (stem-final aw-). For some speakers, particularly in Downhill dialects, verbs that once followed this conjugation have been partly or completely converted to Class 1.1B by treating the stative stem (with -ar-) as a new base stem.[52]
Examples: (b) huruuwa "shake," sukuuwa "scoop"; (c) omouwa "think," irouwa "bully"; (d) cukouwa "use," warouwa "laugh," juwouwa "celebrate," -nouwa "(conjectural suffix)."
Class 1.1B Verbs — Strong Consonant-Stem, Participle te
Consonant-stem verbs whose stem ends in a heavy syllable followed by k, t, or r.
Examples: kourowa "freeze," keerowa "go home," koorowa "change," kookowa "dry," cjoorowa "touch."
Class 1.1C Verbs — Semi-Strong r-Stem, Participle Qte
Consonant-stem verbs created from the stative suffix -ar- or another combination with the existence verb ar-, like the copula dara (from de + arowa). Non-verbal adjectives such as heta "unskilled, crude" also can be said to follow this conjugation, as they use the copula dara in order to describe nouns, e.g., hetadoo sito "an unskilled person." Kaneda classifies these verbs as a special class of 1.1A verbs, but they are separated here for clarity.
Examples: dara "be (copula)," oora "be, exist," -(t)ara "(stative suffix)," -Nzjara "(Old-Type negative)."
Class 1.2A Verbs — Strong Consonant-Stem, Participle Nde
Consonant-stem verbs whose stem ends in a light syllable followed by m, b, g, or n.
Examples: kamowa "eat," nomowa "drink," jemowa "smile," asubowa "play," marubowa "die," ojogowa "swim," kasjagowa "slant," cinowa "die."
Class 1.2B Verbs — Strong Consonant-Stem, Participle de
Consonant-stem verbs whose stem ends in a heavy syllable followed by m, b, or g.
Examples: houmowa "contain," eemowa "walk," soogowa "clamor."
Class 1.3A Verbs — Weak s-Stem, Short-Euphonic
Consonant-stem verbs whose stem ends in a light syllable followed by a weak s; this s becomes a coalescing i in certain inflections. For some speakers, particularly in Uphill dialects, verbs that once followed this conjugation are now conjugated as class 1.3B partly or completely instead.
Examples: dasowa "take out," watasowa "send across," modosowa "put back," nabusowa "hide."
Class 1.3A' Verbs — Weak s-Stem, Long-Euphonic
Consonant-stem verbs whose stem ends in a heavy syllable followed by a weak s; this s becomes (non-coalescing) ii in certain inflections. For some speakers, particularly in Uphill dialects, verbs that once followed this conjugation are now conjugated as class 1.3B partly or completely instead.
Examples: tousowa "put through," keesowa "give back," mousowa "say," moosowa "spin."
Class 1.3B Verbs — Strong s-Stem (Non-Euphonic)
Consonant-stem verbs whose stem ends in a light syllable followed by a strong s. It is unclear whether these verbs derive from regularization of Class 1.3A and 1.3A' verbs by eliminating their euphony, or if they never had euphony to begin with.
Examples: hesowa "push," kesowa "erase," kasowa "lend," josowa "quit."
Class 2 Verbs — Vowel-Stem
Vowel-stem verbs. They can be subclassified into Class 2a (ending in i-), Class 2b (ending in e-), Class 2c (ending in ee-), and Class 2d (ending in ei-).
Examples: kirowa "wear," jerowa "insert," keerowa "mix," jamerowa "suffer," meirowa "burn," oseirowa "teach," irowa "sit."
Class 3 Verbs — Irregular
Irregular verbs, which share a mix of features from Classes 1 and 2, as well as other irregularities.
Examples: sjowa "do," (de)kurowa "come."
Verbal Adjectives (VA)
One of the two types of adjectives in Hachijō. Verbal adjectives follow an idiosyncratic conjugation pattern that is supplemented with forms in -kar- (conjugated as Class 1.1C).
Examples: boukja "big," sjokja "known," hajakja "fast," toukja "far," takakja "high," nagakja "long."
New-Type Negative
[53] A hybrid between the Class 1.1C and verbal adjective classes that is used to conjugate the New-Type Negative auxiliary verb. It has a highly variable stem form of -Nnak- ~ -Nnar- ~ -Nnakar-; how it inflects will be noted in the following subsections. It is used in the Downhill Dialects instead of the Old-Type Negative, which instead consists of the regular Class 1.1C auxiliary -Nzjara.
Sole example: -Nnaka "(New-Type negative)."

A table summarizing some of the basic forms of each conjugation class is shown below:

Class Example Attributive Declarative Infinitive Negative Participle Stative Conditional Exclamatory Final[a]
1.1A kak- "write" kako kakowa kaki kakiNnaka kaQte kakar- kakaba kake kaku-
kat- "win" kato katowa kaci kaciNnaka kaQte katar- kataba kate kacu-
tor- "take" toro torowa tori toriNnaka toQte torar- toraba tore toru-
kaw- "buy" kawo kawowa ka(w)i[b] ka(w)iNnaka[b] kaQte kawar- kawaba kawe kau-[b]
iw- "say" jo jowa i(i) iNnaka, iinaka iQte jar- jaba je ju-
[c] -tew- "(reportative)" -tei[d] -teija[e] -teQte
1.1A-uw
(1.1A'a)
nuw- "sew" nuu nuuwa nu(w)i[b] nu(w)iNnaka[b] nuQte nuwar- nuwaba nuwe nuu-
1.1A'b[f] huruw- "shake" huruu huruuwa hurii huriinaka huruQte huruur-[f] huruuba hurii huruu-
1.1A'c[f] omow- "think" omou omouwa omei omeinaka omoQte omoor-[f] omooba omei omou-
1.1A'd[f] waraw- "laugh" warou warouwa waree wareenaka waraQte waroor-[f] warooba waree warou-
1.1B kook- "dry" kooko kookowa kooki kookiNnaka koote kookar- kookaba kooke kooku-
keer- "go home" keero keerowa keeri keeriNnaka keete keerar- keeraba keere keeru-
1.1C dar- "(copula)" doo dara dari
daĭ[g]
*daNnaka[h] daQte[i] darar- da(r)aba dare
daĭ[j]
*daru-[k]
1.2A nom- "drink" nomo nomowa nomi nomiNnaka noNde nomar- nomaba nome nomu-
asub- "play" asubo asubowa asubi asubiNnaka asuNde asubar- asubaba asube asubu-
ojog- "swim" ojogo ojogowa ojogi ojogiNnaka ojoNde ojogar- ojogaba ojoge ojogu-
cin- "die" cino cinowa cini ciniNnaka ciNde cinar- cinaba cine cinu-
1.2B eem- "walk" eemo eemowa eemi eemiNnaka eede eemar- eemaba eeme eemu-
soog- "clamor" soogo soogowa soogi soogiNnaka soode soogar- soogaba sooge soogu-
1.3A das- "take out" daso dasowa dasi dasiNnaka dasite
dee(te)[l]
dasitar-
deetar-
dasaba dase dasu-
modos- "put back" modoso modosowa modosi modosiNnaka modosite
modei(te)[l]
modositar-
modeitar-
modosaba modose modosu-
nabus- "hide (tr.)" nabuso nabusowa nabusi
nabii
nabusiNnaka nabusite
nabii(te)[l]
nabusitar-
nabiitar-
nabusaba nabuse nabusu-
tames- "attempt" tameso tamesowa tamesi tamesiNnaka tamesite
tamee(te)[l][m]
tamesitar-
tameetar-[m]
tamesaba tamese tamesu-
1.3A' tous- "put through" touso tousowa tousi tousiNnaka tousite
touii(te)[l]
tousitar-
touiitar-
tousaba touse tousu-
kees- "give back" keeso keesowa keesi keesiNnaka keesite
keeii(te)[l]
keesitar-
keeiitar-
keesaba keese keesu-
1.3B hes- "push" heso hesowa hesi hesiNnaka hesite hesitar- hesaba hese hesu-
2a ki- "wear" kiro kirowa ki kiNnaka kite kitar- kiba kire ki(ru)-[n]
2b je- "insert" jero jerowa je jeNnaka jete jetar- jeba jere je(ru)-[n]
2c kee- "mix" keero keerowa kee keenaka keete keetar- keeba keere kee(ru)-[n]
2d mei- "burn" meiro meirowa mei meinaka meite meitar- meiba meire mei(ru)-[n]
3 s(j)- "do" sjo[o] sjowa[o] si siNnaka site sitar- saba se, sje su-
k(o)- "come" kuro kurowa ki kiNnaka kite kitar- koba kure ku(ru)-[n]
VA sjo- "known"[p] sjo-ke sjo-kja sjo-ku (sjo-ku nakja)[q] sjo-kute sjo-karar- sjo-kaba
sjo-ka(r)aba[r]
sjo-ke(re)[s] sjo-ke-[t]
*sjo-karu-[k]
New Neg. -Nn(ak)- -Nnoo
-Nnako[u]
-Nnaka -zu -zuto -Nn(ak)arar- -Nn(ak)a(r)aba -Nn(ak)are *-Nnaru-[k]
  1. ^ The final form (旧終止形, kyū-shūshikei) given here should not be confused with the Japanese-style present tense, which occasionally takes different forms.
  2. ^ a b c d e The w in Class 1.1A and 1.1A-uw w-stem verbs is sometimes dropped in pronunciation before i, and always before u, but it the i and u remain distinctly in their own syllable, not combining with the preceding syllable.
  3. ^ This form is a situational contraction of the quotative particle -te followed by the Class 1.A verb iw- "to say," but it is highly defective and conjugates irregularly.
  4. ^ Only usable when followed by the copular participle de or the particle -(N)te "because."
  5. ^ This form is -teiwa in the Aogashima dialect.
  6. ^ a b c d e f In some dialects, especially the Downhill dialects of Mitsune and Ōkagō, Class 1.1A' verbs have been partly or fully converted into Class 1.1A r-stem verbs by treating the stative stem as a new root stem.[52] In such cases, the stative thus requires another addition of -ar- to the (new) stem.
  7. ^ The Class 1.1C copula dara sometimes uses the infinitive ni, but the regular dari ~ daĭ is also used in certain situations.
  8. ^ The copula dara does not use the regular negative paradigms, instead using the phrase zja nakja (←*dewa nakja) with the verbal adjective nakja "not." In addition, due to the order in which suffixes attach to verbs, the stative -(t)ar- never precedes the negative -Nnaka, instead combining as -Nn(ak)ar-ar-.
  9. ^ The Class 1.1C copula dara usually uses the participle de in place of daQte.
  10. ^ In the Class 1.1C exclamatory form, -re can contract to only when followed by the concessive gerund-forming suffix -dou.
  11. ^ a b c The final forms of 1.1C verbs and the New-Type Negative generally reduce the syllable *ru to Q, N, or coalescing u depending on the attached suffix or particle. For example, the particle -to "if" usually uses u, the focalizing and conjectural suffixes -naw- use N, and the reportative -teija uses Q.
  12. ^ a b c d e f In these forms with an elided s, the te of the participle is optional. Dropping it is a characteristic of the Downhill dialects.[54]
  13. ^ a b In this verb, which is the only Class 1.3A verb ending in -es-, *tame(s)i- irregularly becomes tamee-, not the expected **tamei-.
  14. ^ a b c d e Class 2 verbs and kurowa "to come" can sometimes include -ru in their final forms. Where it is optional, the forms lacking -ru are typical of older speech, and the forms with them, of newer speech.
  15. ^ a b The older forms so (attributive) and sowa (declarative) are also attested.[55]
  16. ^ A small number of monomoraic-stem verbal adjectives like jokja "good" and nakja "not" tend to geminate the initial k on many adjectival forms: joQkja, joQke, etc. The forms without gemination are older.[56]
  17. ^ Negative verbal adjectives are formed phrasally with the infinitive -ku followed by the verbal adjective nakja (stem na-) "nonexistent."
  18. ^ The form -kaba reflects Eastern Old Japanese -kaba (EOJ *-ke-aba-kaba),[57] whereas -ka(r)aba uses the Class 1.1C stem -kar- (*-kar-aba-ka(r)aba).
  19. ^ The form -ke is used in isolation (in exclamatory kakari-musubi), whereas -kere is used for forming the provisional and concessive gerunds. As neither reflects the Eastern Old Japanese form -ka,[58] these may be borrowed from Japanese.
  20. ^ This form is only used before the conditional -to.
  21. ^ The form -Nnako is old-fashioned.

Verbal Affixes

[edit]

Attributive -o

[edit]

The attributive form (連体形, rentaikei, attr) is made by adding the suffix -o to the stems of Class 1 verbs, -ro to those of Class 2, and -ke to verbal adjectives'. For irregular verbs, sjowa becomes sjo, and kurowa becomes kuro. This form descends from the Eastern Old Japanese attributive form -o1 ~ *-uro1.

On its own, the attributive serves a similar function to an English relative clause, for defining or classifying nominals:

(1)
今日来た手紙[59]

kei

kei

today

kitoo

ki-ta(r)-o

come-STAT-ATTR

tegami

tegami

letter

kei kitoo tegami

kei ki-ta(r)-o tegami

today come-STAT-ATTR letter

"the letter which came today"

(2)
繭を煮ているとき[60]

meejo

mee=jo

cocoon=ACC

niro

ni-ro

boil-ATTR

toki

toki

time

meejo niro toki

mee=jo ni-ro toki

cocoon=ACC boil-ATTR time

"(at) the time when I was boiling cocoons"

Unlike in Modern Japanese, clauses in Hachijō also can be nominalized directly using the attributive form of a verb (glossed as attr(nmlz)). When nominalized in this way, the clause becomes a noun meaning "the act of ~ing", "the fact of ~ happening", "one who ~s", "that which is ~ed," etc., depending on context. Compare these near-identical constructions in Hachijō and Japanese, where Japanese requires the nominalization particle の no, but Hachijō does not:

(3)
hukurono sokoga naQkede

袋の

hukuro=no

fukuro=no

bag=GEN

底が

soko=ga

soko=ga

bottom=NOM

na-ke

na-i

not-ADJ.ATTR

 

no

(NMLZ)

=de

=de

=COP.PTCP

袋の 底が 無

hukuro=no soko=ga na-ke {} =de

fukuro=no soko=ga na-i no =de

bag=GEN bottom=NOM not-ADJ.ATTR (NMLZ) =COP.PTCP

"Because the bag has no bottom..."[19]

(4)
utaja teekou sukidoode

歌や

uta=ja

uta=ya

song=ENUM

太鼓が

teeko=o

taiko=ga

drum=ACC/NOM

好き

suki

suki

liking

=da(r)-o

na

=COP-ATTR

 

no

(NMLZ)

=de

=de

=COP.PTCP

歌や 太鼓が 好き

uta=ja teeko=o suki =da(r)-o {} =de

uta=ya taiko=ga suki na no =de

song=ENUM drum=ACC/NOM liking =COP-ATTR (NMLZ) =COP.PTCP

"I like songs and drums, so..."[22]

This function of the attributive was also a feature of Japanese up until the early modern period, during which の no became used as a nominalization particle.[61][62]

See also the section on mermaid constructions, which make ample use of the attributive form.

Declarative Particles -wa and -zja
[edit]

The default form of the declarative (断定, dantei, decl) in Hachijō is formed by adding the declarative particle -wa to the attributive form (連体形, rentaikei) of verbs. For a slightly assertive or emphatic statement, the particle -zja can replace -wa. The particles wa and zja come from Old Japanese は pa and にては nite pa → dewa, respectively. The wa-declarative form serves as the dictionary form of verbals.

Originally, these particles followed the Old Japanese attributive in its nominalized form, creating a topicalized nominal;[63] in Hachijō, they have become markers of independent clauses, almost completely supplanting the original final form in this particular use:[64]

(1)
カニは横に歩く。

garimewa

garime=wa

crab=TOP

jokosjaN

joko=sjaN

side=ORNT

eemowa.

eem-o=wa

walk-ATTR=DECL

garimewa jokosjaN eemowa.

garime=wa joko=sjaN eem-o=wa

crab=TOP side=ORNT walk-ATTR=DECL

"Crabs walk sideways."[33]

(2)
鳥が空を飛んでいる

toricubosaga

toricubosa=ga

bird=NOM

teNneijo

teNnei=jo

sky=ACC

makimiQte

mak-i-mik-te

fly-INF-walk-PTCP

arowa.

ar-o=wa

be-ATTR=DECL

toricubosaga teNneijo makimiQte arowa.

toricubosa=ga teNnei=jo mak-i-mik-te ar-o=wa

bird=NOM sky=ACC fly-INF-walk-PTCP be-ATTR=DECL

"Birds are flying around through the sky."[21]

(3)
あの人が飲むから、私も欲しくなるんだ

uiga

uĭ=ga

that.person=NOM

nomunou

nom-u-naw-u

drink-FIN-FOCLZ-JPRS

aimo

aĭ=mo

me=also

hosiku

hosi-ku

wanting-INF

narodoozja.

nar-o=da(r)-o=zja

become-ATTR(NMLZ)=COP-ATTR=DECL

uiga nomunou aimo hosiku narodoozja.

uĭ=ga nom-u-naw-u aĭ=mo hosi-ku nar-o=da(r)-o=zja

that.person=NOM drink-FIN-FOCLZ-JPRS me=also wanting-INF become-ATTR(NMLZ)=COP-ATTR=DECL

"That person will drink, so I will want some, too."[65]

With verbal adjectives, the attributive -ke merges with -wa to become -kja:

(4)
あなたのほうが詳しいよ、私より。

omeega

omee=ga

you(HON)=GEN

hou

hou

part

kuwasikja,

kuwasi-ke=(w)a

well.informed-ADJ.ATTR=DECL

waijori.

waĭ=jori

me=CMPR

omeega hou kuwasikja, waijori.

omee=ga hou kuwasi-ke=(w)a waĭ=jori

you(HON)=GEN part well.informed-ADJ.ATTR=DECL me=CMPR

"You're better informed—more than me."[37]

Verbs of Class 1.1C also merge their attributive with -wa, contracting -owa irregularly to -a. For instance, the copula dara has the attributive form *dar-odoo, but this is blocked by the addition of -wa, as -owa contracts to -a instead, viz., *dar-o-wadara.

(5)
実が生ったよ

miga

mi=ga

fruit=NOM

narara.

nar-ar-(o=w)a

grow-STAT-ATTR=DECL

miga narara.

mi=ga nar-ar-(o=w)a

fruit=NOM grow-STAT-ATTR=DECL

"Fruit has grown."[66]

(6)
私は母に叱られ

ara

ar(e=w)a

me=TOP

hooni

hoo=ni

mother=DAT

waikjuuretara.

waĭkjuw-are-tar-(o=w)a

scold-PASS-STAT-ATTR=DECL

ara hooni waikjuuretara.

ar(e=w)a hoo=ni waĭkjuw-are-tar-(o=w)a

me=TOP mother=DAT scold-PASS-STAT-ATTR=DECL

"I was scolded by my mother."[27]

A similar variation can be seen in the New Negative, which has the attributive form *-Nnako-Nnoo but a declarative form *-Nnakowa-Nnaka.

(7)
免許が無くて、運転できない

meNkjoga

meNkjo=ga

license=NOM

naQkeNte

na-ke=Nte

not-ADJ.ATTR=because

uNteN

uNteN

driving

sareNnaka.

s-are-Nnak-(o=w)a

do-PASS.INF-NEG-ATTR=DECL

meNkjoga naQkeNte uNteN sareNnaka.

meNkjo=ga na-ke=Nte uNteN s-are-Nnak-(o=w)a

license=NOM not-ADJ.ATTR=because driving do-PASS.INF-NEG-ATTR=DECL

"Since you don't have a license, you can't drive." (possible state)[67]

(8)
カラスに取られて手には入れられないよ

karasumeN

karasume=N

crow=DAT

torarete

tor-are-te

take-PASS-PTCP

tedoreNnaka.

tedor-e-Nnak-(o=w)a

obtain-POT.INF-NEG-ATTR=DECL

karasumeN torarete tedoreNnaka.

karasume=N tor-are-te tedor-e-Nnak-(o=w)a

crow=DAT take-PASS-PTCP obtain-POT.INF-NEG-ATTR=DECL

"It was taken by crows, so you're not going to be able to get it."[40]

The declarative particle zja has no special contracted forms, always attaching directly to the attributive, e.g., nomozja "drinks," doozja "is." It has also been noted to take the form -zjaN in the Sueyoshi dialect.

Other particles used with the attributive
[edit]

Because of its nominalization function, the attributive form can be followed by any particle that can follow a noun, such as case particles. However, in addition, there are several other particles can also attach particularly to the attributive forms of verbals:

Particle Japanese Cognate Meaning
-go͡oN "let's" (?) ~が様に ga yō ni Creates a cohortative predicate, suggesting that the speaker and listener do something together.[68]
-ga "but, yet" ~が ga Marks the verb as contrasting with the following clause. In many cases, the following clause is left implicit.[69]
-Nte "because" ~によって ni yotte Marks the verb as a reason or cause; the following clause is its result or consequence.[70]
-karanja "now that" ~からには kara ni wa A combination of the ablative -kara, dative -ni, and topic marker -wa. Marks the verb as an action that has completed, and as a result of its completion, the speaker is commanding or advising the listener to do something. This form always follows a verb with the stative, and it is followed by a verb with a commanding or hortative meaning.[71]

The clitic -Nte is a shortened form of -joNte, itself an extreme contraction and metathesis of -ni joQte, related to Japanese ~によって ni yotte "due to, by means of."[69] This clitic has significant variance between dialects when it occurs after long vowels, shown here on ikowa "to go" as an example:[72]

Dialect After iko "goes" After ikoo "went"
Mitsune ikoNte [ikonte] ikoote [ikoːte]
Ōkagō ikoNte [ikonte] ikoote [ikoːte]
Kashitate ikoĭte [ikoite] ikoaite [ikoɐite][a]
Nakanogō ikoNte [ikonte] ikoaNte [ikoɐnte][b]
Sueyoshi ikoNte [ikonte] ikaaNte [ikaːnte][b]
Aogashima[73] ikoNte [ikonte] ikoote ~ ikaote [ikoːte ~ ikɔute]
Minami Daitō[74] ikoNte [ikonte] ikoote [ikoːte]
  1. ^ Whether this is a case of a superheavy triphthong [i.koɐi.te] or separate syllables [i.koɐ.i.te] is not clear.
  2. ^ a b Whether this is a case of a superheavy syllable [i.koɐn.te ~ i.kaːn.te] or a syllabic N [i.koɐ.n̩.te ~ i.kaː.n̩.te] is not clear.

Some speakers of the Nakanogō and Kashitate dialects were also noted to have used the older form -joNte [jonte] after both long and short vowels as late as 1950.[72]

Infinitive -i

[edit]

The infinitive (連用形, ren'yōkei, lit. "connective-use form," inf) is made by adding the suffix -i to the stems of Class 1 verbs, nothing to those of Class 2, and -ku to verbal adjectives'. For irregular verbs, sjowa becomes si, and kurowa becomes ki. This form descends from the Old Japanese infinitive -i1. Negative verbs also have a suppletive infinitive form where the whole negative auxiliary -Nnaka or -Nzjara is replaced by -zu, from Old Japanese -zu-ni su (possibly reborrowed through Japanese).

This is a non-finite form used similarly to Japanese's infinitive: to link several verbs in a clause, for serial verb constructions, attaching auxiliary verbs, as a method of nominalizing verbs, etc.

Infinitive as an Independent Predicate
[edit]

Certain independent predicates can make use of the infinitive form instead of an ordinary finite predicate.

Simple infinitive predicates can be used to refer to actions in the immediate past, or to indicate that the speaker is speaking to themself, or both:

(1)
それで、全部入っ!(ボールがゲートに)[75]

soide

soĭ=de

that=LOC

zeNbu

zeNbu

everything

heeri!

heer-i

enter-INF

soide zeNbu heeri!

soĭ=de zeNbu heer-i

that=LOC everything enter-INF

"And with that, all (of the balls) have entered (in the gate)." (immediate past)

(2)
ああ、終わっ[76]

aa

aa

ah

owari!

owar-i

end-INF

aa owari!

aa owar-i

ah end-INF

"Ah, it's over!" (immediate past)

(3)
私は悲しいテレビを見ると、すぐ泣けてくる。[77]

ara

ar(e=w)a

me=TOP

kanasike

kanasi-ke

sad-ADJ.ATTR

terebjo

terebi=o

television=ACC

miruto,

mi-ru=to

see-JPRS=if

sugu

sugu

soon

benarare.

benar-are

cry-PASS.INF

ara kanasike terebjo miruto, sugu benarare.

ar(e=w)a kanasi-ke terebi=o mi-ru=to sugu benar-are

me=TOP sad-ADJ.ATTR television=ACC see-JPRS=if soon cry-PASS.INF

"Whenever I watch a sad television show, I quickly start crying." (speaking to self)

(4)
あいつはいつも変なことを言う。[78]

ura

ur(e=w)a

that.person=TOP

icumo

icu=mo

when=also

heNdoo

heN=da(r)-o

strange=COP-ATTR

kotou

koto=o

thing=ACC

ii.

iw-i

say-INF

ura icumo heNdoo kotou ii.

ur(e=w)a icu=mo heN=da(r)-o koto=o iw-i

that.person=TOP when=also strange=COP-ATTR thing=ACC say-INF

"That person always says strange things." (speaking to self)

(5)
まったく、尻尾の切れたトカゲのようにすぐ戻っ[76]

aasike

aasike

INTERJ

obakirekeebjouno

oba-kire-keebjou=no

tail-cut-lizard=GEN

goN

go͡oN

way

sugu

sugu

soon

hiNmodori.

hiQ-modor-i

INTS-return-INF

aasike obakirekeebjouno goN sugu hiNmodori.

aasike oba-kire-keebjou=no go͡oN sugu hiQ-modor-i

INTERJ tail-cut-lizard=GEN way soon INTS-return-INF

"Honestly, it came back just like a lizard's tail does when cut off." (immediate past & speaking to self)

In a reduplicated form with -mo "also, even," specifically of the form nomimo nomi (for nomowa "to drink"), infinitive predicates are used to assert of the truth of the speaker's statement. This kind of statement is used without regard to time:

(6)
もちろん来るとも[79]

dekimo

dek-i=mo

come-INF=also

deki.

dek-i

come-INF

dekimo deki.

dek-i=mo dek-i

come-INF=also come-INF

"(I) will certainly come." (future reference)

(7)
あるとも。たくさんあるよ。[79]

arimo

ar-i=mo

be-INF=also

ari.

ar-i

be-INF

siQkari

siQkari

greatly

arozja.

ar-o=zja

be-ATTR=DECL

(Nakanogō dialect)

 

 

arimo ari. siQkari arozja.

ar-i=mo ar-i siQkari ar-o=zja

be-INF=also be-INF greatly be-ATTR=DECL

"Of course there are (some). There are a lot!" (present reference)

(8)
確かに)いびきをかいていたよ。[79]

igoroo

igoro=o

snoring=ACC

sikimo

sik-i=mo

spread(?)-INF=also

siki.

sik-i

spread(?)-INF

(Nakanogō dialect)

 

 

igoroo sikimo siki.

igoro=o sik-i=mo sik-i

snoring=ACC spread(?)-INF=also spread(?)-INF

"It's true; I used to snore." (past reference)

(9)
今も飲んでる?/(もちろん)飲んでるよ。[80]

maNmo

ma=N=mo

now=DAT=even

noNde

nom-te

drink-PTCP

aroka?

ar-o=ka

be-ATTR=Q

/

/

/

noNde

nom-te

drink-PTCP

arimo

ar-i=mo

be-INF=also

ari.

ar-i

be-INF

maNmo noNde aroka? / noNde arimo ari.

ma=N=mo nom-te ar-o=ka / nom-te ar-i=mo ar-i

now=DAT=even drink-PTCP be-ATTR=Q / drink-PTCP be-INF=also be-INF

"Do you still drink? / Of course I drink." (general reference)

Another use of an infinitive predicate can be found in certain types of questions, as discussed in a section below.

Infinitive-Derived Expressions
[edit]

A number of auxiliary verbs can be used with the infinitive, all of which are derived from grammaticalized verbs:

Auxiliary Class Independent Cognate Example
-mikowa 1.1A mikowa "to walk" nomimikowa "does things like drinking"
-hazimerowa 2b hazimerowa "to start" nomihazimerowa "starts to drink"
-dasowa 1.3A dasowa "to send out" nomidasowa "starts to drink"
-dousowa
-tousowa
1.3A' tousowa "to put through" nomidousowa "completely finishes drinking"
-cuzukerowa 2b cuzukerowa "to continue" nomicuzukerowa "continues to drink"
-kirowa 1.1A kirowa "to cut" nomikirowa "completely finishes drinking"
-genara 1.1C -ge "seeming" + nar- "(copula)"[a] nomigenara "seems to drink"
-jarowa 1.1A jarowa "to give" (honorific) nomijarowa "(an esteemed person) drinks"
-itasowa 1.3A[81] itasowa "to do (humble)" nomiitasowa "(I) humbly drink"
  1. ^ Either fossilized from earlier Hachijō or borrowed from Middle Japanese なり nar-.

The negative verbal auxiliaries -Nnaka and -Nzjara, discussed in a later subsection, are also attached to the infinitive.

Similarly, there are a number of derived adjectives or adjective-like expressions built on the infinitive form:

Auxiliary Class Independent Cognate Example
-takja VA itakja "painful"[a] nomitakja "wants to drink"[83]
-soudara 1.1C そう -sō[b] + dara "(copula)" nomisoudara "seems to drink"[84]
-siNdara 1.1C siN "(etymology unknown)" + dara "(copula)" nomisiNdara "is welcome to drink, is allowed to drink"[85]
-tedara 1.1C te "hand" + dara "(copula)" nomitedara "is someone who can drink"[86]
  1. ^ Or calqued from Japanese ~たい -tai, from 痛い ita-i "painful,"[82] the cognate to itakja.
  2. ^ Borrowed from Japanese.

And several conjunctional forms as well:

  • reduplicated (e.g., nominomi) — Indicates that an action is iterative. Used by itself, it serves as an adverbial phrase indicating that the iterative action was performed simultaneously with another, whereas when used with sjowa "to do" (e.g., nominomi sjowa), it simply indicates repeated action. Reduplicated verbs do not undergo vowel coalescence, e.g., okoriokori "happening again and again," not **okorjokori.
  • -nagara ~ -nagaa — Indicates that an action is performed simultaneously with another, e.g. nominagara "while drinking." This formation is synonymous with the simultaneous gerund in -outei. Cognate with Japanese ~ながら -nagara.[87]
  • -gacu ~ -gacura — Indicates that an action is performed simultaneously with another, often coincidentally or through the exact same action, e.g. nomigacu "while one happens to be drinking." This form is limited to verbs that involve agency on the subject's part, and is also not usually used with motion verbs without an implicit endpoint (e.g., eemowa "walk," hasirowa "run"), intransitive bodily activities or functions (e.g. tatowa "stand"), or transitive verbs where an action is performed only once to one object (e.g., sasagowa "put on one's head"). Related to Japanese ~がてら -gatera.[88]
  • -i (allative) or -ni (dative) — Indicates the purpose for which another action was performed, e.g. nomii or nomini "in order to drink." Using the allative -i is the more common than the dative -ni for this purpose, but both can be found.[89]

Negative Infinitive -zu

[edit]

The negative infinitive (neg.inf) can be made in two different ways. The first way is by simply appending -zu to the regular infinitive form, e.g., nomizu "not drinking" (but is treated here as its own suffix). The second way is by adding -azu to the stems of Class 1 verbs, and -zu to those of Class 2. In this latter way, for irregular verbs, sjowa becomes sazu, sjazu, or sezu;[90] and kurowa becomes kozu.

The negative infinitive is used in many of the same situations that the regular infinitive is used word-finally (that is, without any suffixes). However, there are some specialized constructions used with -zu:

  • -zuN ~ -zuni (-zu-ni, neg.inf-dat), which acts as an adverbial phrase meaning "without ~ing," e.g., nomazuN "without drinking." It can also be used with a similar meaning to a negative participle.
  • -zunja (-zu-nja, neg.inf-dat.top), which acts as an adjectival noun and expresses necessity, e.g., nomazunjadara "must drink, have to drink." This form likely originally meant "if one does not ~," to be followed by a phrase such as damedara "it would not be good," but only the copula dara has remained.[91] Compare Japanese ~なきゃ -nakya, ~なくちゃ -nakucha, and ~ないと -nai to, which literally mean "if one does not," but can express a necessitative meaning even without a following clause.

In addition, there are a handful of derived forms from -zu:

  • Negative Participle -zuto (neg.ptcp), used for conjunctive constructions with the particle -mo "even," e.g., nomazutomo "even not drinking, even if he doesn't drink."[92] In general, this competes as the negative participle with -Nsjade and the dative-marked -zuN ~ -zuni.
  • Negative Dubitative -ziisi (-zu-isi, neg.inf-dub), used as a kind of double negative to show what is not doubted, etc. (e.g., nomiziisi "won't not drink").[93] This competes with the regularly-formed -Nnakaroosi and Nzjaroosi, formed from the negative auxiliaries -Nnaka and -Nzjara.
  • Non-Intentional -ziimadouwa (-zu-imadow-, neg.inf-try), a derived Class 1.1A'c verb that expresses a lack of trying to do something, or seeming not to do something, e.g., nomaziimadouwa "doesn't try to drink." This appears to be a compound involving the verb 惑う madouwa "to get lost, to be perplexed."[94]

Participle -te

[edit]

The participle (中止形, chūshikei, lit. "interrupting form," ptcp) is made by adding the suffix -te or -de to the stems of Class 1 (with some allomorphy), -te to those of Class 2, and -kute to verbal adjectives'. For irregular verbs, sjowa becomes site, and kurowa becomes kite. This grammatical form and its cognates across the Japonic languages are known by many names, including "participle," "gerund," "continuative," "subordinating," and simply "te-form"; the term "participle" will be used here. This form descends from the Old Japanese subordinating suffix -te, which was historically added to the infinitive but has gained a great degree of allomorphy due to historical sound changes, so it is treated as its own suffix here.

The participle is a non-finite form that serves a coordinating or subordinating role in sentences, indicating the realization (at the very least, the beginning) of the marked action. Therefore, the clause following a participle must necessarily refer to either the same time or a later time:

(1)
いつか夏が来川でドジョウを掬いたいなあ。[95]

icuka

icu=ka

when=INDET

nacuga

nacu=ga

summer=NOM

kite

ki-te

come-PTCP

koode

koo=de

river=LOC

zjoNzjoumei

zjoNzjoume=o

loach=ACC

sukuuroosiga.

sukuw-ar-oosi=ga

scoop-STAT-DUB=but

icuka nacuga kite koode zjoNzjoumei sukuuroosiga.

icu=ka nacu=ga ki-te koo=de zjoNzjoume=o sukuw-ar-oosi=ga

when=INDET summer=NOM come-PTCP river=LOC loach=ACC scoop-STAT-DUB=but

"Sometime, when summer comes, I'd like to scoop up loaches at the river."

(2)
さっき畑から帰るときに雨に降られ大変だったよ。[96]

haNzume

haNzume

just.now

jamakaa

jama=kaa

field=ABL

keero

keer-o

return-ATTR

tokiN

toki=N

time=DAT

ameni

ame=ni

rain=DAT

hurarete

hur-are-te

fall-PASS-PTCP

taiheNdarara.

taĭheN=dar-ar-(o=w)a

awful=COP-STAT-ATTR=DECL

haNzume jamakaa keero tokiN ameni hurarete taiheNdarara.

haNzume jama=kaa keer-o toki=N ame=ni hur-are-te taĭheN=dar-ar-(o=w)a

just.now field=ABL return-ATTR time=DAT rain=DAT fall-PASS-PTCP awful=COP-STAT-ATTR=DECL

"Just now, when I was returning from the fields, I got rained on, and it was awful."

(3)
ウチワの風に扇がれ、伝票が飛んでいった。[40]

uciwano

uciwa=no

uchiwa=GEN

kazeN

kaze=N

wind=DAT

aworarete

awor-are-te

fan-PASS-PTCP

deNpjouga

deNpjou=ga

payment.slip=NOM

hiNmakara.

hiQ-mak-ar-(o=w)a

INTS-fly-STAT-ATTR=DECL

uciwano kazeN aworarete deNpjouga hiNmakara.

uciwa=no kaze=N awor-are-te deNpjou=ga hiQ-mak-ar-(o=w)a

uchiwa=GEN wind=DAT fan-PASS-PTCP payment.slip=NOM INTS-fly-STAT-ATTR=DECL

"When fanned by the wind of the uchiwa, the payment slips flew away."

Due to the temporal ordering implied by the participle, it can be used to imply a causal relationship:

(4)
(水が)冷たくてどうもこれで浴びられない。[97]

hjaQkokute

hjaQko-kute

cold-ADJ.PTCP

adaN

adaN

however

koide

koĭ=de

this.thing=LOC

abiroosi.

abi-roosi

bathe-DUB

hjaQkokute adaN koide abiroosi.

hjaQko-kute adaN koĭ=de abi-roosi

cold-ADJ.PTCP however this.thing=LOC bathe-DUB

"(This water) is cold, so there's no way I'd bathe in it."

(5)
カラスに取られ手には入れられないよ。[40]

karasumeN

karasume=N

crow=DAT

torarete

tor-are-te

take-PASS-PTCP

tedoreNnaka.

tedor-e-Nnak-(o=w)a

obtain-POT.INF-NEG-ATTR=DECL

karasumeN torarete tedoreNnaka.

karasume=N tor-are-te tedor-e-Nnak-(o=w)a

crow=DAT take-PASS-PTCP obtain-POT.INF-NEG-ATTR=DECL

"It was taken by crows, so you're not going to be able to get it."

(6)
袋の底が無いの[19]

hukurono

hukuro=no

bag=GEN

sokoga

soko=ga

bottom=NOM

naQkede

na-ke=de

not-ADJ.ATTR(NMLZ)=COP.PTCP

hukurono sokoga naQkede

hukuro=no soko=ga na-ke=de

bag=GEN bottom=NOM not-ADJ.ATTR(NMLZ)=COP.PTCP

"Because the bag has no bottom..."

Lastly, the participle can also be used to mark mirativity or emphasis in verbs of sensation or emotion:[98]

(7)
ああ、心臓がドキドキしている![99]

wow

siNzouga

siNzou=ga

heart=NOM

dokidokisite!

dokidoki=si-te

thumping=do-PTCP

oĩ siNzouga dokidokisite!

oĩ siNzou=ga dokidoki=si-te

wow heart=NOM thumping=do-PTCP

"Oh my, my heart is pounding!"

(8)
ああ、痺れが切れ(てき)た![100]

wow

sjuuburiga

sjuuburi=ga

numbness=NOM

kirete!

kire-te

be.cut-PTCP

oĩ sjuuburiga kirete!

oĩ sjuuburi=ga kire-te

wow numbness=NOM be.cut-PTCP

"Ah, (it) has gone numb!"

(9)
ああ、腹が立つ![101]

wow

kimeiga

kimo-e=ga

liver-area=NOM

meite

mei-te

burn-PTCP

meite!

mei-te

burn-PTCP

oĩ kimeiga meite meite!

oĩ kimo-e=ga mei-te mei-te

wow liver-area=NOM burn-PTCP burn-PTCP

"Ugh, I'm so pissed off!"

Participle-Derived Expressions
[edit]

The participle has a few specialized uses when combined with certain particles:

Combination Japanese Cognate Particles Used Example
-tewa
-cja
~ては -te wa
~ちゃ -cha
topic -wa noNdewa ~ noNzja "if one drinks"
-tekara ~ては -te kara ablative -kara noNdekara "after drinking"
-temo ~ても -te mo -mo "also, even" noNdemo "even if one drinks, even drinking"

Several verbs are also used in common constructions with the participle:

Auxiliary Class Independent Cognate Example
-te arowa 1.1A~1.1C arowa "to be" noNde arowa "is drinking, has drunk"[a]
-te ikowa 1.1A ikowa "to go" noNde ikowa "goes drinking, drinks away, etc."
-te kurowa
-te dekurowa
3 (de)kurowa "to come" noNde kurowa "comes drinking, starts to drink, etc."
-te simouwa 1.1A'd simouwa "to finish doing" noNde simouwa "drinks completely, accidentally drinks"
-te mirowa 2a mirowa "to see" noNde mirowa "tries to drink"
-te miserowa 2b miserowa "to show" noNde miserowa "proves that (he) can drink"
-te miNnaka
-te miNzjara
New Neg.
1.1C
mirowa "to see" + Negative noNde miNnaka "has never drunk"
-tokowa
-te okowa
1.1A okowa "to put" noNdokowa "drinks (for a later purpose)"
  1. ^ Unlike Modern Japanese ~てある -te aru, which has a passive perfect meaning, Hachijō -te arowa expresses a progressive or stative meaning close to Japanese ~ている -te iru.

Anterior -toQtei

[edit]

The anterior gerund (先行形, senkōkei, ant) can be made by replacing the -te or -de of the participle with -totei ~ -toQtei or -dotei ~ -doQtei, respectively. The form -toQtei ~ doQtei is older, and is now generally used after verbs without euphonic participles (mostly Class 2 and 3 verbs, as well as verbal adjectives), whereas -totei ~ -dotei is used with other verbs (like Class 1 verbs). The copula dara has the anterior gerund doQtei.

There are two likely candidates for this form's etymology:[102]

  • participle -te + participle oQte of or- "to be" + accusative -o (in mirative usage)
  • participle -te + participle oQte of ok- "to put" + accusative -o (in mirative usage)

This form denotes an action that occurs strictly before another action that occurs in the following clause. It is similar but not exactly equivalent to the construction -tekara ~ -dekara, using the participle -te ~ -de and the ablative -kara.

(1)
その縄に板をしいて、乗って揺れるんだよ。[30]

sono

sono

that.ATTR

noogee

noo=gee

rope=LAT

itoo

ita=o

board=ACC

suQtotei,

suk-totei

lay-ANT

noQte

nor-te

ride-PTCP

jurerodara.

jur-e-ro=dar-(o=w)a

swing-POT-ATTR(NMLZ)=COP-ATTR=DECL

sono noogee itoo suQtotei, noQte jurerodara.

sono noo=gee ita=o suk-totei nor-te jur-e-ro=dar-(o=w)a

that.ATTR rope=LAT board=ACC lay-ANT ride-PTCP swing-POT-ATTR(NMLZ)=COP-ATTR=DECL

"After laying a board on that rope, you can ride it and swing."

Requisitional -tou

[edit]

The requisitional form (依頼, irai, req) form can be made by replacing the -te or -de of the participle with -tou or -dou, respectively. This suffix is often thought to etymologically derive from the participle -te followed by the accusative -o, but as that would have been expected to yield **-tei rather than -tou, this form's ultimate origin is unclear; it likely derives from a more complex contraction.[103]

The requisitional is used for asking favors and requests of others. Like the imperative, it can be softened by adding mii afterward:

(1)
車へ積ん[104]

kurumee

kuruma=i

car=ALL

cuNdou.

cum-tou

load-REQ

kurumee cuNdou.

kuruma=i cum-tou

car=ALL load-REQ

"(Please) load it into the car."

(2)
熊ちゃん、お茶を注いでね[104]

kumacjaN

kuma-cjaN

bear-DIM

ocjoo

ocja=o

tea=ACC

cuNdou

cug-tou

pour-REQ

mii.

mii

please

kumacjaN ocjoo cuNdou mii.

kuma-cjaN ocja=o cug-tou mii

bear-DIM tea=ACC pour-REQ please

"Little bear, please pour the tea."

Imperative -e ~ -ro

[edit]

The imperative form (命令形, meireikei, imp) is made by adding the suffix -e to the stems of Class 1 verbs, and -ro to those of Class 2. For irregular verbs, sjowa becomes se or sje, and kurowa becomes ko. These forms descend from the Eastern Old Japanese imperative forms -e(1) ~ ro2.

The imperative is used for commands, and can be softened by adding mii afterward:

(1)
それを綺麗に(一気に)飲[104]

sorei

sore=o

that.thing=ACC

deeciku

deeci-ku

clean-ADJ.INF

hiQkakero.

hiQkake-ro

drink-IMP

sorei deeciku hiQkakero.

sore=o deeci-ku hiQkake-ro

that.thing=ACC clean-ADJ.INF drink-IMP

"Drink that cleanly (in one gulp)."

(2)
ここへ来なさい[105]

kokei

koko=i

here=ALL

ko

ko

come.IMP

mii.

mii

please

kokei ko mii.

koko=i ko mii

here=ALL come.IMP please

"(Please) come this way."

(3)
いらっしゃいま/ようこそ!

ozjarijare!

ozjar-i-jar-e

come(HON)-INF-HON-IMP

ozjarijare!

ozjar-i-jar-e

come(HON)-INF-HON-IMP

"Welcome!" or "Please come in!"

The imperative can also be used to warn others about imminent events that would have a negative effect on them:

(4)
ほら、それを逃がしちゃうよ[106]

maN

ma=N

now=DAT

nou

nou

DM

sorei

sore=o

that=ACC

nigase!

nigas-e

let.escape-IMP

maN nou sorei nigase!

ma=N nou sore=o nigas-e

now=DAT DM that=ACC let.escape-IMP

"Look, you're gonna let it get away!"

For negative imperatives, the prohibitive postfix -na (attaching to the final form) is used instead.

Final Form -u

[edit]

The final form (旧終止形, kyū-shūshikei, lit. "old termination form," fin) is made by adding the suffix -u to the stems of Class 1 verbs, nothing or -ru to those of Class 2, and -ke or underlying *-karu to verbal adjectives'. For irregular verbs, sjowa becomes su, and kurowa becomes ku or kuru. However, for Class 1.1C verbs, the underlying *-aru typically contracts to aQ, aN, or oo depending on the following morpheme; the same can be said for verbal adjectives, whose underlying 1.1C *-karu contracts to -kaQ, -kaN, or -koo. This form descends from the Old Japanese final form -u, as well as in some constructions borrowed from Japanese using its attributive form -u ~ -ru.

Despite its name, this suffix's use in concluding declarative sentences has mostly been supplanted in Hachijō by the declarative -owa form. It mainly only exists as a predicative form in quotative and reportative speech:

(1)
baasamawa kooii seNtakuN ikaraQteiga

baa-sama=wa

grandma-HON=TOP

koo=jii

river=ALL

seNtaku=N

laundry=DAT

ik-ar-ar-(u)

go-STAT-STAT-FIN

=tew-o=ga

=QUOT.say-ATTR=but

baa-sama=wa koo=jii seNtaku=N ik-ar-ar-(u) =tew-o=ga

grandma-HON=TOP river=ALL laundry=DAT go-STAT-STAT-FIN =QUOT.say-ATTR=but

"I hear that Grandma went to the river to do laundry, but..."
おばあさんは川へ洗濯に行ったそうだが[29]

(2)
bjoukide cino iroga kooraQteija.

bjouki=de

illness=LOC

ci=no

blood=GEN

iro=ga

color=NOM

koor-ar-(u)

change-STAT-FIN

=tew-o=wa

=QUOT.say-ATTR=DECL

bjouki=de ci=no iro=ga koor-ar-(u) =tew-o=wa

illness=LOC blood=GEN color=NOM change-STAT-FIN =QUOT.say-ATTR=DECL

"I hear that his blood changed color when he was sick."
病気で血の色が変わったそうだ。[34]

However, the final form still remains fossilized in the formation of several verbal extensions:

Prohibitive -na
[edit]

The prohibitive form (禁止形, kinshikei, proh) is made by adding the suffix -na to the final form (with or without the extra -ru on Class 2 verbs and kurowa). This form is either inherited from the Old Japanese prohibitive -(u)na or reborrowed from Japanese. This form serves as the negative counterpart to the imperative, commanding the addressee not to do something:

(1)
sjakude mizuu nomuna.

sjaku=de

ladle=LOC

mizu=o

water=ACC

nom-u-na

drink-FIN-PROH

sjaku=de mizu=o nom-u-na

ladle=LOC water=ACC drink-FIN-PROH

"Don't drink water with a ladle."
柄杓で水を飲む[34]

(2)
kokoronake hitoni cukoorena.

kokoro-na-ke

heart-not-ADJ.ATTR

hito=ni

person=DAT

cukaw-are-na

use-PASS.FIN-PROH

kokoro-na-ke hito=ni cukaw-are-na

heart-not-ADJ.ATTR person=DAT use-PASS.FIN-PROH

"Don't get used by heartless people."
心ない人に使われる[105]

Conjectural Extension -naw-
[edit]

The conjectural (推量, suiryō, cnjec) extension is made by adding -naw- (Class 1.1A') to the final forms of verbals. On Class 2 verbs and kurowa, the extra ru is optional; for verbal adjectives, the combined result is -kaNnaw-. This extension descends from the Old Japanese tentative-conjectural extension -nam- (contrast Western Old Japanese -uram-), with /m/ elided to /w/.

This extension denotes various conjectural meanings such as guessing, expectation, prediction, hypotheticality, and other such irrealis situations.

Focalizing Extension -naw-
[edit]

The focalizing (強調, kyōchō, lit. "emphatic," foclz) extension is made by adding -naw- (Class 1.1A') to the final forms of verbals, identical in all forms to the conjectural.

This extension was borrowed from a Middle Japanese mermaid construction -(r)u nari, consisting of the Middle Japanese nominalized attributive form in -(r)u followed by the copula なり nari, an exact parallel to Hachijō's native -(r)odara mermaid construction. Because the Middle Japanese attributive is -(r)u rather than -(r)o, this construction was borrowed to use the Hachijō final form in -(r)u instead. In addition, the borrowed copula nar- has been reduced to -naw-, merging in form with the conjectural -naw-.

The Japanese-style present form -nou (← -naw-u) is used sentence-finally for emphasis (example 1) and sentence-medially express cause and effect (example 2):

(1)
ikura aga cukurjaatei uiga kite korei kousunou.

ikura

how.many

a=ga

me=NOM

cukur-jaatei

make-FHYP

uĭ=ga

that.person=NOM

ki-te

come-PTCP

kore=o

this=ACC

kous-u-naw-u

destroy-FIN-FOCLZ-JPRS

ikura a=ga cukur-jaatei uĭ=ga ki-te kore=o kous-u-naw-u

how.many me=NOM make-FHYP that.person=NOM come-PTCP this=ACC destroy-FIN-FOCLZ-JPRS

"No matter how many I make, that person will come and destroy them."
いくら私が作っても、あいつが来てこれを壊すんだもの[107]

(2)
uiga nomunou aimo hosiku narodoozja.

uĭ=ga

that.person=NOM

nom-u-naw-u

drink-FIN-FOCLZ-JPRS

aĭ=mo

me=also

hosi-ku

wanting-INF

nar-o

become-ATTR(NMLZ)

=da(r)-o=zja

=COP-ATTR=DECL

uĭ=ga nom-u-naw-u aĭ=mo hosi-ku nar-o =da(r)-o=zja

that.person=NOM drink-FIN-FOCLZ-JPRS me=also wanting-INF become-ATTR(NMLZ) =COP-ATTR=DECL

"That person will drink, so I will want some, too."
あの人が飲むから、私も欲しくなるんだよ。[65]

The exclamatory form -nee (← -naw-e) is used in kakari-musubi with the focus particle koo (see the section on focalized exclamatory kakari-musubi for details and examples).

The provisional form -neeja (← -naw-eba) is used to express two types of conditionals or cause-and-effect statements. When not following the stative extension, it is an imperfect conditional, indicating that the condition was met repeatedly or many times at once:

(3)
terebjo mineeja ureN waikjuuretara.

terebi=o

television=ACC

mi-naw-e(b)a

see.FIN-FOCLZ-PROV

ure=N

that.person=DAT

waĭkjuw-are-tar-(o=w)a

scold-PASS-STAT-ATTR=DECL

terebi=o mi-naw-e(b)a ure=N waĭkjuw-are-tar-(o=w)a

television=ACC see.FIN-FOCLZ-PROV that.person=DAT scold-PASS-STAT-ATTR=DECL

"Whenever I watched television, I was scolded by that person." (repeated instances)
テレビを見ていると、あの人に怒られた。[108]

(4)
konasamaga marubuneeja jakekusoN naQte haa kabeejomo mogiNnaka.

konasama=ga

silkworm=NOM

marub-u-naw-e(b)a

die-FIN-FOCLZ-PROV

jakekuso=N

desperate=DAT

nar-te

become-PTCP

haa

already

kabee=jo=mo

mulberry.leaf=ACC=even

mog-i-Nnak-(o=w)a

pluck-INF-NEG-ATTR=DECL

konasama=ga marub-u-naw-e(b)a jakekuso=N nar-te haa kabee=jo=mo mog-i-Nnak-(o=w)a

silkworm=NOM die-FIN-FOCLZ-PROV desperate=DAT become-PTCP already mulberry.leaf=ACC=even pluck-INF-NEG-ATTR=DECL

"When the silkworms started dying (one after another), he became desperate and wouldn't pick any more mulberry leaves." (many instances at once)
蚕が(つぎつぎ)死んでいく、(それが原因でこの人は)ヤケクソになって、もう桑の葉をも、捥がないよ。[108]

When -neeja does follow the stative extension, the clauses expresses a completed action, and the following clause indicates a result that occurred upon its completion:

(5)
ukii nuburaNneeja meitara.

uku=i

there=ALL

nubur-ar-(u)-naw-e(b)a

climb-STAT-FIN-FOCLZ-PROV

mei-tar-(o=w)a

be.visible-STAT-ATTR=DECL

uku=i nubur-ar-(u)-naw-e(b)a mei-tar-(o=w)a

there=ALL climb-STAT-FIN-FOCLZ-PROV be.visible-STAT-ATTR=DECL

"When (I) climbed up there, (it) was visible."
あそこへ上ったら見えた。[109]

Lastly, this extension appears to be somehow fossilized in the optative ending -osunou.

Jussive Adjective -beki
[edit]

The jussive (当為・義務, tōi-gimu, lit. "responsibility & duty," juss) is made by adding the postfix -beki to the final forms of verbs, creating an adjectival noun. This form is borrowed from the Japanese form -beki, descended from Western Old Japanese -(u)be2-ki1.

This form acts as an adjectival noun that, when used with the copula dara, expresses a meaning like "ought to do," "should do," or "needs to do":

(1)
waimo ikubekidarooni

waĭ=mo

me=also

ik-u-beki

go-FIN-JUSS

=dar-a(r)-o

=COP-STAT-ATTR(NMLZ)

=ni

=COP.INF

waĭ=mo ik-u-beki =dar-a(r)-o =ni

me=also go-FIN-JUSS =COP-STAT-ATTR(NMLZ) =COP.INF

"Even though I should have gone too..."
私も行くべきだったのに[110]

A verbal adjective form -bekja of this affix has also been attested.[citation needed]

Suppositional Adjective -rasikja
[edit]

The suppositional (推定, suitei, supp) form is made by adding the extension -rasi- to the final forms of verbs, creating a verbal adjective. This form is either inherited from Eastern Old Japanese -(u)rasi or borrowed from its Japanese cognate form ~らしい -rashi-i.

This form is a verbal adjective with the meaning "seeming":

(1)
asumo jukiga hururasikja.

asu=mo

tomorrow=also

juki=ga

snow=NOM

hur-u-rasi-ke=(w)a

fall-FIN-SUPP-ADJ.ATTR=DECL

asu=mo juki=ga hur-u-rasi-ke=(w)a

tomorrow=also snow=NOM fall-FIN-SUPP-ADJ.ATTR=DECL

"It seems it will snow tomorrow, too."
明日も雪が降るらしい。[110]

Conditional Gerund -aba

[edit]

The conditional gerund (aba条件形, ABA jōkenkei, lit. "aba-conditional form," cond) is made by adding the suffix -aba to the stems of Class 1 verbs, -ba or -raba to those of Class 2, and -kaba or -kaaba ~ -karaba to verbal adjectives'. For irregular verbs, sjowa becomes saba, and kurowa becomes koba or kuraba. This form descends from the Old Japanese conditional gerund -aba.

This form introduces a condition or prerequisite that, if it is (or were) true, the following clause occurs (or would occur).[111] For conditions without a stative, the consequence occurs before the condition (in anticipation of it):

(1)
kokoN neba hutoNjo sukowa.

koko=N

here=DAT

ne-ba

sleep-COND

hutoN=jo

futon=ACC

suk-o=wa

lay.out-ATTR=DECL

koko=N ne-ba hutoN=jo suk-o=wa

here=DAT sleep-COND futon=ACC lay.out-ATTR=DECL

"If (he) is going to sleep here, then (I) will lay out a futon (beforehand)," or
"If (he) were to sleep here, then (I) would lay out a futon (beforehand)."
ここに寝るなら、布団を敷くよ。[112]

(2)
unumo ikaba korei moQte ike.

unu=mo

you=also

ik-aba

go-COND

kore=o

this=ACC

mot-te

hold-PTCP

ik-e

go-IMP

unu=mo ik-aba kore=o mot-te ik-e

you=also go-COND this=ACC hold-PTCP go-IMP

"If you're going too, take this with you (before you go)."
おまえも行くなら、これを持っていけ。[112]

For past conditions (usually marked with a stative), the consequence occurs after the achievement of the condition:

(3)
hamee ikaaba keegoujo hiroQte ko jou.

hama=i

beach=ALL

ik-a(r)-aba

go-STAT-COND

keegou=jo

seashell=ACC

hirow-te

pick.up-PTCP

ko

come.IMP

jou

DM

hama=i ik-a(r)-aba keegou=jo hirow-te ko jou

beach=ALL go-STAT-COND seashell=ACC pick.up-PTCP come.IMP DM

"If you go to the beach, bring back a seashell (afterwards)."
浜に行ったら、貝を拾ってこいと。[113]

Finally, if the consequence refers to past time, the sentence is always counterfactual, where the condition was not actually met:

(4)
unumo ikaba cuQte ikoositooni.

unu=mo

you=also

ik-aba

go-COND

cur-te

join-PTCP

ik-oosita(r)-o

go-PSTSUBJ-ATTR(NMLZ)

=ni

=COP.INF

unu=mo ik-aba cur-te ik-oosita(r)-o =ni

you=also go-COND join-PTCP go-PSTSUBJ-ATTR(NMLZ) =COP.INF

"If you were going to go too, I would've gone with you, but..."
おまえも行くなら、連れて行っのに。[114]

(5)
haiku keeraaba jokarara.

haĭ-ku

soon-ADJ.INF

keer-a(r)-aba

go.home-STAT-COND

jo-kar-ar-(o=w)a

good-ADJ-STAT-ATTR=DECL

haĭ-ku keer-a(r)-aba jo-kar-ar-(o=w)a

soon-ADJ.INF go.home-STAT-COND good-ADJ-STAT-ATTR=DECL

"It would have been better if you had come home early."
はやく帰ればよかっ[114]

Futile-Hypothetical Gerund -jaatei

[edit]

The futile-hypothetical gerund (逆条件形, gyaku-jōkenkei, lit. "reverse-conditional form," fhyp) is made by adding the suffix -jaatei to the stems of Class 1 verbs, -rjaatei to those of Class 2, and -kjaatei or -karjaatei to verbal adjectives'. For irregular verbs, sjowa becomes sjaatei, and kurowa becomes kurjaatei. This form is believed to descend from the Class 1 infinitive -i followed by the phrase aQte mo "even if it is": *-iaQtemo → *-jaQtewo → *-jaatei; the other verb classes' forms must have been formed by analogy.[115]

This form expresses futility: the clause marked by -jaatei introduces a condition that is known to be false or impossible, and the following clause expresses an action or state that would remain true even if the condition were met.[116]

(1)
ureN jaatei kikiNnaka.

ure=N

that.person=DAT

iw-jaatei

say-FHYP

kik-i-Nnak-(o=w)a

hear-INF-NEG-ATTR=DECL

ure=N iw-jaatei kik-i-Nnak-(o=w)a

that.person=DAT say-FHYP hear-INF-NEG-ATTR=DECL

"Even if (you) tell that person, he won't listen," or "...he won't hear it."
あいつに言っても、聞かないよ。[116]

(2)
ikura nomjaatei joiNnaNnouwa.

ikura

how.much

nom-jaatei

drink-FHYP

jow-i-Nar-(u)-naw-o=wa

get.drunk-INF-NEG-FIN-CNJEC-ATTR=DECL

ikura nom-jaatei jow-i-Nar-(u)-naw-o=wa

how.much drink-FHYP get.drunk-INF-NEG-FIN-CNJEC-ATTR=DECL

"I probably won't get drunk no matter how much I drink."
いくら飲んでも酔わないだろうよ。[116]

Exclamatory -e

[edit]

The exclamatory form (已然形, izenkei, excl) is made by adding the suffix -e to the stems of Class 1 verbs, -re to those of Class 2, and -ke to verbal adjectives'. For irregular verbs, sjowa becomes se or sje, and kurowa becomes kure. This form descends from the Old Japanese exclamatory form -e2 ~ -ure.

The exclamatory form used as a predicative form in constructions with the focus particles ka and koo; these constructions are detailed further in the section on kakari-musubi. The exclamatory form is also used etymologically as the base for forming the provisional and concessive gerunds, detailed in the following subsection:

Provisional -eba ~ -ja
[edit]

The provisional gerund (eba条件形, EBA jōkenkei, lit. "eba-conditional form," prov) is generally formed by adding by the suffix -ba or -a to the exclamatory form of verbals (but is treated as its own suffix). For the -a variant, this contracts with a preceding e to become ja, or if the verb's exclamatory form ends in a long vowel, -a becomes -ja instead (e.g., wareebawareeja "when he laughs"). For verbal adjectives, the -ba forms are -keba and -kereba, while the -a form is -kerja. For the irregular verb sjowa, the -ba forms are sureba and s(j)eba, and the -a forms are surja and sja. For the irregular verb kurowa, the -ba form is kureba, and the -a form is -kurja. All of these forms descend from the Old Japanese conjunctive gerund -e2ba ~ -ureba with or without the /b/ elided. Although the variants in -eba and -ja have identical etymologies, they have slightly diverged in usage.

The principal function of the provisional gerund is to mark a subordinate clause that is causally or temporally related to the main clause, describing the circumstance in which the main clause occurs:

(1)
korei nomja/nomeba daidemo jowowa.

kore=o

this=ACC

nom-e(b)a

drink-PROV

daĭ

who

=de=mo

=COP.PTCP=even

jow-o=wa

get.drunk-ATTR=DECL

kore=o nom-e(b)a daĭ =de=mo jow-o=wa

this=ACC drink-PROV who =COP.PTCP=even get.drunk-ATTR=DECL

"Anyone would get drunk if/when they drank this."
これを飲めばだれでも酔うよ。[117]

(2)
akiN narja/nareba kaNmoga kamerowa.

aki=N

autumn=DAT

nar-e(b)a

become-PROV

kaNmo=ga

sweet.potato=NOM

kam-e-ro=wa

eat-POT-ATTR=DECL

aki=N nar-e(b)a kaNmo=ga kam-e-ro=wa

autumn=DAT become-PROV sweet.potato=NOM eat-POT-ATTR=DECL

"(We) can eat sweet potatoes when autumn comes."
秋になればサツマイモが食べられるよ。[117]

Both -eba and -ja can also be used to mark future conditions, whether they are expected to be actualized or not:

(3)
sogoN sjeba kiga harerowa

sogo͡oN

in.that.way

sj-eba

do-PROV

ki=ga

feeling=NOM

hare-ro=wa

become.clear-ATTR=DECL

sogo͡oN sj-eba ki=ga hare-ro=wa

in.that.way do-PROV feeling=NOM become.clear-ATTR=DECL

"If you do that, you'll feel better," or "If you did that, you'd feel better."
そうすれば気が晴れるよ。[117]

(4)
korei nomja koĭga soogowa.

kore=o

this=ACC

nom-e(b)a

drink-PROV

koĭ=ga

this.person=NOM

soog-o=wa

get.angry-ATTR=DECL

kore=o nom-e(b)a koĭ=ga soog-o=wa

this=ACC drink-PROV this.person=NOM get.angry-ATTR=DECL

"If you drink this, this person will get angry," or "If you drank this, this person would get angry."
これを飲めばこの人が怒るよ。[118]

However, for conditions or circumstances that are or were met repeatedly, with the same result in each case, -ja is preferred for both present and past results:

(5)
aga uteeja koiga tomerowa

a=ga

me=NOM

utaw-e(b)a

sing-PROV

koĭ=ga

this.person=NOM

tome-ro=wa

stop-ATTR=DECL

a=ga utaw-e(b)a koĭ=ga tome-ro=wa

me=NOM sing-PROV this.person=NOM stop-ATTR=DECL

"Whenever I sing, this person stops me."
私が歌っている、こいつが止める。[117]

(6)
uiga kamja aimo hosiku narara.

uĭ=ga

that.person=NOM

kam-e(b)a

eat-PROV

aĭ=mo

me=also

hosi-ku

wanting-ADJ.INF

nar-ar-(o=w)a

become-STAT-ATTR=DECL

uĭ=ga kam-e(b)a aĭ=mo hosi-ku nar-ar-(o=w)a

that.person=NOM eat-PROV me=also wanting-ADJ.INF become-STAT-ATTR=DECL

"Whenever that person was eating, I wanted some, too."
あの人が食べている、私も欲しくなった。[117]

When used with a focus-marking particle ka or koo, a provisional in -ja marks a precise reason, with more emphasis than the common phrasing using -Nte "because." Naturally, such sentences with ka or koo use exclamatory kakari-musubi:

(7)
aga cukeejakoo moQte kitaNnee

a=ga

me=NOM

cukaw-e(b)a=koo

use-PROV=FOC

mot-te

hold-PTCP

ki-tar-(u)-naw-e

come-STAT-FIN-FOCLZ-EXCL

a=ga cukaw-e(b)a=koo mot-te ki-tar-(u)-naw-e

me=NOM use-PROV=FOC hold-PTCP come-STAT-FIN-FOCLZ-EXCL

"It is because I will use it that I have started holding it."
私が使うからこそ持ってきたんだよ。[119]

Concessive -edou
[edit]

The concessive gerund (dou接続形, DOU setsuzokukei, lit. "dou-conjunctional form," cnces) is formed by adding by the suffix -dou to the exclamatory form of verbals (but is treated as its own suffix). For Class 1.1C verbs, the resulting sequence -aredou can contract to -aĭdou. This form descends from the Old Japanese concessive gerund -e2do2mo2 ~ -uredo2mo2-edowo ~ -redowo-edou ~ -redou, cognate to the Japanese conjunctions けども kedomo and けれども keredomo "although." The forms -doumo and -douni are also attested.

The concessive gerund introduces adverse information despite which the main clause still nevertheless occurs or occurred:

(1)
kineiwa huQcidou keiwa adadaka.

kinei=wa

yesterday=TOP

hur-ci-dou

rain-RET(EXCL)-CNCES

kei=wa

today=TOP

ada

how

=da=ka

=COP.JPRS=Q

kinei=wa hur-ci-dou kei=wa ada =da=ka

yesterday=TOP rain-RET(EXCL)-CNCES today=TOP how =COP.JPRS=Q

"Although it rained yesterday, how will today be, I wonder?"
昨日は(雨が)降った、今日はどうだか。[120]

Volitional -ou

[edit]

The volitional form (意志形, ishikei, vol) is made by adding the suffix -ou to the stems of Class 1 verbs, and -rou to those of Class 2.[121] Alternative formations also exist, where Class 1.1A' verbs use their declarative or final form, -i (possibly underlying *o or *u) is attached to the stems of Class 2b verbs, and nothing is added to the stems of Classes 2c and 2d.[122] For irregular verbs, sjowa becomes sjou, and kurowa becomes kurou or kou. (Verbal adjectives have no volitional form.) The volitional seems to have some relationship to the Old Japanese tentative-conjectural form -am-, and thereby the Japanese volitional -ō ~ -yō,[123] but the exact path between the Old Japanese and Modern Hachijō forms is not clear.[121]

The volitional indicates a personal intent or a cohortative suggestion:[124]

(1)
sorosoro nerou.

sorosoro

before.long

ne-rou

sleep-VOL

sorosoro ne-rou

before.long sleep-VOL

"It's about time (we) went to sleep," or "Let's go to sleep soon."
そろそろ寝よう[125]

(2)
aimo nomou.

aĭ=mo

me=also

nom-ou

drink-VOL

aĭ=mo nom-ou

me=also drink-VOL

"I'll drink, too."
私も飲もう[125]

Statements of intent can be emphasized by adding the postfix -bei, as in nomoubei "I'll drink!" Similarly, cohortative suggestions can be emphasized by adding the declarative particle -zja, as in ikouzja "Let's go!"

The volitional can also be used as an attributive form in the construction -ou houdara and its negative equivalent -ou hou nakja, which indicate ability or possibility:[122]

(3)
ura jomou houdoote urei tanome.

ur(e=w)a

that.person=TOP

jom-ou

read-VOL(ATTR)

hou

way

=da(r)-o=(N)te

=COP-ATTR=because

ure=o

that.person=ACC

tanom-e

request-IMP

ur(e=w)a jom-ou hou =da(r)-o=(N)te ure=o tanom-e

that.person=TOP read-VOL(ATTR) way =COP-ATTR=because that.person=ACC request-IMP

"That person can read (it), so ask him."
あの人は読るから、あの人を頼め。[126]

(4)
jasei hou nakja.

jase-i

lose.weight-VOL(ATTR)

hou

way

na-ke=(w)a

not-ADJ.ATTR=DECL

jase-i hou na-ke=(w)a

lose.weight-VOL(ATTR) way not-ADJ.ATTR=DECL

"I am unable to lose weight."
痩せることができない。[127]

Simultaneous -outei
[edit]

The simultaneous gerund (同時形, dōjikei, simul) can be made by appending -tei to the end of the volitional form. There are two likely candidates for this form's etymology:[128]

  • volitional -ou + quotative te + accusative -o (in mirative usage)
  • volitional -ou + quotative to + allative -i

This form denotes an action that occurs simultaneously with another action, similar to English "while ~ing," and equivalent in meaning to adding -nagara "while" to the infinitive.[129]

(1)
teekou hatakoutei utaQte miro.

teeko=o

drum=ACC

hatak-ou-tei

beat-VOL-SIMUL

utaw-te

sing-PTCP

mi-ro

see-IMP

teeko=o hatak-ou-tei utaw-te mi-ro

drum=ACC beat-VOL-SIMUL sing-PTCP see-IMP

"Try singing and playing the drums at the same time."
太鼓を叩きながら歌ってみろ。[130]

This sense of simultaneity can also be used to indicate an action that was interrupted by another:

(2)
isjo horoutei bukacukara.

isi=o

rock=ACC

horow-(ou)-tei

pick.up-VOL-SIMUL

bukacuk-ar-(o=w)a

fall.forward-STAT-ATTR=DECL

isi=o horow-(ou)-tei bukacuk-ar-(o=w)a

rock=ACC pick.up-VOL-SIMUL fall.forward-STAT-ATTR=DECL

"He fell forward while trying to pick up a rock."
石を拾おうとして前に転んだ。[131]

It can also be used to emphasize a contradictory yet simultaneous event:

(3)
waraQte aroutei wareenakaate jowa.

waraw-te

laugh-PTCP

ar-ou-tei

be-VOL-SIMUL

waraw-i-(N)nak-(o=w)a

laugh-INF-NEG-ATTR=DECL

=te

=QUOT

iw-o=wa

say-ATTR=DECL

waraw-te ar-ou-tei waraw-i-(N)nak-(o=w)a =te iw-o=wa

laugh-PTCP be-VOL-SIMUL laugh-INF-NEG-ATTR=DECL =QUOT say-ATTR=DECL

"He says "I'm not laughing!" (even) while laughing."
笑っていながら、「笑わない(笑っていない)よ」と言う。[132]

[edit]

Several verbal forms appear to be related to the dubitative (formerly optative) form listed below, which seems to be related in some way to the Classical Japanese optative constructions ~ま欲しき -mafosi-ki or ~ま欲りする -mafori suru.[133]

Dubitative -oosi
[edit]

The dubitative (反語, hango, lit. "ironic," dub) form is made by adding the suffix -oosi to the stems of Class 1 verbs (or -aroosi for Class 1.1A'), -isi or -roosi to those of Class 2a and 2b, -si or -roosi to those of Class 2c and 2d, and -karoosi to verbal adjectives'. For irregular verbs, sjowa becomes seisi or sjoosi, and kurowa becomes kousi or kuroosi. The Sueyoshi and Aogashima dialects are an exception, where -iisi is used for Class 1 verbs (-ariisi for Class 1.1A'), only -isi ~ -si is used for Class 2, sjowa becomes siisi, and kurowa becomes kiisi.

As attested in older records, this form once expressed an optative meaning, often (but not necessarily) regarding a wish or hope that the speaker thinks might not come true:

(1)
NNga icuka kousiga.

(u)n(u)=ga

you=NOM

icu=ka

when=INDET

ko-osi=ga

come-DUB=but

(u)n(u)=ga icu=ka ko-osi=ga

you=NOM when=INDET come-DUB=but

"I'd like for you to come again sometime."
おまえがいつか(また)来るといいなあ[95]

(2)
icuka nacuga kite koode zjoNzjoumei sukuuroosiga.

icu=ka

when=INDET

nacu=ga

summer=NOM

ki-te

come-PTCP

koo=de

river=LOC

zjoNzjoume=o

loach=ACC

sukuw-ar-oosi=ga

scoop-STAT-DUB=but

icu=ka nacu=ga ki-te koo=de zjoNzjoume=o sukuw-ar-oosi=ga

when=INDET summer=NOM come-PTCP river=LOC loach=ACC scoop-STAT-DUB=but

"Sometim