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Japanese LanguageJapanese (nihongo) is a language spoken by over 127 million people, mainly in Japan, but also by Japanese emigrant communities around the world. It is considered an agglutinative language and is distinguished by a system of honorifics reflecting the hierarchical nature of Japanese society, with verb forms and particular vocabulary which indicate the relative status of speaker and listener. The sound inventory of Japanese is relatively small, and it has a lexically-distinctive pitch accent system. Though the two languages are completely unrelated, Japanese has been heavily influenced by Chinese over a period of at least 1,500 years. Japanese is written with a mix of Chinese characters (kanji) and a modified syllabary, kana, also originally based on Chinese characters. Much vocabulary has been imported from Chinese, or created on Chinese models. Geographic distributionAlthough Japanese is spoken almost exclusively in Japan, it has been and is still sometimes spoken in countries besides Japan. When Japan occupied Korea, Taiwan, parts of China, and various Pacific islands, locals in those countries were forced to learn Japanese in empire-building programmes. As a result, there are still many people in these countries who speak Japanese instead of or as well as the local languages. In addition, emigrants from Japan, the majority of whom are found in Brazil, where the biggest Japanese community outside Japan is found, Australia (especially Sydney, Brisbane and Melbourne), and the United States (notably California and Hawaii), also frequently speak Japanese. There is also a small community in Davao, Philippines. Their descendants, however, rarely speak Japanese fluently. There are estimated to be several million non-Japanese studying the language as well. Official statusJapanese is the de facto official language of Japan, and Japan is the
only country to have Japanese as an official working language. There are
two forms of the language considered standard: hyojungo or standard Japanese,
and kyotsugo or the common language. As government policy has modernized
Japanese, many of the distinctions between the two have blurred. Hyojungo
is taught in schools and used on television and in official communications. This article is licensed under the GNU
Free Documentation License. |
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