Japanese/Dialects/Ishikawa

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Ishikawa-ben(石川弁) is a local dialect of the Japanese language spoken throughout the prefecture of Ishikawa and some surrounding areas, such as Toyama and Fukui. Unlike kansai-ben, where the intonation of words differs greatly from hyōjungo (i.e. Tokyo-ben), Ishikawa-ben is characterized more by its relaxation of hard consonants into softer ones, resulting in a more "rounded" pronunciation and vocabulary.

Common relaxations and replacements

Da→ya (だ→や)

Speakers of Ishikawa-ben often relax the pronunciation of the word だ (the plain form of です) into the word や, producing sentences similar to the following:

This transformation can be extended to other forms of the word だ as well; for example, だろう becomes やろう:

So→ho (そ→ほ)

The syllable そ is often relaxed to the softer ほ, especially when used in the そう sense ("like that"):

This last example is commonly relaxed even further into 「ほうあろう?」, especially among Ishikawa-ben speakers in Kanazawa and neighboring Uchinada.

This relaxation also produces the commonly used phrase 「あ、ほんな?」 ("Oh, really?"), stemming from 「あ、そうですか?」 or possibly 「あ、本当?」 as used in hyōjungo.

Iru→oru (いる→おる)

The verb いる is often replaced with the synonymous verb おる, although the end result may or may not necessarily convey the "humbled" sense normally associated with the verb おる as used in 謙譲語 (kenjōgo).

Verbs used in the present progressive sense (i.e., ending with ~ている) are often relaxed into the form ~とる rather than ~ておる:

When used in the negative sense, いない and ~ていない become おらん and ~とらん, respectively:

Ka→ke (か→け)

The particle か, when used at the end of a sentence to signify a question, is often replaced by け or っけ instead:

Ne→jii (ね→じい)

The particle ね, when used at the end of a sentence to express uncertainty or to solicit confirmation, is often replaced by じい instead:

Nen / gen (ねん、げん)

The stems ~ねん and ~げん can be used after the dictionary form of a verb (i.e., verbs ending in ~る, ~く, etc.) to add emphasis to the sentence. Their usage is similar to the stem ~んだよ used by speakers of Tokyo Japanese.

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