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The Structure of the Japanese Language (Current Studies in Linguistics)
 
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The Structure of the Japanese Language (Current Studies in Linguistics) [Hardcover]

Susumu Kuno (Author)
4.5 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (2 customer reviews)


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Book Description

0262110490 978-0262110495 April 15, 1973 1ST
"Conventional grammars tell us when we can use given grammatical patterns. However, they almost invariably fail to tell us when we cannot use them. Many of the chapters of this book are concerned with the latter problem. They attempt to explain why some sentences that should be grammatical according to the explanations given in conventional grammars are in fact ungrammatical. In this sense, the book can be called a grammar of ungrammatical sentences.... It deals only with those problems of Japanese—and only a handful of them—that are either completely ignored or erroneously treated in conventional grammars. For these features I hope that the book will give the reader a revealing account of a kind seldom found in other Japanese grammars or in grammars of any other languages."
—from the author's Preface

Some features of Japanese are peculiarities of the language, while others are shared by English and various other languages of the world. At times two features, one in Japanese and one, for example, in English, that may look totally unrelated on casual inspection turn out to be a manifestation of the same principle, either syntactic or semantic, which governs the two languages. Whenever possible each feature of Japanese that the book discusses is contrasted with the features in English that are overtly or covertly related to it, and the similarities and differences that exist between the two languages with respect to this feature are examined. Thus the book can also be called a contrastive grammar of Japanese and English.

The book reveals a wide variety of semantic and syntactic factors (some of them not very well known to linguists working on English) that control the usage of certain grammatical patterns. It also shows what kinds of sentences the linguist working on a nonnative language should check with native speakers of the language to prove or disprove his initial hypothesis. So in a third sense, Professor Kuno's study might be called a textbook of field methods in linguistic analysis.

Because The Structure of the Japanese Language is both descriptive and analytical (the generalizations given in the book have been developed within the framework of the theory of transformational grammar but are presented without recourse to the complex formalisms of the theory), it will prove useful both as a basic handbook of supplementary reading for second-year or more advanced courses in Japanese and as a source of material for students and researchers doing work in Japanese or non-Indo-European linguistics.

This is volume three in the series, Current Studies in Linguistics.

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Product Details

  • Hardcover: 422 pages
  • Publisher: The MIT Press; 1ST edition (April 15, 1973)
  • Language: English
  • ISBN-10: 0262110490
  • ISBN-13: 978-0262110495
  • Product Dimensions: 9.3 x 6.4 x 1.2 inches
  • Shipping Weight: 2 pounds
  • Average Customer Review: 4.5 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (2 customer reviews)
  • Amazon Best Sellers Rank: #1,489,532 in Books (See Top 100 in Books)

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10 of 11 people found the following review helpful:
4.0 out of 5 stars This book should be retitled, February 13, 2006
By 
debonair (3rd Rock, Milky Way) - See all my reviews
This review is from: The Structure of the Japanese Language (Current Studies in Linguistics) (Hardcover)
This book is not for the novice and will not teach you the "Structure of the Japanese Language", irrespective of what the title says. This book is written for people who have a solid(at least level 3) understanding of Japanese and a basic background in linguistics. This requirement includes fluency with the language and deep knowledge of the grammar. The author covers grammatical points that tend to cause problems for the non-native speaker. This book is more for learning how NOT to use certain grammatical forms, and for understanding why certain sentences, phrases would be considered awkward or just plain wrong by a native Japanese speaker. Until you have a strong mental repository of positive examples of Japanese grammar against which you can compare, this book is of extremely limited use.

The book itself is well written and may prove useful for non-natives of Japan who are fluent in the written and spoken language but would like to improve by learning certain concepts. For a real book on the structure of the Japanese Language check out Alfonso Anthony's Japanese Language Patterns(JLP). The Anthony book starts for ground zero and just works out more complex and elaborated sentence structures. FYI, the editions I've seen of JLP are all in romazi.
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5.0 out of 5 stars A wonderful (if technical) coverage of the language., November 4, 2008
This review is from: The Structure of the Japanese Language (Current Studies in Linguistics) (Hardcover)
To start with, this is from the perspective of a person learning to speak/understand/read/write Japanese, not a linguist.

This book is NOT for learning the basics of the language, but seems appropriate for someone of approximately at approximately JLPT3-level. Users of Jordan/Noda's JSL program will appreciate the depth of the grammatical notes; users of programs such as Genki who may have been looking for slightly more technical coverage of grammatical points will appreciate this book as well. In some ways, this is like a more in-depth version of those "understanding japanese particles" books, or perhaps like picking a few chapters out of the "Dictionary of Basic Japanese Grammar" and going into each one in more depth.

I did not find the book immediately applicable to my Japanese study in the sense adding new structure or particle usage to my daily usage. Instead, when I came across sentences that were described as "non-grammatical" or "unnatural", I found that thinking back to the book would resolve some of my curiosity about "why" it was non-grammatical/unnatural. One thing the book does very well is explain that certain Japanese grammatical constructions are no more strange than their English equivalents, the examples of convoluted (but technically legal) English are marvelous foils for the explaining similar points in Japanese.

One complaint others might have is that the book occasionally spends too much time talking about the minutia of English, as opposed to Japanese. While true, this is relevant to the book's primary audience (linguists), and I do not believe this is enough of a detriment to reduce it from a 5 star rating.
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