100 percent certain, based on the evidence available
~37,000
From Niinaga's fieldwork experience, adults over 65 in the Amami islands could speak the local Amami dialect fairly well. The estimate of 37,000 speakers of Amami comes from multiplying the population of the Amami islands as of 2010, which was 130,000 people, by the ratio of residents over 65, 29%.
信息日期
2010
使用领域
使用者趋势
传承情况
更多关于活力的信息
"All dialects in the Amami Islands are endangered today. In other words, the younger generation does not speak these dialects. Depending on the situation, they speak a local variety of Japanese or Standard Japanese instead. Every dialect in the Amami Islands is endangered because Standard Japanese has more political, economical, and cultural power. If such imbalance of power continues, it will continue to be difficult, and unlikely, for younger people to choose to speak these dialects, which are not their first language."
该群体使用的其他语言
Japanese
语言环境评论
Hara and Heinrich (2015)'s chapter in the Handbook of the Ryukyuan Languages discusses The Society for Okinawan Dialect Revitalization, est. 2000, which established an Uchinaaguchi kana orthography, published teaching materials, has conducted training for prospective Uchinaaguchi teachers, and has established a quarterly newspaper written only in Uchinaaguchi. Uchinaaguchi is taught as part of club activities in many elementary and high schools in Okinawa.
地点描述
"The Amami Islands are located between Kyushu and the Okinawa Islands in the southwest of Japan. The Amami Islands include Amami Ōshima, Kikai, Tokunoshima, Okinoerabu, and Yoron. These islands stretch over a distance of 200 kilometres from north to south. The southern part of Amami Ōshima can be divided into Kakeroma, Yoro, and Uke. Each island in the Amami Archipelago has its own dialects."
信息不完整 “Atlas of the World’s Languages in Danger” . Christopher Moseley (ed.) (2010) UNESCO Publishing
地点
Japan
信息不完整 “personal communication on Japonic languages” . Thomas Dougherty (2014)
濒危
100 percent certain, based on the evidence available
~100,000
0
0
The total of all the Okinawan speakers is somewhere around 100,000. Most speakers are over the age of 50 and are bilingual in Amami-North Okinawan and Japanese. Please note that this estimate is given for all Amami and North Okinawan speakers, not only Amami speakers.
信息日期
2014
使用领域
使用者趋势
传承情况
更多关于活力的信息
"Younger Amami-North Okinawan speakers are L1 Japanese speakers, and L2 Amami-North Okinawan learners (most people under 40 who learn are involved in traditional Okinawan culture, like the theater, with a growing number of language activists). And basically no children learn it at home from their parents, though there have been efforts to establish a language nest."
该群体使用的其他语言
Japanese
语言环境评论
"'Language nest' is implemented at the community level, though the government has issued statements that it is certainly not opposed."
手写稿、文字系统和正字法
kana
正字法
It's not written until quite recently and speakers don't write much.
地点
Japan
地点描述
Northeast Okinawa; Kikai island; Toku-no-shima Island; Yoron Island
信息不完整 “Glottolog” .
地点
Japan
其他评论
Note that the coordinates of Okinawa have been removed from this source as it does not reflect Pellard (2015)'s classification.
信息不完整 “Okinoerabu Grammar” (345-377) . Van der Lubbe, Gijs & Akiko Tokunaga (2015) , Heinrich, Patrick, Miyara, Shinsho, & Shimoji, Michinori. · De Gruyter Mouton
近危
20 percent certain, based on the evidence available
6,500
"There are about 14,000 people living in Okinoerabu Island, but the number of local language speakers is decreasing rapidly. Based on our fieldwork experience, we can say that people in their late 50s are fluent in the Okinoerabu language. Middle-aged people between 40 to 50 are usually passive bilinguals (see Anderson, this volume). People under 30 years of age are monolingual in Japanese. Considering the ratio of people older than 55 years, the number of speakers is assessed to be around 6,500 people, or of 45% of the total population." Note that Van der Lubbe & Tokunaga (2015) consider Okinoerabu to be a distinct language.