Miyako
[aka Ikimatsu, Ryukyuan, Southern Ryukyuan]Classification: Japonic
·severely endangered
Classification: Japonic
·severely endangered
Ikimatsu, Ryukyuan, Southern Ryukyuan, Saskisima, Saskishima, 宮古語, 宮古方言, ミャークフツ |
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Japonic, Ryukyuan, Southern Ryukyuan |
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ISO 639-3; Glottolog |
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mvi; miya1259 |
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As csv |
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Information from: “Ikema Miyako (Japan) - Language Snapshot” . Shigeko Shinohara and Qandeel Hussain (2020) , Peter K. Austin · ELPublishing
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Sarahama dialect has the most speakers and more young speakers, followed by Nishihara and Ikema with the fewest young speakers.
Recent revival movements are promoting the language at events such as speech contests and religious rituals in local communities. The language plays a role in the ethnic identity for those of the Ikema minzoku tribe.
Japanese
Information from: “Atlas of the World’s Languages in Danger” . Christopher Moseley (ed.) (2010) UNESCO Publishing
Information from: “Tarama Miyako Grammar” (405-421) . Aoi, Hayato (2015) , Heinrich, P., Miyara, S., & Shimoji, M. · De Gruyter Mouton
"In Tarama, all fluent speakers are in their sixties or older."
"Like all other Ryukyuan languages, Miyako Ryukyuan is endangered. The younger generations do not speak or comprehend Tarama, nor do children learn it at school."
Information from: “Ethnologue: Languages of the World, 16th Edition (2009)” . M. Paul Lewis · SIL International
67,653
Ethnic population: 67,653 (2000)
Mainly older adults. The younger the generation, the more fluently they speak Japanese (Wurm and Hattori 1981). Those under 20 are mainly monolingual in Japanese (1989 T. Fukuda).
Japanese
Southern Okinawa; Miyako, Ogami, Ikema, Kurima, Irabu, Tarama, Minna islands.
Information from: “Miyako-Ryukyuan and its contribution to linguistic diversity” (39-55) . Jarosz, Aleksandra (2014)
Miyako islands
Information from: “personal communication on Japonic languages” . Thomas Dougherty (2014)
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Most speakers are over the age of 50 and are bilingual in Miyako and Japanese.
"Younger Miyako speakers are L1 Japanese speakers, and L2 Miyako 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."
Japanese
"'Language nest' is implemented at the community level, though the government has issued statements that it is certainly not opposed."
It's not written until quite recently and speakers don't write much.
The Miyako Islands