Talk:Names of Japan

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[edit] Page name

The name "etymology of Japan" doesn't really grab me. I thought the title "names of Japan" was better. "Etymology of Japan" makes it sound like the page is just about the word "Japan". --DannyWilde 02:25, 21 November 2005 (UTC)

After all, it is. -- Mkill 21:05, 24 November 2005 (UTC)
No, it's about the words "Nihon" and "Nippon" and other names of Japan too. --DannyWilde 00:01, 25 November 2005 (UTC)

[edit] Hi-no-moto?

Is that name Hinomoto or Hīnōmoto? i.e. are the hyphens there for aesthetic reasons or are they actually chōons? —Frungi 01:12, 2 February 2006 (UTC)

They are just ordinary hyphens. Gon-no-suke 04:03, 16 March 2006 (UTC)

[edit] Nihon/Nippon

There was a short article in (i think it was) 朝日新聞 about this distinction recently. They claimed that in old Japanese, the small tu (ッ) was not explicitly written out. Although 日本 was written as ニホン (nihon), educated readers knew to pronounce this as ニッポン (nippon). However, in due time many people assumed that ニホン was the correct reading, and it became prevalent. Gon-no-suke 04:03, 16 March 2006 (UTC)

I think people should all realize by now that the two variant Japanese readings of 日本, i.e. Nihon and Nippon, are not due to some medieval idiot's misinterpretation of an abbreviated kana annotation as にほん or ニホン. To be certain, it would have been fashionable for a time to annotate the characters 日本 in that way, but that does not mean that the pronunciation "Nihon" was derived from the orthographic kana representation, にほん. Rather, the two variant pronunciations are an example of what linguists call a doublet, i.e., two words that have derived from an identical etymological ancestor. Linguists already know that the Japanese language as it was spoken around the time that Chinese writing was introduced to the ancient Japanese, a stage of the language that is known as Old Japanese (or pre-Old Japanese, Archaic Japanese, etc.), lacked a distinction between the sounds /p/ and /f/. It is presumed that the syllables that later came to be represented by the kana series は, ひ, ふ, へ, ほ were pronounced as */pa/, */pi/, */pu/, */pe/, */po/, but there is no way to be absolutely certain about this, and so it is possible that there were already some dialects that pronounced these syllables as */fa/, */fi/, */fu/, */fe/, */fo/ or */hwa/, */hwi/, */hu/, */hwe/, */hwo/, as they are pronounced even today by the speakers of some exotic Japonic dialects, especially some of those that are spoken in the Ryukyu Islands. In any case, it came to pass that the central Japanese dialects shifted an original */p/ first to */f/ or */hw/, and eventually to simply /h/, as that series of kana is pronounced in Modern Standard Japanese. The word 日本, which was originally pronounced probably as */nitpon/ or */nippon/, came to be used in colloquial Japanese much earlier than most modern Japanese words of Chinese derivation, which generally were not coined or did not enter the colloquial speech of Japanese people until quite recently, particularly since the Meiji Period. Thus, the word */nippon/ was subject to the sound change that affected all Old Japanese instances of */p/, and it lenited to become Middle Japanese */niffoN/ or */nihhoN/. This Middle Japanese colloquial form */niffoN/ or */nihhoN/ continued to be used as the colloquial pronunciation of the characters 日本 as the name of "Japan," and this colloquial pronunciation developed regularly into Modern Standard Japanese /nihoN/, which today remains the most commonly used reading of 日本. The modern formal variant, /nippoN/, is derived either from an ancient dialectal variant that did not lenite Old Japanese */nitpon/ or */nippon/ to */niffoN/ or */nihhoN/, or else it is derived from a sort of stilted literary pronunciation that sought to preserve the independent pronounciations of each of the two Chinese characters, 日 and 本, that comprise the name 日本. This sort of literary "etymological reconstruction," or the artificial adoption/reinvention of a pronunciation that is assumed to be more historically accurate or closer to the "original" pronunciation of a word, has been a ubiquitous linguistic phenomenon throughout the history of most languages of the world, and Japanese is certainly no exception. Thus the two different forms, "Nihon" and "Nippon," have come to exist side by side within Modern Standard Japanese, and they are currently used with a sort of pragmatic/sociolinguistic distinction, but from a historical linguist's perspective, "Nihon" is almost certainly the more traditional colloquial form, at least in the central regions of Japan. Ebizur 08:39, 1 October 2006 (UTC)

[edit] Cipangu merge

Cipangu is really short and would be better merged into this article. --日本穣 Nihonjoe 21:20, 12 April 2006 (UTC)

I agree. Plus the article doesn't make much sense - how does "riben" becomg "Japan"? This article makes it clearer that the old Shanghainese pronounciation is much closer to "Japan." Jxyama 21:31, 27 May 2006 (UTC)
support this merge. The article should not be its own entry. Zakolantern 14:13, 7 August 2006 (UTC)

suppourt the mergeLyswim 20:48, 10 October 2006 (UTC)

Anyone knows why the Malays used the term Jepang/Jepun? I think that's pretty important since it's the origin of term "Japan" Pejuang bahasa 15:17, 24 June 2007 (UTC)

[edit] Nippongo

This article claims: "For example, Japanese people call their language Nihongo; Nippongo, while not incorrect, is never heard."

While it is certainly uncommon, the statement is incorrect. Nikkoku has an entry for nippongo. It even gives a quote: 西洋道中膝栗毛 (1874-1876)〈総生寛〉一三・下「日本語(ニッポンゴ)で言っておくんなせへ」

Per this reference, I will remove this claim. Bendono (talk) 07:27, 26 March 2008 (UTC)