< Reconstruction:Proto-Ryukyuan
Reconstruction:Proto-Ryukyuan/niga
Proto-Ryukyuan
Etymology
From Proto-Japonic *ninka (“bitter”).
Descendants
- Northern Ryukyuan: 리가사 (/ri.ka.sa/) (Haytong Ceykwukki, 1501)
- Kikai: 苦さい (nyāsai)
- Kunigami: 苦ーせん (zāsen)
- Northern Amami-Oshima: 苦さり (nigyasari)
- Okinawan: 苦さん (njasan)
- Oki-No-Erabu: 苦さん (nigyasan)
- Southern Amami-Oshima: 苦ーさむっ (nigyāsam)
- Toku-No-Shima: 苦ーい (ingyāi)
- Yoron: 苦さん (ninjasan)
- Southern Ryukyuan:
- Miyako: 苦 (ngya)
- Yaeyama: 苦さん (ngasan)
- Yonaguni: 苦ん (ndan)
References
- Martin, Samuel E. (1987) The Japanese Language Through Time, New Haven, London: Yale University Press, →ISBN, page 837
- Thorpe, Maner Lawton (1983) Ryūkyūan Language History, Doctoral dissertation. University of Southern California, pages 264-265
- Lin, Chihkai (2015 August) A Reconstruction of Old Okinawan: A Corpus-Based Approach, University of Hawaii at Manoa, page 118
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