レㇷ゚
Ainu
Noun
レㇷ゚ (Latin spelling rep)
Etymology
Proto-Ainu *dE= (“three”).[1]
From レ (re, “three”) + -ㇷ゚ (-p, noun-forming suffix, reduction of ペ (pe), “thing”).[2]
Pronunciation
- IPA(key): [ɾe̞p]
| area | pronunciation |
|---|---|
| Yakumo (八雲) | rép |
| Oshamambe (長万部) | rép |
| Horobetsu (幌別) | rép |
| Hiratori (平取) | rép |
| Nukkibetsu (貫気別) | rép |
| Niikappu (新冠) | () |
| Samani (様似) | rép |
| Obihiro (帯広) | rép |
| Kushiro (釧路) | rép |
| Bihoro (美幌) | rép |
| Asahikawa (旭川) | rép |
| Nayoro (名寄) | rép |
| Soya (宗谷) | rép |
| Ochiho (落帆) | reh |
| Tarantomari (多蘭泊) | rep |
| Maoka (真岡) | reh |
| Shiraura (白浦) | reh |
| Raichishka (ライチシカ) | reh |
| Nairo (内路) | teppis |
References
- ^ Vovin, Alexander V. (1993) Leiden: E.J. Brill, editors, A Reconstruction of Proto-Ainu.
- ^ John Batchelor (1905) An Ainu-English-Japanese dictionary (including a grammar of the Ainu language)[1], Tokyo, London: Methodist Publishing House; Kegan Paul, Trench, Trubner Co.
- ^ 服部四郎・知里真志保 (Shirō Hattori & Mashiho Chiri) (1960) 『アイヌ語諸方言の基礎語彙統計学的研究』「民族學研究」 (Ainu Go Shohōgen No Kiso Goi Tōkeigaku Teki Kenkyū, “A Lexicostatistic Study on the Ainu Dialects”)[2] (in Japanese), Japan: 日本文化人類学会 (“Japanese Society of Cultural Anthropology”)
- 単語リスト(アイヌ語・日本語)―石狩川― (Tango List Ainu-go Nihon-go - Ishikari River, “Word List (Ainu / Japanese) - Ishikari River”)[3] (in Japanese), Sapporo, Hokkaidō: 公益財団法人アイヌ文化振興・研究推進機構 (Zaidan Hōjin Ainu Bunka Shinkō / Kenkyū Suishin Kikō, “Foundation for the Advancement, Research, and Promotion of Ainu Culture”), 2014 (Hokkaido)