Aynu itak
Aynu itak (/aj.nu i.tak/ [ˈʔäjꜜˌnu ʔi.ˈtäk̚]) newa A=kor itak anak Aynu mosir ta teetawano an Aynu utari kor itak ne.
Aynu itak アイヌ イタㇰ Айну итак | |
---|---|
Hawhum | IPA: /aj.nu i.tak/ |
Mosir | Nippon |
Sisserke | Aynu mosir (Yaun mosir. Teeta Karapto・Ruttom ikinnepoysir・Tohoku sisserke (Sisam mosir) or ta a=ye) |
Itakkur |
1996 pa sirunkurpiski: 15n[1] 2007 pa sirunkurpiski: 10n[2] 2017 pa sirunkurpiski: 5n |
Ikir |
Yaykoan itak
|
Itakitokpa |
Katakana、Rómaunkur Itakitokpa、Nuca Itakitokpa (Hanke-ikir wano) Isam (Husko) |
Itak Iuscipiskip | |
ISO 639-2 |
ain |
ISO 639-3 |
ain |
SIL | AIN |
Glottolog |
Nokaor:Glottolink [3] |
isam eyayhomsu iurenkare | |
Critically endangered (Moseley 2010) | |
Ruttomunkur itak | Isam |
Karaptounkur itak | Isam |
Yaunmosirunkur itak | Sonno eyayhomsu |
Huskoanpe
Teeta wano Aynu utari anak Aynu itak ani a=ukoysoytak korka tane sonno poroko itakkur an. Aynu itak iposse ne Karaptounkur itak newa Poromosirunkur itak kur isam wakusu Yaunkur itak pak siknu wa an korka pon kur ununeitak kor.
Itakutar
Aynu itak neno itak nep ka isam kusu yaykoan itak ne ruwe ne.
Hawhum
Ununehum
Aynu itak anak asikne ununehum kor.
sa | noski | mak | |
---|---|---|---|
hutne | i | u | |
noski | e | o | |
sep | a |
Ponehum anak tup ikasma wanpe oka.
urenpatoy | re | nitnenikotor | hapurnikotor | rekut | |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
etu | m | n | |||
pus | p | t | k | ' | |
pussiru | c | ||||
siru | s | h | |||
toptukan | r | ||||
hanke | j | w |
Itokpa
Teeta itakitokpa sak korka tane re Itak-itokpa eywanke.
Nippon ta Katakana iyotta a=eywanke p ne.
Irenka
Aynu itak anak sisak Itak-irenka kor.
Ikir
Réitak
Iposse
Kampinuye
Poronno ieanpehunarakur Aynu itak eanpehunar. John Batchelor, Kindaiichi Kyōsuke, Chiri Mashiho hene an.
Kampimoto
- ↑ UNESCO Atlas of the World's Languages in Danger
- ↑ Bradley, D. Languages of Mainland South-East Asia (2007) In O. Miyaoka, O. Sakiyama, and M. E. Krauss (eds.), The vanishing languages of the Pacific Rim, pp. 301–336. Oxford Linguistics. Oxford: Oxford University Press.
- ↑ Hammarström, Harald; Forkel, Robert; Haspelmath, Martin et al., eds (2016). “Ainu”. Glottolog 2.7. Jena: Max Planck Institute for the Science of Human History