Hokkaido dialect | |
States: | Japan |
Region: | Hokkaido |
Speakers: | ? |
Familycolor: | Altaic |
Fam1: | Japonic |
Fam2: | Japanese |
Fam3: | Eastern Japanese |
Fam4: | (unclear) |
Isoexception: | dialect |
Glotto: | hokk1249 |
Glottorefname: | Hokkaidō |
Ietf: | ja-u-sd-jp01 |
The , commonly called , originated in the area where people from all over Japan gathered and settled.
Since the Meiji period, immigrants have flowed into the inland areas of Hokkaido, especially from the mixed areas of the Tohoku and Hokuriku regions, resulting in a mixture of various Japanese dialects in Hokkaido.
The relationship of Hokkaidō dialect to the rest of Japanese—and whether there even is a coherent Hokkaidō dialect—are the subject of debate. Shibata (2003) mentions three theories:[1]
Tōhoku influence is strongest in coastal areas, especially on the Oshima Peninsula in the south, where the local variety is commonly called . The urban dialect of Sapporo is quite close to Standard Japanese. Western features may have been brought by merchants from Kansai and Hokuriku following the Kitamaebune ("northern-bound ships") trading route.
The Ainu language is also spoken around Hokkaido. It was widely used before the Japanese settled there in the Meiji period and there are still a few elderly speakers today.