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Hani Wahyuningtias
Universitas Darma Persada

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Partikel Akhir Kalimatbahasa Jepang Dan Bahasa Indonesia Hani Wahyuningtias
Linguistika: Buletin Ilmiah Program Magister Linguistik Universitas Udayana Vol 24 No 1 (2017): Maret
Publisher : Program Magister Linguistik Universitas Udayana

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Abstract

In Japanese, the ending particles of sentences commonly used in conversations are 'ne', 'yo', 'yone', and 'yona'. The matching of these words in Indonesian are 'ya', 'lho' and 'kan'. Using the methodology of language comparison, the theory of Information Territory, and using the example of sentences collected in Japanese comic that has been translated into Indonesian as a source of data, this study examines more deeply the use and function of ending particles on Japanese sentences 'ne', 'yo', 'yone', and 'yona' with the translation of the words in Indonesian. The results shows that the use of ending particle on a sentence like 'ne', 'yo', 'yone', and 'yona' in conversation is a must, while the use of "ya" "lho" "kan" in Indonesian is arbitrary.
Partikel Akhir Kalimatbahasa Jepang Dan Bahasa Indonesia Hani Wahyuningtias; Ari Artadi; Hermansyah Dyaya
Linguistika: Buletin Ilmiah Program Magister Linguistik Universitas Udayana Vol 24 No 1 (2017): Maret
Publisher : Program Magister Linguistik Universitas Udayana

Show Abstract | Download Original | Original Source | Check in Google Scholar | Full PDF (558.147 KB)

Abstract

In Japanese, the ending particles of sentences commonly used in conversations are 'ne', 'yo', 'yone', and 'yona'. The matching of these words in Indonesian are 'ya', 'lho' and 'kan'. Using the methodology of language comparison, the theory of Information Territory, and using the example of sentences collected in Japanese comic that has been translated into Indonesian as a source of data, this study examines more deeply the use and function of ending particles on Japanese sentences 'ne', 'yo', 'yone', and 'yona' with the translation of the words in Indonesian. The results shows that the use of ending particle on a sentence like 'ne', 'yo', 'yone', and 'yona' in conversation is a must, while the use of "ya" "lho" "kan" in Indonesian is arbitrary.