Gusti Ayu Made Yuni Mahadewi
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KLASIFIKASI EMOSI TOKOH UTAMA MIZUKI ASHIYA DALAM DRAMA HANAKIMI Gusti Ayu Made Yuni Mahadewi; Made Henra Dwikarmawan Sudipa
Jurnal Daruma : Linguistik, Sastra dan Budaya Jepang Vol. 3 No. 1 (2023): Jurnal Daruma: Linguistik, Sastra dan Budaya Jepang
Publisher : Program Studi Sastra Jepang Fakultas Bahasa Asing Unmas Denpasar

Show Abstract | Download Original | Original Source | Check in Google Scholar | Full PDF (409.338 KB)

Abstract

This article aims to determine the emotional classification of the main character Ashiya Mizuki in the Japanese drama titled Hanakimi. The theory used is David Krech's theory of emotional classification. The data source used is the primary data source, using methods namely listen and record. Based on the results of the analysis of the data obtained, there are 4 types of classification of emotions, namely: basic emotions, emotions related to sensor stimulation, emotions related to oneself, and emotions related to others.
Analisis Kontrastif Bentuk dan Makna Kata Majemuk Bahasa Jepang dan Bahasa Indonesia Made Henra Dwikarmawan Sudipa; I Wayan Wahyu Cipta Widiastika; Gusti Ayu Made Yuni Mahadewi; Ni Luh Yunda Anindyana
Morfologi : Jurnal Ilmu Pendidikan, Bahasa, Sastra dan Budaya Vol. 4 No. 1 (2026): Februari: Morfologi : Jurnal Ilmu Pendidikan, Bahasa, Sastra dan Budaya
Publisher : Asosiasi Periset Bahasa Sastra Indonesia

Show Abstract | Download Original | Original Source | Check in Google Scholar | DOI: 10.61132/morfologi.v4i1.2598

Abstract

This study analyzes the similarities and differences between Japanese and Indonesian compound words, with particular attention to their structural patterns and semantic characteristics. The data were collected from official news websites in Japan and Indonesia, including Asahi Shinbun and Kompas, through observation and note-taking techniques. The collected data were analyzed through the distributional method, and the contrastive analysis was conducted based on morphological theories proposed by Chaer (2015), Katamba (2018), and Kageyama (2016). The findings reveal that ten Japanese and Indonesian compound words share equivalent meanings. From a structural perspective, both languages exhibit various types of compound formations, including noun, adjective, and verb compounds. A notable structural difference is that Japanese compound words may undergo a phonological process known as rendaku. From a semantic perspective, compound words in both languages may be categorized as endocentric and exocentric. However, some compounds do not share the same idiomatic meanings, even though they are constructed from identical lexemes in each language.