The Japanese language has dozens of dialects differing by place.

Table of contents
1 Kansai dialect
2 Other dialects
3 External Link

Kansai dialect

The most well-known, Kansai-ben (関西弁, ben dialect) is a dialect spoken in the Kansai region of Japan, and most notably in the city of Osaka. Most Japanese people from outside the region find the dialect to be rough-sounding.

Kansai-ben contracts several words—chigau "wrong" becomes chau, omoshiroi "interesting" becomes omoroi, and hontō "really" becomes homma. It replaces others entirely—suteru "to throw away" becomes hokasu, and totemo "very" becomes ''metcha'\'.

Common phrases unique to the Kansai dialect include:

  • akan - a mild expletive
  • aho - idiot
  • donkusai - stupid (literally "stupid-smelling")
  • honnnara - in that case
  • makeru - to discount a price (literally "to lose")
  • tanomu - please
  • yaru - to give (elsewhere in Japan, it is a vulgar form of "to do")

Other dialects

  • Hokkaido-ben
  • Fukui-ben
  • Kawachi-ben
  • Kobe-ben is a variation on Kansai-ben, most notable for conjugating verbs with an ending -ton (nani shite iru? "What are you doing?" becomes nani shiton?)
  • Kyoto-ben is a very soft and melodic Kansai dialect variation. Where Kobe dialect would say -ton, Kyoto dialect uses -taharu or -teharu (e.g. nani shitaharu no?). The sentence endings -yasu and -dosu are also common in Kyoto.

External Link