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Combined lexical and phonotactic data resolves uncertainties in the evolutionary diversification of the Japonic language family

Combined lexical and phonotactic data resolves uncertainties in the evolutionary diversification of the Japonic language family
Combined lexical and phonotactic data resolves uncertainties in the evolutionary diversification of the Japonic language family
The use of phylogenetic methods in linguistics has provided new insights into the structure, age, and spread of language families. Despite increasing recognition of Japonic as one of the world’s primary language families, research on the family’s phylogeny remains limited. This study presents a new reconstruction of Japonic language history based on NichiRyuuLex, a new lexical dataset comprising data from 48 Japanese and 33 Ryukyuan lects for 256 concepts. The study combines lexical and phonotactic data to increase precision in the phylogenetic parameter estimates, providing a more informative reconstruction. The analyses presented here confirm previous findings on the age of the family as a whole, estimating a Japanese-Ryukyuan split at around 400–500 Bce, supporting that the time of diversification coincides with the influx of Bronze Age rice agriculturists during the Yayoi Period. The topology of the mainland Japanese clade uncovered in the analyses unifies two divisions recognized in traditional Japanese dialectology: the East-West division, and the center-periphery division. The topology of the Ryukyuan clade largely followed geographical segmentation—Northern Ryukyuan (Amami; Okinawa) vs. Southern Ryukyuan (Miyako; Macro-Yaeyama). The ancestor of Ryukyuan was dated to around the ninth century, coinciding with the first traces of cereal farming in the Northern Ryukyu Islands. In sum, the study provides greater certainty about the linguistic history and internal structure of mainland Japanese, as well as a more detailed perspective on the history of the Ryukyuan languages.
Huisman, John L.A.
c1a6cf2e-8e4b-45da-8620-daa399dab58b
McLean, Bonnie
6eadccc1-73da-4ebb-a908-1dc3494e373b
Wu, Chieh-Hsi
ace630c6-2095-4ade-b657-241692f6b4d3
Huisman, John L.A.
c1a6cf2e-8e4b-45da-8620-daa399dab58b
McLean, Bonnie
6eadccc1-73da-4ebb-a908-1dc3494e373b
Wu, Chieh-Hsi
ace630c6-2095-4ade-b657-241692f6b4d3

Huisman, John L.A., McLean, Bonnie and Wu, Chieh-Hsi (2025) Combined lexical and phonotactic data resolves uncertainties in the evolutionary diversification of the Japonic language family. Journal of Language Evolution, 10 (1), [lzaf002]. (doi:10.1093/jole/lzaf002).

Record type: Article

Abstract

The use of phylogenetic methods in linguistics has provided new insights into the structure, age, and spread of language families. Despite increasing recognition of Japonic as one of the world’s primary language families, research on the family’s phylogeny remains limited. This study presents a new reconstruction of Japonic language history based on NichiRyuuLex, a new lexical dataset comprising data from 48 Japanese and 33 Ryukyuan lects for 256 concepts. The study combines lexical and phonotactic data to increase precision in the phylogenetic parameter estimates, providing a more informative reconstruction. The analyses presented here confirm previous findings on the age of the family as a whole, estimating a Japanese-Ryukyuan split at around 400–500 Bce, supporting that the time of diversification coincides with the influx of Bronze Age rice agriculturists during the Yayoi Period. The topology of the mainland Japanese clade uncovered in the analyses unifies two divisions recognized in traditional Japanese dialectology: the East-West division, and the center-periphery division. The topology of the Ryukyuan clade largely followed geographical segmentation—Northern Ryukyuan (Amami; Okinawa) vs. Southern Ryukyuan (Miyako; Macro-Yaeyama). The ancestor of Ryukyuan was dated to around the ninth century, coinciding with the first traces of cereal farming in the Northern Ryukyu Islands. In sum, the study provides greater certainty about the linguistic history and internal structure of mainland Japanese, as well as a more detailed perspective on the history of the Ryukyuan languages.

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Accepted/In Press date: 28 August 2025
e-pub ahead of print date: 14 October 2025
Published date: 14 October 2025

Identifiers

Local EPrints ID: 505714
URI: http://eprints.soton.ac.uk/id/eprint/505714
PURE UUID: 0599d932-72fc-4f27-a676-848b031947aa
ORCID for Chieh-Hsi Wu: ORCID iD orcid.org/0000-0001-9386-725X

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Date deposited: 16 Oct 2025 17:15
Last modified: 17 Oct 2025 02:06

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Contributors

Author: John L.A. Huisman
Author: Bonnie McLean
Author: Chieh-Hsi Wu ORCID iD

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