広島大学大学院教育学研究科紀要. 第二部, 文化教育開発関連領域 Issue 63
published_at 2014-12-19

メールにおける日本語学習者のスピーチスタイル : 「ません」と「ないです」の使い分け

Email Speech Style of Japanese Learners : The Differential Use of "Masen" and "Naidesu"
Okazaki Wataru
Inayoshi Mako
Su Zhenjun
Taniguchi Miho
fulltext
1.67 MB
BullGradSchEduc-HiroshimaUniv-Part2_63_219.pdf
Abstract
Both “masen” and “naidesu” are the polite negative ending forms of a Japanese sentence. However, native speakers of Japanese will adjust accordingly between the two words depending on formality, part of speech used and medium chosen. Nonetheless, differences in usage are hardly taught in the classroom. Moreover, Japanese textbooks for learners usually introduce one of the two forms in each part of speech. From this, a question arises: How do Japanese learners distinguish between these two forms? This research investigates the different usages of the two Japanese negative forms “masen” and “naidesu” by Japanese learners. Advanced-level Japanese learners in Japan were asked to fill in the blanks of two questionnaires. The setting was to write an email to their teacher and a senior who was one year older than themselves respectively. The results show that learners tend to make different use of the two forms with regard to hierarchal relations with whom they write to and the part of speech conjugated just like native speakers of Japanese. However, some learners only wrote “naidesu” after I-adjectives, while some others did not seem to use the two forms separately according to hierarchal relations. The results indicate that those learners did not have a definite distinction between the two forms unlike Japanese natives. Previous research has indicated that Japanese natives use “naidesu” frequently in spoken language, especially with I-adjectives. This research, on the other hand, shows that the natives avoid “naidesu” even with I-adjectives when they write emails to their seniors. In conclusion, the importance to teach Japanese learners the difference in usage between “masen” and “naidesu” is asserted in this research.
Keywords
“masen” and “naidesu”
Japanese learners
Japanese in e-mail
「ません」と「ないです」
日本語学習者
メールの日本語