(There is also an unrelated Turkic language spoken in western China known as Ainu, variously spelled Aynu or Aini.)
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Ainu is a moribund language, with a small and rapidly dwindling number of speakers; a 1996 estimate lists only 15 active speakers out of some 15,000 ethnic Ainu (Ethnologue). Most Ainu in Japan speak only Japanese.
The phonology of Ainu is relatively simple; syllables are CV(C), there are few consonant clusters[?].
There are five vowels:
i u e o a
p t k ? (glottal stop is not written in transcription) s h c (varies between [tS], [ts], [dZ], [dz]) w y ([j]) m n r
The sequence /ti/ is realized as [tSi]; /s/ usually becomes [S] before /i/ and at the end of syllables. There is some variation among dialects; in the Sakhalin dialect, syllable-final /p, t, k, r/ are merged into /h/.
There is a pitch accent[?]; words including affixes have a high pitch on the stem, or on the first syllable if it is closed or has a diphthong. Other words have the high pitch on the second syllable.
Ainu is SOV, with postpositions. Subject and object are generally not marked. Nouns can cluster to modify one another; the head comes at the end. Verbs, which are inherently either transitive or intransitive, accept various derivational affixes.
No formal orthography exists for writing Ainu; Latin-based scripts devised by linguists, as well as the Japanese katakana syllabary are variously used.
The Ainu have a rich oral tradition of hero-sagas called Yukar[?], which retain a number of grammatical archaisms.
Extensive research on Ainu language and the culture of Ainu was performed by the anthropologist Bronislaw Pilsudski.
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