@article{oai:bunkyo.repo.nii.ac.jp:00002318, author = {村山, 康雄}, journal = {言語と文化, Language and Culture}, month = {1999-03-01, 2012-02-07}, note = {Japanese sentence-final particles are divided into two groups: the first includes sa, yo and ne, which follow particles in the other group; the second group includes no, wa, tomo, mono, zo and ze, which do not follow other particles. First-group particles convey the speaker's view to listener. Second-group particles are further divided into three groups based on their co-occurrences with first-group particles. The Co-occurrences of these two groups are determined by the degree of confidence which each particle, from both groups, implies. Among the second-group particles this degree of confidence is implied by the co-occurrence with the verb of supposition, daroo. Particles which co-occur with daroo imply a low degree of confidence. Among particles of both groups, the degree of confidence depends on whether the particle is used to indicate "sente-hatsugen" or "ukete-hatsugen", and on whose view it expresses. Particles indicating the speaker's view imply a strong degree of confidence and those indicating the listener's view imply a low degree of confidence. Particles implying greater confidence from the second group co-occur with those particles implying greater confidence from the first group, and vice versa.}, pages = {107--123}, title = {A Classification of the Final Particles of Japanese Sentences and an Examination of their Co-occurrence}, volume = {11}, year = {} }