Patrick Geoffrey O'Neill
P. G. O'Neill (1924 – 19 January 2012) was a British academic and writer on Japanese language and Noh drama.[1][2]
O'Neill was, with Ronald P. Dore, Sir Peter Parker and John R. McEwan, one of the "Dulwich boys", 30 sixth-formers who commenced study of Japanese at the School of Oriental and African Studies in May 1942.[3][4]
O'Neill was Professor of Japanese at SOAS from 1968 until 1986.[2]
Works
on Noh
- Collected Writings ISBN 4-931444-37-7
- A Guide to No
- Early No Drama
- Japan on Stage
on Japanese language
- A Reader of Handwritten Japanese
- Japanese Kana Handbook
- A programmed course on respect language in modem Japanese. London: English Universities Press, 1966.[5]
- Essential Kanji. (a sequenced introduction to the Tōyō kanji 1946-1981)
- 日英佛教語辞典 Japanese-English-French Teaching Terms Lexicon.
- 中日英佛教語辞典 Chinese-Japanese-English-French Teaching Terms Lexicon. (enlarged edition of above)
- 日本人名辞典 - dictionary of variant pronunciations of Japanese personal names and surnames.
- 日本人名地名辞典 - personal names, surnames and place names dictionary
gollark: From the people who brought you the Potatowall, the Potatobase.
gollark: Via backdoors 1 and 4.
gollark: If I wanted to do that I could just install DemoVirus over potatOS.
gollark: Now if my server goes down potatOS will just be stuck on a blank screen.
gollark: I've added protection against that stuff in new versions.
References
- オニール(Patrick Geoffrey O'Neill): 1924年生まれ。ロンドン大学東洋アフリカ研究部(SOAS)にて日本語を学び、能の研究で博士号取得。同大学教授、日本語学科長等歴任。日本語の敬語、書記法や能の研究とともに、数多くの外国人向け日本語教科書の著者として著名。著書に日英佛教語辞典、中日英佛教語辞典、日本人名辞典、A Guide to No, A Reader of Handwritten Japanese, Early No Drama, Japanese Kana Handbook, Essential Kanji, Japan on Stage (河竹登志夫著英訳)等。収録論文分野:日本語、能、日本の祭りなど。
- "Professor P. G. O'Neill". The Times.
- Ōba, Sadao. The 'Japanese' war: London University's WWII secret teaching 1995 p11 "There were five war-time courses in Japanese at SOAS. ...who to this day are known affectionately as 'the Dulwich boys'."
- Bayly,Christopher Alan; Harper, Timothy Norman. 'Forgotten armies: the fall of British Asia, 1941-1945 2005 Page 259 "They were known as the 'Dulwich Boys', lodged as they were at Tin Tut's alma mater, Dulwich College."
- review
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