Complete Course of Japanese Conversation-Grammar; A New and Practical Method of Learning the Japanese Language

Tokyo: Oreste Vaccari, 1946. Sixth Edition [stated]. Unknown printing. Hardcover. xxxiv, [2], 504 pages. Preface by Count Ayske Kabayama. Indexes DJ in a plastic sleeve and has wear, tears, chips & soiling. Inscription from both authors on fep. Inscription reads To His Excellency Etsujiro Uehara, with the compliments of the authors. Oreste and Elisa Vaccari Tokyo, January 30th, 1947. Oreste Vaccari (1886 - 1980) was an Italian Orientalist and linguist. He was a pupil at the Royal Oriental Institute of Naples during the second decade of the 20th century, where his instructors included Afevork Ghevre Jesus, who taught him Amharic and eventually became the chargé d'affaires of the Ethiopian delegation to Rome. After his studies, Vaccari obtained a posting in Japan as a correspondent for The Japan Times and Mail, and also taught foreign languages at the Athénée Français of Tokyo, being fluent in French and English besides his native Italian. In 1935, he married a Japanese woman, Enko Elisa Vaccari (1896-1983), who had graduated in English from Jissen Women's College, and would support him in his various linguistic projects during the rest of his career. Vaccari was responsible for translating Blattengeta Heruy Welde Sellase's Mahidere Birhan: Hagre Japan (The Document of Japan) (1934), a seminal work in Japanese-Ethiopian relations, from the original Amharic into English, which was then rendered into Japanese by his wife. Together with his wife, Vaccari prepared many books to help foreign learners of Japanese, and his most popular works included the New Up-to-date English-Japanese Conversation Dictionary and Vaccari's Concise English-Japanese Japanese-English Dictionary. Etsujir Uehara (15 May 1877 – 2 December 1962) was a politician and bureaucrat in the early Sh wa period Japan, who subsequently was a politician and cabinet minister in the immediate post-war era. Uehara was born in what is now the city of Azumino, Nagano. He lost his parents when he was three years old. After working for a silk mill, and the Yokohama Customs Office, he moved to the United States in 1899, working as a waiter to pay he way through high school. He also published a weekly business newsletter. In 1907, he graduated from Washington State University, continuing on to graduate school at the University of London, from his he obtained a doctorate in 1910. After returning to Japan in 1911, Uehara worked as lecturer on political science at Meiji University, Rikkyo University and at the forerunner of Tokyo Institute of Technology in Tokyo, teaching both comparative legal theory and constitutional law. He was a supporter of the theory of popular sovereignty, which was one of the underpinnings of the Taish democracy movement. He was elected to a seat in the lower house of the Diet of Japan in the 1917 General Election under the Rikken Kokumint party, and was subsequently reelected 13 times, holding the seat until World War II. A supporter of the reforms of Inukai Tsuyoshi, he later changed party affiliations to the Rikken Seiy kai. Uehara served as parliamentary councilor for the Ministry of Communications in 1924 under Prime Minister Kat Takaaki, and parliamentary councilor for the Ministry of Foreign Affairs in 1926 under Prime Minister Tanaka Giichi. In 1932–1936, Uehara was the Vice-Chair of the House of Representatives. In the 1939 schism of the Rikken Seiyuto, Uehara sided with the "orthodox" faction led by Ichir Hatoyama. Uehara took a critical stance against the formation of the Taisei Yokusankai, and in 1941 formed an anti-Yokusankai group with Hatoyama and Yukio Ozaki; however, the group was defeated in the 1942 General Election. During the war years, he worked in the budgetary committee of the Ministry of Foreign Affairs under Shigenori T g and was noted for his anti-war stance, repeated stating that it was the job of the ministry to bring the war to an early conclusion. After the end of World War II, Uehara helped form the Japan Liberal Party 1942–1948 together with Hatoyama and Hitoshi Ashida. In the first Yoshida administration he was appointed Minister without portfolio and subsequently Home Minister. Despite his liberal credentials, he was highly opposed to Article 9 of the new Constitution of Japan, which he felt to be incompatible with a sovereign nation. In 1955, Uehara served as chairman of the Committee of Foreign Affairs for the House of Representatives. Condition: Good / Fair.

Keywords: Japanese, Conversation, Grammar, Reference Works, Etsujiro Uehara, Transliteration, Spelling, Orthography, Pronunciation, Kana Characters, Conjugation, Relative Pronouns, Subjunctive, Infinitives, Gerunds, Reading Exercises

[Book #81990]

Price: $250.00