The is a Japanese dialect spoken in the southern area, made up of the former area known as Mino Province, of Gifu Prefecture, Japan. It is also referred to as the Tà Ânà  dialect (æÂ±æ¿Âå¼ Tà Ânà Â-ben) by residents of the Tà Ânà  region of the prefecture, which is the eastern part of the former province. It is sometimes also referred to as the Gifu dialect (å²ÂéÂÂå¼ Gifu-ben), but that can sometimes include Hida dialect, which is in the northern part of Gifu Prefecture.
Generally speaking, it has many words and grammatical structures that are shared with other nearby dialects, such as the Nagoya and Mikawa dialects in neighboring Aichi Prefecture. However, it also shares features with the Kansai dialect.
Up until the Taishà  period, the Mino dialect used ja (ãÂÂãÂÂ) for copulas and adjectival nouns, and the Mino dialect was occasionally referred to as a "ja-language in Mino" (ç¾Âæ¿Âã®ãÂÂãÂÂè¨Âè Mino no ja-kotoba). However, because of the influence of the Kansai dialect, the modern Mino dialect generally uses ya (ãÂÂ) and is compared to the Nagoya dialect which uses da (ã ) for copulas and adjectival nouns.
Standard Japanese emphasizes copulas with yo, such as da yo (ã ãÂÂ), but the Mino dialect attaches te (ã¦) to the ya copula, leading to emphases such as ya te (ãÂÂã¦).
The main difference between verbs in the Mino dialect and in standard Japanese is seen in the negative form. The verb "to eat" (é£Âã¹ã taberu) is written as tabenai (é£Âã¹ãªãÂÂ) as a negative in standard Japanese. In the Mino dialect, nai is replaced by n (ãÂÂ) or hen (ã¸ãÂÂ), leading to forms such as taben (é£Âã¹ãÂÂ) or tabehen (é£Âã¹ã¸ãÂÂ). The verb "to go" would similarly be written in the negative form as ikan (è¡ÂãÂÂãÂÂ) or ikahen (è¡ÂãÂÂã¸ãÂÂ).
The Mino dialect elides the intervocalic in the sequences an'i and en'i; the first vowel is lengthened, becoming aai and eei, respectively. For example, æºÂå¡ and å ¨å¡ are read as man'in and zen'in in standard Japanese, but can be read as maain and zeein in the Mino dialect.
The traditional accent pattern for the Mino dialect follow similar patterns to the Tokyo accent, though some of the western areas around Tarui and Sekigahara also show influences from the nearby Kansai accent pattern. Because major cities like à Âgaki and Gifu have many commuters from the surrounding area, modern youth have lost the traditional accent for the dialect.
Below is a list of example words for the Mino dialect: