@article{oai:shotoku.repo.nii.ac.jp:00001679, author = {小田, 勝 and Oda, Masaru}, journal = {聖徳学園岐阜教育大学紀要, Bulletin of Gifu College of Education}, month = {Feb}, note = {In the Japanese language, a noun is usually followed by a particle in a sentence. And the particle marks the case. As for the classical Japanese, it is known that a noun is often used without having a particle when the noun is interpreted as either the nominative or the accusative. (I call this type of noun "the noun phrase without a particl" in this paper.) In The Tale of Genji, however, noun phrases without a particle are found which are interpreted as neither the nominative nor the accusative. This paper deals with the various usages of the noun phrases without a particle found in The Tale of Genji and shows that they are classified into the following three types : I, the ones which are taken as the nominative, the accusative, the dative, and other cases, ii. The ones which can function as the conjunctive, and iii. The ones indicating the theme of the sentence.}, pages = {372--378}, title = {源氏物語における無助詞の名詞}, volume = {33}, year = {1997}, yomi = {オダ, マサル} }