jukujikun

English

Etymology

Romanization of Japanese 熟字訓 (literally compound character reading).

Noun

jukujikun (plural jukujikun)

  1. (linguistics) A Japanese word whose kanji spelling conveys the meaning based on the individual characters, but the reading is not directly related to the spelling. For example, (big, usually read ō in kun'yomi compounds) and (person, usually read hito in kun'yomi compounds) combine to form 大人, meaning “adult” but read as otona instead of the otherwise-expected ōbito.

Usage notes

Examples include:-

  • "smoke" ( kemuri) + "grass" ( kusa) = tobacco (煙草 tabako)
  • "great" ( ō) + "peace" ( wa) = unified Japan (大和 Yamato)
  • "seven" ( nana) + "evening" ( ) = a star festival held July 7th (七夕 Tanabata)
  • "ageless wizard" (仙人 sennin) + "hand" ( tenohira) = cactus (仙人掌 saboten)
  • "place" ( tokoro) + "because of" ( motsu) = grounds, justification (所以 yuen)
  • "horse" ( uma) + "drunken" ( yoi) + "tree" ( ki) = Japanese andromeda, a shrub poisonous to horses (馬酔木 ashibi)
  • "ocean" ( umi) + "otter" ( kawauso) = "sea otter" (海獺 rakko)

References

  • Taylor, I., & Taylor, M. M. (1995) Writing and literacy in Chinese, Korean, and Japanese. Philadelphia, PA: John Benjamins Publishing Company, p. 302.

Japanese

Romanization

jukujikun

  1. Rōmaji transcription of じゅくじくん
This article is issued from Wiktionary. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.