otsu

See also: Otsu, ōtsu, and Ōtsu

English

Etymology

Borrowed from Japanese (second).

Adjective

otsu (not comparable)

  1. (linguistics) In Old Japanese, one of two sets of vowels of uncertain pronunciation which fell together in modern Japanese.
    • 1991: Christopher Seeley, A History of Writing in Japan
      Later—during the ninth century—the and otsu groups did come to be used interchangeably.
    • 2001: John R. Bentley, A Descriptive Grammar of Early Old Japanese Prose
      He rejects the claim of Matsumoto (1984) that the and otsu -o- vowels are in complementary distribution, and therefore these two vowels are allophones of a single vowel.

See also

  • otsu-rui
  • /
  • kô-otsu/kō-otsu

Anagrams


Japanese

Romanization

otsu

  1. Rōmaji transcription of おつ
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