菠薐草

Chinese

spinach
 
grass; straw; draft (of a document); careless; rough; manuscript; hasty
trad. (菠薐草) 菠薐
simp. #(菠薐草) 菠薐

Pronunciation


Noun

菠薐草

  1. Synonym of 菠薐 (bōléng).

Japanese

菠薐草 (hōrensō): spinach plants growing in a pot.
Kanji in this term
ほう
Hyōgaiji
れん
Hyōgaiji
そう
Grade: 1
on’yomi

Alternative forms

Etymology

The plant was introduced to Japan in the 16th century from China. A number of Japanese sources[1][2] state that the term 菠薐 (hōren) had previously been borrowed from Middle Chinese to refer vaguely to Persia or Nepal. The spinach plant did likely originate in the area of ancient Persia, but the Chinese term itself means spinach, not Nepal or Persia or any other place name. The plant was introduced to China via the region of Nepal around the year 647, suggesting that the Chinese term may have been borrowed from the Sanskrit language in use by the Licchavi kingdom ruling Nepal at that time. One possible Sanskrit source term is पालङ्ग (pālaṅga, beet” or “beet greens” initially, later extended to also refer to “spinach). Compare modern Nepali पालुङ्गो (pāluṅgo, spinach).

The Japanese term would thus be a compound of 菠薐 (hōren, spinach, obsolete, not used in modern Japanese) + (, herb, plant).

The alternative kanji spellings are phonetic substitutions.

Pronunciation

Noun

菠薐草 (hiragana ほうれんそう, katakana ホウレンソウ, rōmaji hōrensō, historical hiragana はうれんさう)

  1. spinach

Usage notes

The first two kanji are extremely rare; the second character appears to be used only in this term. These two kanji are often replaced with the kana spelling, as ほうれん草.

As with many terms that name organisms, this term is often spelled in katakana, especially in biological contexts, as ホウレンソウ.

References

  1. 1988, 国語大辞典(新装版) (Kokugo Dai Jiten, Revised Edition) (in Japanese), Tōkyō: Shogakukan
  2. 1995, 大辞泉 (Daijisen) (in Japanese), Tōkyō: Shogakukan, →ISBN
  3. 2006, 大辞林 (Daijirin), Third Edition (in Japanese), Tōkyō: Sanseidō, →ISBN
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