茜さす
Japanese
[edit]Kanji in this term |
---|
茜 |
あかね Jinmeiyō |
kun'yomi |
Etymology
[edit]From Old Japanese.
Derived from 茜 (akane, “madder (dye) → red”) + 差す (sasu, “to illuminate, shine”). [1][2]
First cited in the Man'yōshū of roughly 759 CE.[1]
Pronunciation
[edit]Adnominal
[edit]茜さす • (akane sasu)
- shining brilliantly, allusion to 昼 (hiru, “daytime”), 光 (hikari, “light”), 朝日 (asahi, “morning sun”), etc.
- glowing sappanwood red, allusion to 周防 (Suō, a placename, especially Suō Province)
- puns to 蘇芳 (suō, “sappanwood red”) in reference to Suō
Quotations
[edit]For quotations using this term, see Citations:茜さす.
Derived terms
[edit]- 茜さし (akane sashi)
Phrase
[edit]茜さす • (akane sasu)
Quotations
[edit]For quotations using this term, see Citations:茜さす.
Noun
[edit]茜さす • (akane sasu)
- (archaic women's speech) Synonym of 日の出 (hinode): the sunrise
References
[edit]Old Japanese
[edit]Etymology
[edit]Derived from 茜 (akane, “madder (dye) → red”) + 差す (sasu, “to illuminate, shine”).[1][2]
First cited in the Man'yōshū of roughly 759 CE.[1]
Adnominal
[edit]茜さす (akane sasu) (kana あかねさす)
- shining brilliantly, allusion to 日 (pi1, “sun, day”), 晝 (pi1ru, “daytime”), or 照る (teru, “to shine”)
- glowing madder red, allusion to 紫 (murasaki1, “purple gromwell → purple”) or 紫野 (murasaki1no1, “murasaki field”)
- reddish face, allusion to 君 (ki1mi1, “you; person of high respect”)
Quotations
[edit]For quotations using this term, see Citations:茜さす.
Derived terms
[edit]- 茜さし (akane sasi)
Descendants
[edit]- Japanese: 茜さす (akane sasu)
References
[edit]- Japanese terms spelled with 茜 read as あかね
- Japanese terms read with kun'yomi
- Japanese terms inherited from Old Japanese
- Japanese terms derived from Old Japanese
- Japanese terms with IPA pronunciation
- Japanese lemmas
- Japanese adnominals
- Japanese terms spelled with jinmeiyō kanji
- Japanese terms with 1 kanji
- Japanese phrases
- Japanese nouns
- Japanese terms with archaic senses
- Japanese women's speech terms
- Japanese makurakotoba
- Old Japanese lemmas
- Old Japanese adnominals
- Old Japanese makurakotoba