丸太
Japanese
Kanji in this term | |
---|---|
丸 | 太 |
まる Grade: 2 |
た Grade: 2 |
yutōyomi |
Etymology
Compound of 丸 (maru, “circle; round”) + 太 (ta, “fat”, here possibly emphasizing the roundness).
Noun
丸太 (hiragana まるた, rōmaji maruta) (alternative reading hiragana まろた, romaji marota) (less common)
- a log: unsawn lumber (UK) or timber (US), a section of a tree cut to a length and with the bark removed, but otherwise round and unfinished
- alternate name for the 似鯉 (にごい, nigoi) fish (Hemibarbus barbus); more commonly known as ニゴイ (nigoi)
- alternate name for the 鯎 or 石斑魚 (うぐい, ugui) fish, Japanese dace (Tribolodon hakonensis); more commonly known as ウグイ (ugui)
- (archaic, slang): during the Edo period, derogatory term for an unlicensed prostitute dressed as a Buddhist nun as a form of disguise from the authorities (from the way the shaven head looks a bit like a debarked log, and from the way that they both roll around)
Derived terms
Derived terms
- 丸太小屋 (まるたごや, marutagoya): a log cabin
- 丸太ん棒 (まるたんぼう, marutanbō): a log (more casual)
- 丸太魚 (まるたうお, maruta uo): a maruta fish: a ニゴイ (nigoi)
- 丸太式舞台 (まるたしきぶたい, maruta-shiki butai): a log-style (theater) stage, made of hewn logs
- 丸太舟 (まるたぶね, marutabune): a kind of boat made of logs and used mainly on Lake Biwa starting from the medieval period
- 丸太洗い, 丸太洗 (まるたあらい, maruta arai): logs used to shore up the bottom of a reservoir pond or sewer outlet
Idioms
- 丸太に糠釘 (まるたにぬかくぎ, maruta ni nukakugi): “a tack into a log” → a metaphor for one's intentions or feelings not getting through to another person, much as a tack will not go through a log
Synonyms
Further reading
Lumber on Wikipedia.Wikipedia 木材 (Lumber) on the Japanese Wikipedia.Wikipedia ja ニゴイ on the Japanese Wikipedia.Wikipedia ja (Hemibarbus barbus) ウグイ on the Japanese Wikipedia.Wikipedia ja (Tribolodon hakonensis) Edo period on Wikipedia.Wikipedia Ukiyo on Wikipedia.Wikipedia
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