国民学校
Japanese
Kanji in this term | |||
---|---|---|---|
国 | 民 | 学 | 校 |
こく Grade: 2 |
みん Grade: 4 |
がく > がっ Grade: 1 |
こう Grade: 1 |
on’yomi |
Etymology
Compound of 国民 (kokumin, “nationals, citizens”) + 学校 (gakkō, “school”). Calque of German Volksschule (“primary school”, literally “people-school”).
Noun
国民学校 (hiragana こくみんがっこう, rōmaji kokumin gakkō)
- (historical) elementary school, national elementary school
- 2018 December 8 (last accessed) “Kokumin gakko”, in Kodomo-tachi no mita sensō [The war children saw], Hiroshima Virtual Museum:
- 国民学校は国民の基礎的錬成をなす学校とされ、心身を鍛え、国のため天皇のために身を捧げることが求められました。
- Kokumin gakkō wa kokumin no kisoteki rensei o nasu gakkō tosare, shinshin o kitae, kuni no tame tennō no tame ni mi o sasageru koto ga motomeraremashita.
- Kokumin gakko was considered as a school to provide basic training for all citizens, to discipline mind and body, to seek to sacrifice one's body for the country and for the Emperor.
- 国民学校は国民の基礎的錬成をなす学校とされ、心身を鍛え、国のため天皇のために身を捧げることが求められました。
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Usage notes
The term was used officially from 1941-1947, later replaced by the term 小学校 (shōgakkō, “primary school”).
Descendants
- → Indonesian: sekolah rakyat (calque)
- → Korean: 국민학교 (gungminhakgyo)
References
- Gibney, Frank (ed.). 2014. Buritanika kokusai dai hyakka jiten. Tokyo: TBS Britannica.
See also
Education in the Empire of Japan on Wikipedia.Wikipedia
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