富士

Chinese

 
rich; abundant; to enrich; resource
scholar; warrior; knight
simp. and trad.
(富士)

Etymology

Orthographic borrowing from Japanese 富士 (Fuji).

Pronunciation


Proper noun

富士

  1. (~山) Mount Fuji (a mountain, the highest mountain in Japan)
  2. () Fuji (a city in Shizuoka, Japan)
  3. Fuji, a Japanese company

Japanese

Kanji in this term

Grade: 5

Grade: 4
on’yomi

Etymology

From Old Japanese, first attested in the Hitachi-no-kuni Fudoki (721 CE). The etymology continues to be debated, but there is wide acceptance of an origin from Ainu フヂ (fuji, [goddess of] fire), which is commonly associated with volcanoes by the Ainu people.[1]

Alexander Vovin (2017) proposes a derivation from (pu, fire, Eastern Old Japanese term and hapax legomenon encountered only once in any ancient source,[2] inferred as equivalent to Western Old Japanese combining form ho and standalone form hi) + (nushi, master):[3]

*⟨pu nusi⟩ → */punusi/ → */punsi//puzi/ (the form found in ancient texts like the Man'yōshū)/fuʑi/

The current kanji spelling possibly relates to a folk etymology of (fu, abundant) + (shi, soldiers) climbing the mountain. Multiple other folk etymologies exist, such as 不死 (fushi, immortal). All the folk etymologies rely on on'yomi readings, a trait that Vovin finds unsatisfactory due to the reliance on Chinese morphemes to spell an ancient Japanese placename.

Pronunciation

Proper noun

富士 (hiragana ふじ, rōmaji Fuji)

  1. short for 富士山 (Fujisan, “Mount Fuji)
  2. a city in Shizuoka Prefecture
  3. a surname

Derived terms

References

  1. John Batchelor (1925) The Pit-dwellers of Hokkaido and Ainu Place-names Considered, Sapporo, page 10
  2. c. 759, Man'yōshū (book 20, poem 4419), text here
  3. Alexander Vovin and William McClure, editors (2017) Studies in Japanese and Korean Historical Linguistics and Beyond, Leiden, Boston: Brill, →ISBN, pages 80-89: “On The Etymology of the Name of Mt. Fuji”
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