閩
|
Translingual
Han character
閩 (radical 169, 門+6, 14 strokes, cangjie input 日弓中一戈 (ANLMI), four-corner 77136, composition ⿵門虫)
Derived characters
- 𤁝
Related characters
References
- KangXi: page 1335, character 7
- Dai Kanwa Jiten: character 41315
- Dae Jaweon: page 1841, character 4
- Hanyu Da Zidian: volume 7, page 4295, character 9
- Unihan data for U+95A9
Chinese
trad. | 閩 | |
---|---|---|
simp. | 闽 | |
variant forms | 𨷷 |
Glyph origin
Characters in the same phonetic series (門) (Zhengzhang, 2003) | |
---|---|
Old Chinese | |
蔄 | *roːs, *mruːns |
闅 | *min, *mrɯn, *mɯn |
閩 | *mrɯn, *mɯn |
蕄 | *mɯːŋ, *mrɯːŋ |
門 | *mɯːn |
捫 | *mɯːn |
悶 | *mɯːns |
聞 | *mɯn, *mɯns |
閿 | *mɯn |
問 | *mɯns |
Phono-semantic compound (形聲, OC *mrɯn, *mɯn) : phonetic 門 (OC *mɯːn) + semantic 虫 (“snake”). The 虫 radical was a common component of the names of barbarians (Schuessler, 2007), probably reflecting the Min people's worship of snakes (Li, 2017).
Etymology
In most modern Min dialects and some other southern dialects (including Hakka and Xiang), it is read with a level tone (平聲), which is the expected reflex based on rime dictionaries. In Mandarin and the remaining southern dialects, it is read with a rising tone (上聲), probably due to analogy with the phonetic component of 閔 (MC mˠiɪnX) (Li, 2017).
This etymology is incomplete. You can help Wiktionary by elaborating on the origins of this term.
Pronunciation
Definitions
閩
Compounds
Japanese
Kanji
- This term needs a translation to English. Please help out and add a translation, then remove the text
{{rfdef}}
.
Korean
Hanja
閩 • (min) (hangeul 민, revised min, McCune–Reischauer min, Yale min)
- This term needs a translation to English. Please help out and add a translation, then remove the text
{{rfdef}}
.
Vietnamese
Han character
閩 (mân)
- This term needs a translation to English. Please help out and add a translation, then remove the text
{{rfdef}}
.