並瓢虫
Japanese
    
| Kanji in this term | ||
|---|---|---|
| 並 | 瓢 | 虫 | 
| なみ Grade: 6 | てんとう | |
| Jinmeiyō | Grade: 1 | |
| kun’yomi | jukujikun | |
| Alternative spelling | 
|---|
| 竝瓢蟲 (kyūjitai) | 
Etymology
    
Compound of 並 (nami, “average, ordinary”) + 天道 (tentō, literally, “celestial path”, but here referring to 天道虫 (tentō mushi, “ladybird, ladybug”); the 瓢虫 spelling is an alternative for tentō mushi).[1][2]
The use 瓢虫 for the tentō portion is an example of jukujikun (熟字訓), borrowed from Chinese.
Pronunciation
    
Usage notes
    
- As with many terms that name organisms, this term is often spelled in katakana, especially in biological contexts (where katakana is customary), as ナミテントウ.
- Sometimes called as simply 天道虫 (tentō mushi).[1]
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