幼
| ||||||||
| ||||||||
Translingual
Han character
幼 (Kangxi radical 52, 幺+2, 5 strokes, cangjie input 女戈大尸 (VIKS), four-corner 24727, composition ⿰幺力)
References
- KangXi: page 342, character 2
- Dai Kanwa Jiten: character 9193
- Dae Jaweon: page 650, character 9
- Hanyu Da Zidian (first edition): volume 2, page 1093, character 7
- Unihan data for U+5E7C
Chinese
| simp. and trad. |
幼 | |
|---|---|---|
| alternative forms | 㓜 | |
Glyph origin
| Historical forms of the character 幼 | ||||
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Shang | Western Zhou | Warring States | Shuowen Jiezi (compiled in Han) | Liushutong (compiled in Ming) |
| Oracle bone script | Bronze inscriptions | Chu slip and silk script | Small seal script | Transcribed ancient scripts |
![]() |
![]() |
![]() |
![]() |
![]() |
Characters in the same phonetic series (幼) (Zhengzhang, 2003)
Ideogrammic compound (會意) : 幺 (“tiny”) + 力 (“strength”). 幺 (OC *qiːw) may also act as a phonetic component.
Pronunciation 1
Definitions
幼
Synonyms
- (infant):
Dialectal synonyms of 小孩 (“child; kid”) [map]
- (young):
Dialectal synonyms of 年輕 (“young”) [map]
- (thin):
Dialectal synonyms of 細 (“thin; fine; slender”) [map]
| Variety | Location | Words |
|---|---|---|
| Classical Chinese | 細 | |
| Formal (Written Standard Chinese) | 細 | |
| Mandarin | Beijing | 細 |
| Taiwan | 細 | |
| Jinan | 細 | |
| Xi'an | 細 | |
| Wuhan | 細 | |
| Chengdu | 細 | |
| Yangzhou | 細 | |
| Hefei | 細 | |
| Singapore | 細 | |
| Cantonese | Guangzhou | 幼 |
| Hong Kong | 幼 | |
| Yangjiang | 細, 嫩 | |
| Singapore (Guangfu) | 幼 | |
| Gan | Nanchang | 細 |
| Hakka | Meixian | 幼, 細 |
| Jin | Taiyuan | 細 |
| Min Bei | Jian'ou | 細 |
| Min Dong | Fuzhou | 杪, 幼 |
| Min Nan | Xiamen | 幼 |
| Tainan | 幼 | |
| Penang (Hokkien) | 幼 | |
| Singapore (Hokkien) | 幼 | |
| Chaozhou | 幼, 細 | |
| Wenchang | 幼 | |
| Haikou | 幼 | |
| Wu | Suzhou | 細 |
| Wenzhou | 細 | |
| Xiang | Changsha | 細 |
| Shuangfeng | 細 | |
- (tender):
Dialectal synonyms of 嫩 (“(of food) tender; soft”) [map]
| Variety | Location | Words |
|---|---|---|
| Formal (Written Standard Chinese) | 嫩 | |
| Mandarin | Taiwan | 嫩 |
| Yantai (Muping) | 嫩 | |
| Xi'an | 嫩 | |
| Wuhan | 嫩 | |
| Nanjing | 嫩 | |
| Singapore | 嫩 | |
| Cantonese | Guangzhou | 嫩 |
| Hong Kong | 嫩 | |
| Dongguan | 嫩 | |
| Gan | Nanchang | 嫩 |
| Lichuan | 嫩 | |
| Jin | Taiyuan | 嫩 |
| Min Dong | Fuzhou | 幼 |
| Min Nan | Xiamen | 幼 |
| Xiamen (Tong'an) | 幼 | |
| Quanzhou | 幼 | |
| Zhangzhou | 幼 | |
| Tainan | 幼 | |
| Singapore (Hokkien) | 幼 | |
| Singapore (Teochew) | 幼 | |
| Wenchang | 幼 | |
| Haikou | 幼 | |
| Wu | Hangzhou | 嫩 |
| Ningbo | 嫩 | |
Antonyms
- (young): 老 (lǎo)
Compounds
Derived terms from 幼
Pronunciation 2
Definitions
幼
- Used in 幼眇 and 幼妙.
Japanese
Readings
Compounds
Compounds
- 幼芽 (yōga, “plumule”)
- 幼孩 (yōgai)
- 幼学 (yōgaku)
- 幼魚 (yōgyo, “young fish”)
- 幼君 (yōkun, “young master”)
- 幼形 (yōkei, “neoteny”)
- 幼孤 (yōko, “young orphan”)
- 幼根 (yōkon, “(botany) radicle”)
- 幼児 (yōji, “infant, toddler”)
- 幼時 (yōji, “childhood, infancy”)
- 幼歯 (yōshi, “baby tooth”)
- 幼者 (yōsha, “young child, infant”)
- 幼弱 (yōjaku, “young and weak”)
- 幼若 (yōjaku, “juvenile”)
- 幼主 (yōshu, “young monarch”)
- 幼獣 (yōjū, “young animal”)
- 幼女 (yōjo, “young girl”)
- 幼少 (yōshō, “very young, infancy”)
- 幼生 (yōsei, “larva”)
- 幼稚 (yōchi, “childish; infantile”)
- 幼冲 (yōchū), 幼沖 (yōchū)
- 幼虫 (yōchū, “larva”)
- 幼鳥 (yōchō, “chick”)
- 幼帝 (yōtei, “young emperor”)
- 幼童 (yōdō, “young child”)
- 幼年 (yōnen, “childhood”)
- 幼保 (yōho)
- 幼木 (yōboku)
- 幼齢林 (yōreirin)
- 幼名 (yōmyō, “childhood name”), 幼名 (yōmei)
- 長幼 (chōyō, “the young and the old”)
- 童幼 (dōyō)
- 老幼 (rōyō, “the young and the old”)
- 幼気 (itaike, “young and sweet”)
Etymology 1
| Kanji in this term |
|---|
| 幼 |
| よう Grade: 6 |
| on’yomi |
*/jiɪu/ → /jieu/ → /jeu/ → /joː/
From Middle Chinese 幼 (MC ʔiɪuH).
Etymology 2
| Kanji in this term |
|---|
| 幼 |
| おさな Grade: 6 |
| kun’yomi |
/wosana/ → /osana/
Stem of classical verb 幼し (osanashi),[1][2] modern 幼い (osanai, “childish, infantile”).
Derived terms
Etymology 3
| Kanji in this term |
|---|
| 幼 |
| いと Grade: 6 |
| kun’yomi |
Derived terms
- 幼様 (itosama), 幼様 (itosan)
Derived terms
- 幼宮 (itomiya)
Korean
Etymology
From Middle Chinese 幼 (MC ʔiɪuH).
Recorded as Middle Korean ᅙᅲᇢ〮 (Yale: qyuw) in Dongguk Jeongun (東國正韻 / 동국정운), 1448.
Recorded as Middle Korean 유〯 (yǔ) (Yale: yu) in Hunmong Jahoe (訓蒙字會 / 훈몽자회), 1527.
Compounds
Vietnamese
This article is issued from Wiktionary. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.




