U+7AE5, 童
CJK UNIFIED IDEOGRAPH-7AE5

[U+7AE4]
CJK Unified Ideographs
[U+7AE6]

Translingual

Stroke order
12 strokes
Stroke order (Japan)
12 strokes

Han character

(Kangxi radical 117, +7, 12 strokes, cangjie input 卜廿田土 (YTWG), four-corner 00104, composition )

Derived characters

References

  • KangXi: page 871, character 20
  • Dai Kanwa Jiten: character 25775
  • Dae Jaweon: page 1302, character 12
  • Hanyu Da Zidian (first edition): volume 4, page 2711, character 9
  • Unihan data for U+7AE5

Chinese

simp. and trad.
2nd round simp.
alternative forms 𥪿
𥫍
servant boy

Glyph origin

Historical forms of the character
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

Posited to be a phono-semantic compound (形聲, OC *doːŋ) : semantic + phonetic (OC *toːŋ). The semantic component is a simplification of what was originally an ideogrammic compound (會意) : (dagger) + (kneeling slave). The phonetic component (OC *toːŋ) became after to the addition of underneath (similar to what occurred with ). The original meaning was “boy servant”.

The character is essentially posited to be a needle (abbreviated to ) going through a kneeling slave's eye , with the pronunciation indicated by (OC *toːŋ). In ancient China, slaves were blinded. Compare .

It is also possibly a phono-semantic compound (形聲, OC *doːŋ) : semantic + phonetic (OC *doŋ, *doŋʔ, *doŋs). The bottom component is unrelated to .

Etymology

“child; servant boy; virgin; bare”
Löffler (1966) compares it to Kukish dong (boy); see also Rengmitca tong-kléng' (boy), Areng thon-dén (boy) (Löffler, 1960). Schuessler (2007) also compares it to Hmong-Mien: White Hmong tub (son), Iu Mien dorn (son).
“shaman”
Norman and Mei (1976) proposed that the Min Chinese word for “shaman” (*-dəŋA), written as , is from an Austroasiatic substratum, cognate with Vietnamese đồng, Mon ဒံၚ် (tòŋ, to dance while under daemonic possession; to proceed by leaps), ဒေါၚ် (tòŋ, shaman called in to organise kəlok dances). This is rebutted in Sagart (2008), who cited the wide distribution of the sense “magician; sorcerer” in Chinese and the secondary meaning of as “servant; messenger”, describing the resemblance between the Min and Austroasiatic terms as “undoubtedly fortuitous”.

Pronunciation


Note:
  • tâng - vernacular;
  • tông - literary.
Note:
  • dang5 - vernacular ("possessed“);
  • tong5 - literary.
  • Wu
  • Xiang
    • (Changsha)
      • Wiktionary: dong2
      • Sinological IPA (key) (old-style): /tʊŋ¹³/
      • Sinological IPA (key) (new-style): /tən¹³/

Rime
Character
Reading # 1/1
Initial () (7)
Final () (1)
Tone (調) Level (Ø)
Openness (開合) Open
Division () I
Fanqie
Baxter duwng
Reconstructions
Zhengzhang
Shangfang
/duŋ/
Pan
Wuyun
/duŋ/
Shao
Rongfen
/duŋ/
Edwin
Pulleyblank
/dəwŋ/
Li
Rong
/duŋ/
Wang
Li
/duŋ/
Bernard
Karlgren
/dʱuŋ/
Expected
Mandarin
Reflex
tóng
Expected
Cantonese
Reflex
tung4
BaxterSagart system 1.1 (2014)
Character
Reading # 1/1
Modern
Beijing
(Pinyin)
tóng
Middle
Chinese
‹ duwng ›
Old
Chinese
/*[d]ˁoŋ/
English boy

Notes for Old Chinese notations in the Baxter–Sagart system:

* Parentheses "()" indicate uncertain presence;
* Square brackets "[]" indicate uncertain identity, e.g. *[t] as coda may in fact be *-t or *-p;
* Angle brackets "<>" indicate infix;
* Hyphen "-" indicates morpheme boundary;

* Period "." indicates syllable boundary.
Zhengzhang system (2003)
Character
Reading # 1/1
No. 17439
Phonetic
component
Rime
group
Rime
subdivision
0
Corresponding
MC rime
Old
Chinese
/*doːŋ/
Notes

Definitions

  1. child
       értóng   child
       tóng   boy
       tóngnián   childhood
    商店現貨 [MSC, trad.]
    商店现货 [MSC, simp.]
    Zhè jiā shāngdiàn tóngxié yǒu xiànhuò. [Pinyin]
    The store had children's shoes in stock.
    情況今天看起來昨天不妙 [MSC, trad.]
    情况今天看起来昨天不妙 [MSC, simp.]
    Nà ge bìngtóng de qíngkuàng jīntiān kànqǐlái bǐ zuótiān gèng bùmiào. [Pinyin]
    The sick child looks still worse today than yesterday.
  2. young servant; servant boy
       méntóng   doorman
       shūtóng   page boy
       qiútóng   caddie
  3. (Min, dialectal Mandarin, dialectal Wu) shaman
  4. virgin
  5. bare; exposed
       tóngshān   bare hill
  6. a surname
       Tóng Guàn   Tong Guan (Song dynasty court eunuch)
  7. 12th tetragram of the Taixuanjing; "youthfulness" (𝌑)

Compounds

Japanese

Shinjitai
Kyūjitai
[1]

󠄂
+&#xE0102;?
(Hanyo-Denshi)
(Moji_Joho)
The displayed kanji may be different from the image due to your environment.
See here for details.

Kanji

(grade 3 “Kyōiku” kanji)

  1. juvenile, child

Readings

Compounds

Etymology 1

Kanji in this term
わらわ
Grade: 3
kun’yomi
For pronunciation and definitions of – see the following entry.
わらわ
[noun] (archaic, historical) a hairstyle, with the hair not tied up but hanging loose, typically worn by children
[noun] (by extension, archaic) a child older than a baby but not yet an adult
[noun] (archaic) a child servant, a child who does errands; (especially) a young servant of a Buddhist temple
[noun] (archaic, historical) short for 五節の童女 (gosechi no warawa), a girl who dances in 五節(ごせち) (gosechi) festivals
(This term, , is an alternative spelling of the above term.)

Etymology 2

Kanji in this term
わらべ
Grade: 3
kun’yomi
For pronunciation and definitions of – see the following entry.
わらべ
[noun] a child
[noun] a young servant
[noun] (humble) my wife
(This term, , is an alternative spelling of the above term.)

Etymology 3

Kanji in this term
わらんべ
Grade: 3
kun’yomi
For pronunciation and definitions of – see the following entry.
わらんべ
[noun] (archaic) a child
[noun] (archaic, by extension) someone who had not attained genpuku adulthood
(This term, , is an alternative spelling of the above term.)

Etymology 4

Kanji in this term
わらし
Grade: 3
kun’yomi
For pronunciation and definitions of – see わらし.
(This term, , is an alternative spelling of the above terms.)

(The following entry is uncreated: わらし.)

Etymology 5

Kanji in this term
わっぱ
Grade: 3
kun’yomi
For pronunciation and definitions of – see the following entry.
わっぱ
[noun] (archaic) a child
[noun] child, kid, boy (used in scolding a child or male person)
[noun] (archaic) a young servant
[adverb] (archaic, usually followed by (to)) yelling loudly
(This term, , is an alternative spelling of the above term.)

References

  1. 1914, 漢和大辭書 (Kanwa Dai Jisho, “The Great Kanji-Japanese Dictionary”) (in Japanese), page 1595 (paper), page 849 (digital), Tōkyō: 興文社 (Kōbunsha)

Korean

Etymology

From Middle Chinese (MC duŋ). Recorded as Middle Korean 도ᇰ (twong) (Yale: twong) in Hunmong Jahoe (訓蒙字會 / 훈몽자회), 1527.

Hanja

Wikisource (eumhun 아이 (ai dong))

  1. Hanja form? of (child).

Compounds

References

  • 국제퇴계학회 대구경북지부 (國際退溪學會 大邱慶北支部) (2007). Digital Hanja Dictionary, 전자사전/電子字典.

Vietnamese

Han character

: Hán Nôm readings: đồng

  1. (occult, divination) of mediums or divination
    bà đồnga female medium
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