巨毋霸
Chinese
very large; huge; tremendous very large; huge; tremendous; gigantic |
no; not | feudal chief; rule by force; tyrant feudal chief; rule by force; tyrant; lord; master; hegemon; usurp | ||
---|---|---|---|---|
trad. (巨毋霸) | 巨 | 毋 | 霸 | |
simp. #(巨毋霸) | 巨 | 毋 | 霸 | |
alternative forms | 巨無霸/巨无霸 |
Etymology
The name was mentioned in the biography of Emperor Wang Mang in the Book of Han as the purported "self-appellation" of a giant. Both the text, and allegedly Wang himself according to the text, interpreted "巨毋" as a family name and "霸" as the given name. The biography wrote explicitly that the character was fictional, intended by its creator as a humorous pun at the expense of the emperor himself: Wang was styled 巨君 (Jùjūn), and the name 巨毋霸 could be interpreted as "Ju (巨) will never gain supremacy."
In the Book of the Later Han the alternative form 巨無霸/巨无霸 (jùwúbà) was mentioned, this time with a slight air of reality, as the name of a warrior in the service of Wang Mang.
Pronunciation
Noun
巨毋霸
- (figurative) Alternative form of 巨無霸/巨无霸 (jùwúbà, “big or invincible person or thing; Big Mac”).
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