杖
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Translingual
Han character
杖 (Kangxi radical 75, 木+3, 7 strokes, cangjie input 木十大 (DJK), four-corner 45900, composition ⿰木丈)
References
- KangXi: page 512, character 1
- Dai Kanwa Jiten: character 14469
- Dae Jaweon: page 897, character 5
- Hanyu Da Zidian (first edition): volume 2, page 1159, character 2
- Unihan data for U+6756
- Unihan data for U+FA94
Chinese
simp. and trad. |
杖 | |
---|---|---|
alternative forms | 𨥅 |
Glyph origin
Phono-semantic compound (形聲, OC *daŋʔ) : semantic 木 + phonetic 丈 (OC *daŋʔ).
Etymology
Thought to be the same word as 丈 (OC *daŋʔ) "gentleman, older man, husband", i.e. "someone who walks with, or leans on, a staff"; though unlikely.
According to Schuessler (2007), this is an areal word. Compare Mizo tiang (“staff, stick, crutch”), Old Khmer toŋ (“shaft, stock, shank”), -toṅa (“stock, stem, stick”), and Khmer ដង (dɑɑng, “pole, shaft, handle, yoke, body, trunk”). Benedict (1976) also compares this to Proto-Tai *de:ŋ ~ *tʰe:ŋ (“stick, bar”), Malay tiang (“pillar, post, pole”), Fijian ndia (“stick, handle”), and to reconstructed Proto-Austro-Tai *(n)ti(j)aŋ.
A derivative, attested in Zuozhuan as 杖, is the verb 仗 (OC daŋs) "to lean on", with suffix *-s → *-h → 去聲/去声 (qùshēng).
Pronunciation
Definitions
杖
Compounds
Descendants
- → Mongolian: зан (zan), ᠵᠠᠩ (ǰaŋ)
- → Manchu: ᠵᠠᠩ (jang)
Japanese
Readings
- Go-on: じょう (jō)←ぢやう (dyau, historical)
- Kan-on: ちょう (chō)←ちやう (tyau, historical)
- Kun: つえ (tsue, 杖)←つゑ (tuwe, 杖, historical)
Etymology 1
Kanji in this term |
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杖 |
つえ Jinmeiyō |
kun’yomi |
⟨tuwe⟩ → /tuwe/ → /t͡suwe/ → /t͡suje/ → /t͡sue/
From Old Japanese. Found in the Man'yōshū, completed some time after 759 CE.[1]
Noun
- staff, stick, walking stick, cane, stave, strove, rod, wand
- 2000 March 1, “古代魔導士 [Ancient Mage]”, in BOOSTER 7, Konami:
- 数多くの杖を持ち、それぞれを使い分け多彩な攻撃をする。
- Kazuōku no tsue o mochi, sorezore o tsukaiwake tasai na kōgeki o suru.
- He wields an array of wands, each of which is used for a distinctive attack.
- 数多くの杖を持ち、それぞれを使い分け多彩な攻撃をする。
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- something one leans on, a support
- a cane used for corporal punishment
- a particularly shaped stirring stick used to make New Year's porridge
- Synonym: 粥杖 (kayuzue)
- the stem of a pear
- (historical) a traditional unit of length
- (historical) a traditional unit of area
Usage notes
The Japanese term tsue can refer generally to a stick or staff of various lengths, as expressed by the range of English meanings apparent in the senses above.
Noun
- a jo: a fighting staff, a little over 4 尺 (shaku, “a traditional unit of measure, about 30 cm or a foot”) long, shorter than a 棒 (bō, “quarterstaff”)
- (historical) under the ancient Ritsuryō system, caning as a form of corporal punishment
- (historical) a traditional unit of area: one-fifth of a 段 (tan, traditional Japanese paddy size, roughly half of an English acre), or around 237m²
Compounds
Korean
Hanja
杖 • (jang) (hangeul 장, revised jang, McCune–Reischauer chang, Yale cang)
- This term needs a translation to English. Please help out and add a translation, then remove the text
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