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入道前太政大臣. In DICTIOUS you will not only get to know all the dictionary meanings for the word
入道前太政大臣, but we will also tell you about its etymology, its characteristics and you will know how to say
入道前太政大臣 in singular and plural. Everything you need to know about the word
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Japanese
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Etymology
Compound of 入道 (nyūdō, “monk; lay novice”) + 前 (saki, “former, previous”) + の (no, genitive particle) + 太政大臣 (daijō-daijin, “grand chancellor”, literally “imperial government + cabinet minister”).
Literally the “lay novice and former chancellor”.[1]
Proper noun
入道前太政大臣 • (Nyūdō Saki no Daijō-daijin) ←にふだうさきのだいじやうだいじん (Nifudau Saki no Daizyau-daizin)?
- courtesy title of Saionji Kintsune, Kamakura-period poet and nobleman
- 1235, Shinchokusen Wakashū (book 16, poem 1052 by the lay priest and former Chancellor; also Hyakunin Isshu, poem 96)
- 花さそふ嵐の庭の雪ならでふりゆくものはわが身なりけり
- hana sasou arashi no niwa no yuki narade furi yuku mono wa waga mi narikeri
- Blossoms flurry in with the storm, but the garden’s snow scatters naught but the years of my life.
References
- ^ Joshua S. Mostow (1996) Pictures of the Heart: The Hyakunin Isshu in Word and Image, illustrated edition, University of Hawaii Press, →ISBN, page 424