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Also encountered with the reading miozukushi. The tsukushi changes to zukushi as an instance of rendaku (連濁).
Notably, different publishers of the same historical texts appear to alternate between the miotsukushi and miojirushi readings, possibly due to historical or dialectal differences.
At the time of the Man'yōshū, the "dolphin" sense referred to those at Tōtōmi Province; during the Heian period the sense was reserved to the markers at the bay of Naniwa, present-day Osaka.
Since the Heian period, the "dolphin" sense can be used as a 掛詞(kakekotoba) to pun against the sense of 身を尽くし(mi o tsukushi, literally “exhausting one's body” → “with all one's might, with all one's heart and soul”):
Compound of 澪(mio, “waterchannel”) + 標(shirushi, “mark, sign”). The shirushi changes to jirushi as an instance of rendaku (連濁).
Notably, different publishers of the same historical texts appear to alternate between the miojirushi and miotsukushi readings, possibly due to historical or dialectal differences.
^ Edwin A. Cranston (1998) The Gem-Glistening Cup, Stanford University Press, →ISBN, page 734
^ Joshua S. Mostow (1996) Pictures of the Heart: The Hyakunin Isshu in Word and Image, illustrated edition, University of Hawaii Press, →ISBN, page 201