10 Results found for "Wiktionary:About_Chinese/en/Wiktionary:About_Japanese/Etymology".

Wiktionary:About Japanese/Etymology

now kami. 漢語 (かんご, kango): Chinese words – Chinese borrowings, from several stages through history. Kango (Sino-Japanese vocabulary); these are generally...


Wiktionary:Index

Help:FAQ#Downloading Wiktionary Help:FAQ#Downloading Wiktionary Wiktionary:Searchable external archives Wiktionary:Etymology Wiktionary:Etymology scriptorium Category:Requests...


Wiktionary:About Vietnamese

demonstratives and vocabulary items. Many Vietnamese words are loaned from Chinese, either with the orthodox Sino-Vietnamese pronunciations (for which use...


Wiktionary:Votes/pl-2014-04/Unified Chinese

which accounts for about 99% of the Chinese-language corpus. The remaining 1% of words, which are never used in Standard Chinese (Mandarin), can still...


Wiktionary:Etymology scriptorium/2017/February

transmission of the instrument from China to Japan via the Ryūkyū Kingdom. The Japanese WP article section here notes that the Chinese instrument was known in the...


Wiktionary:Beer parlour/2011/September

at Wiktionary:Beer_parlour#Question about cats, but I'm realizing this is a sizable issue for Japanese. The underlying problem is that kanji (Chinese characters...


Wiktionary:Beer parlour/2019/November

Traditional Chinese or Simplified Chinese. — justin(r)leung { (t...) | c=› } 04:58, 11 November 2019 (UTC) OK, I stand corrected about my statement about POJ...


Wiktionary:Etymology scriptorium/2020/September

was whether the Chinese compound was coined in Japanese. As stated above: "May I have the first attestation of these compounds in Japanese? These compounds...


Wiktionary:Etymology scriptorium/2013/February

Perapera-kun Chinese (plug-in on Mozilla Firefox), the Chinese equivalent of Perapera-kun Japanese (I know Haplology uses Perapera-kun Japanese, do you?)...


Wiktionary:Beer parlour/2013/February

from Japanese/Korean/Chinese, where it is "(I) love (..) girl/woman" (好いた女 / 내가 사랑하는 여자 / 我愛的女孩). "the person who is running down the road" in Chinese is...