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む. In DICTIOUS you will not only get to know all the dictionary meanings for the word
む, but we will also tell you about its etymology, its characteristics and you will know how to say
む in singular and plural. Everything you need to know about the word
む you have here. The definition of the word
む will help you to be more precise and correct when speaking or writing your texts. Knowing the definition of
む, as well as those of other words, enriches your vocabulary and provides you with more and better linguistic resources.
Japanese
Stroke order
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Etymology 1
Derived in the Heian period from writing the man'yōgana kanji 武 in the cursive sōsho style.
Pronunciation
Syllable
む • (mu)
- The hiragana syllable む (mu). Its equivalent in katakana is ム (mu). It is the thirty-third syllable in the gojūon order; its position is ま行う段 (ma-gyō u-dan, “row ma, section u”).
See also
- (Hiragana) 平仮名; あぁ, いぃ, うぅゔ, えぇ, おぉ, かゕが, きぎ, くぐ, けゖげ, こ𛄲 (𛄲)ご, さざ, しじ, すず, せぜ, そぞ, ただ, ちぢ, つっづ, てで, とど, な, に, ぬ, ね, の, はばぱ, ひびぴ, ふぶぷ, へべぺ, ほぼぽ, ま, み, む, め, も, やゃ, 𛀆, ゆゅ, 𛀁, よょ, らら゚, りり゚, るる゚, れれ゚, ろろ゚, わゎわ゙, ゐ𛅐 (𛅐)ゐ゙, 𛄟 (𛄟), ゑ𛅑 (𛅑)ゑ゙, を𛅒 (𛅒)を゙, ん, ー, ゝ, ゞ, ゟ
Etymology 2
Onomatopoeia.
Pronunciation
Interjection
む • (mu)
- A mumbling sound.
Etymology 3
From Old Japanese. First cited in the Kojiki of 712.[2]
The pronunciation shifted from /mu/ to just nasal /m/ and then to the generalized nasal /ɴ/ by the mid-Heian period (794–1185), leading some writers to use ん (n) instead to write this suffix.[2] The kana ん (n) itself evolved out of a hentaigana (alternative kana form) for む (mu) based on the cursive for kanji 无 (mu). In Classical Japanese texts, the practice now is to pronounce final む (-mu) as ん (-n) instead.
As a separate phonological shift, /mu/ retained the vowel but lost the consonant, becoming a nasalized /ũ/ and then plain /u/. This then often fused with the preceding vowel, ultimately leading to the development of the modern volitional / suppositional /oː/ ending in modern Japanese.[2] See よう#Japanese:_suffix for more detail.
Variously described as suppositional ("seems like"), volitional ("I will"), or hortative ("let's). Ultimately, all of these senses arise from an apparent base meaning of "seem, appear, look like". May be cognate with 目 (me, “eye”), 見る (miru, “to see; to look at”), びる (-biru, “to look like, to seem like, to behave like”).
Suffix
む • (-mu) †yodan
- (Classical Japanese, after mizenkei) used to form the suppositional / volitional / hortative form of verbs, equivalent to modern う (-u > -ō) / よう (-yō); also used as a mild imperative
- c. late 9th–mid-10th century, Taketori Monogatari
- 我こそ死なめ。
- Ware koso shiname.
- I would rather die myself.
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- 鳴り高し。鳴り止まむ。
- Nari takashi. Nari yamamu.
- You are too noisy. Be quiet
Conjugation
Stem forms
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Irrealis (未然形)
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ま |
ma
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Continuative (連用形)
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-
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Terminal (終止形)
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む ん |
mu n
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Attributive (連体形)
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む ん |
mu n
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Realis (已然形)
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め |
me
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Imperative (命令形)
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- Resembling yodan conjugation, but defective.
Derived terms
Etymology 4
Native Japanese kun’yomi pronunciation of various Chinese characters.
For pronunciation and definitions of む – see the following entries.
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【身】3
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- (only in compounds) a body
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(This term, む (mu), is the hiragana spelling of the above terms.) For a list of all kanji read as む, see Category:Japanese kanji read as む.)
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Etymology 5
Middle Chinese-derived on’yomi pronunciation of various Chinese characters.
For pronunciation and definitions of む – see the following entries.
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(This term, む (mu), is the hiragana spelling of the above terms.) For a list of all kanji read as む, see Category:Japanese kanji read as む.)
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(The following entries are uncreated: 矛, 務, 霧, 牟, 墓.)
References
- ^ Matsumura, Akira, editor (2006), 大辞林 [Daijirin] (in Japanese), Third edition, Tokyo: Sanseidō, →ISBN
- ↑ 2.0 2.1 2.2 “む”, in 日本国語大辞典 [Nihon Kokugo Daijiten] (in Japanese), concise edition, Tokyo: Shogakukan, 2006