For pronunciation and definitions of 黄泉 – see 黃泉 (“yellow spring; underground spring; underworld; the land of the dead”). (This term is the simplified form of 黃泉). |
Notes:
|
Kanji in this term | |
---|---|
黄 | 泉 |
よも | |
Grade: 2 | Grade: 6 |
jukujikun |
Alternative spelling |
---|
黃泉 (kyūjitai) |
*⟨yo2mo2⟩ → */jəmə/ → ⟨yo2mo⟩ → */jəmo/ → /jomo/
From Old Japanese, first attested in the Kojiki, the oldest extant historical record of ancient Japan, compiled in 712 CE. Appears to be the older combining form of yomi (see below).
The ablaut or apophonic form of cognate 山 (yama, “mountain”). Mountains were often used as a place to bury the dead and were strongly associated with the afterlife. (Can this(+) etymology be sourced?)
Orthographic borrowing from Chinese 黃泉/黄泉 (huángquán, literally “yellow springs”), incorporating the underworld from Chinese mythology.
Kanji in this term | |
---|---|
黄 | 泉 |
よみ | |
Grade: 2 | Grade: 6 |
jukujikun |
Alternative spelling |
---|
黃泉 (kyūjitai) |
*⟨yo2mi2⟩ → */jəmwi/ → /jomi/
From Old Japanese, first attested in the Kojiki (712 CE) alongside its combining form yomo (see above).
The ablaut or apophonic form of yomo. For this vowel alternation, see WT:AJPX#Standalone forms and combining forms.
Orthographic borrowing from Chinese 黃泉/黄泉 (huángquán, literally “yellow springs”), incorporating the underworld from Chinese mythology.
Kanji in this term | |
---|---|
黄 | 泉 |
よみじ | |
Grade: 2 | Grade: 6 |
jukujikun |
Alternative spellings |
---|
黃泉 (kyūjitai) 黄泉路 |
Compound of 黄泉 (yomi, “land of the dead, underworld”, see above) + 路 (chi, “road”).[3] The chi changes to ji as an instance of rendaku (連濁).
The kanji spelling reflects the extension of the sense from "the road to the underworld" to '"the underworld" itself.
The 黄泉 spelling may be more common in certain contexts.
Kanji in this term | |
---|---|
黄 | 泉 |
こう Grade: 2 |
せん Grade: 6 |
on'yomi |
Alternative spelling |
---|
黃泉 (kyūjitai) |
/kwau sen/ → /kwɔːseɴ/ → /kɔːseɴ/ → /koːseɴ/
From Middle Chinese 黃泉 (MC hwang dzjwen, literally “yellow springs”). Attested in various Heian period texts.[4]
黄泉 • (kōsen) ←くわうせん (kwausen)?