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君が世 君代 君世 |
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Etymology
From Old Japanese 君が代 (kimi ga yo). Found already in the Man'yōshū, completed in 759 CE.[1][2][3][4]
Analyzable as a noun phrase composed of 君 (kimi, “lord, master”) + が (ga, ancient possessive particle) + 代 (yo, “life, lifespan; reign”).[1][2][3]
The lyrics to the national anthem are from the 776th poem of the Wakan Rōeishū (c. 1013), in turn based on the 343rd poem of the Kokin Wakashū (905 CE):
- わが君は千代に八千代にさざれ石の巌となりて苔の生すまで
- waga kimi wa chiyo ni yachiyo ni sazare-ishi no iwao to narite koke no musu made
- May our lord endure for a thousand, eight thousand long generations―may he live until pebbles grow into mossy boulders.[5]
Proper noun
君が代 • (Kimi ga Yo)
- Kimigayo, the national anthem of Japan
- 君が代は千代に八千代にさざれ石のいわおとなりて苔のむすまで
- kimi ga yo wa chiyo ni yachiyo ni sazare-ishi no iwao to narite koke no musu made
- May your majesty's reign for a thousand―even eight thousand―generations, until pebbles become boulders covered over moss.[7]
- 「君が代」の歌詞は世界最古の国歌です。
- “Kimigayo” no kashi wa sekai saiko no kokka desu.
- The lyrics of the national anthem of Japan are the oldest of all national anthems in the world.
「君が代」は正式には日本の国歌です。- “Kimigayo ” wa seishiki ni wa nihon no kokka desu.
- Kimigayo is officially the national anthem of Japan.
Usage notes
As a proper noun, 君が代 (Kimi ga Yo) is used exclusively to refer to the national anthem of Japan. The generic term for "national anthem" is 国歌 (kokka).
References
Shōgaku Tosho (1988) 国語大辞典(新装版) [Unabridged Dictionary of Japanese (Revised Edition)] (in Japanese), Tōkyō: Shogakukan, →ISBN
, text here (in Japanese)
Helen Craig McCullough (1985) Brocade by Night: Kokin Wakashū and the Court Style in Japanese Classical Poetry, Stanford University Press, →ISBN, page 444
Edwin A. Cranston (1993) A Waka Anthology: Grasses of remembrance, Part A, Stanford University Press, →ISBN, page 9
Roger K Thomas (2013) “Kimigayo (National Anthem)”, in Louis G. Perez, editor, Japan at War: An Encyclopedia, illustrated, reprint edition, ABC-CLIO, →ISBN, page 177