岳
From Wiktionary, the free dictionary
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From Wiktionary, the free dictionary
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岳 (Kangxi radical 46, 山+5, 8 strokes, cangjie input 人一山 (OMU), four-corner 72772, composition ⿱丘山)
Historical forms of the character 岳 | |
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Shang | Shuowen Jiezi (compiled in Han) |
Oracle bone script | Small seal script |
Unclear. Compare Proto-North Bahnaric *ŋŏk ("mountain") (> Halang ngŏk and Sedang ŋɔ). Note also Proto-Hlai *hŋwʔo³ (“mountain”) and perhaps also Burmese ငေါ (ngau:), [script needed] (ŋok-ŋak, “project, stick up or out”), [script needed] (ŋroŋʼ, “any sharp thing sticking out; sharp stump or thorn”), and Tibetan རྔོག (rngog, “hump”) (Schuessler, 2007).
STEDT instead derives it from provisional Proto-Sino-Tibetan *kak (“expensive, at its peak”) and considers it cognate to 極 (OC *N‑kək; N‑k(r)ək, “ridge of house; the highest point; extreme limit, utmost”), Proto-Lolo-Burmese *kak (“expensive, intense, at its peak”) (> Lisu [script needed] (phy²¹ kha³⁵, “expensive”)), Ersu phɛ⁵⁵ khuɑ⁵⁵ (“expensive”), and Galo `kog dɨr (“peak”).
岳
For pronunciation and definitions of 岳 – see 嶽 (“tall mountain; highest peak”). (This character is the simplified and variant form of 嶽). |
Notes:
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For pronunciation and definitions of 岳 – see 𩓥 (“to raise one's head”). (This character is a variant form of 𩓥). |
岳 | |
嶽 |
(Jōyō kanji, shinjitai kanji, kyūjitai form 嶽)
Alternative spelling |
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嶽 (kyūjitai) |
Directly cognate with 丈 (take, “height”). Indirectly cognate with 高 (taka, “height”), 高い (takai, “high”), and 長ける (takeru, “to be high”).
岳 or 岳 • (-take or -dake)
Alternative spelling |
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嶽 (kyūjitai) |
岳 • (ak) (hangeul 악, revised ak, McCune–Reischauer ak)
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