Etymology 1
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獸 (kyūjitai) |
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Literally "thing of hair". Compound of 毛 (ke, “hair”) + だ (da, genitive marker) + 物 (mono, “thing”).[1][2] Medial -da- is a very rare genitive marker found in compounds, also seen in 果物 (kudamono, “fruit”).
Etymology 2
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Literally "hair thing". Compound of 毛 (ke, “hair”) + 物 (mono, “thing”).[1][2]
Noun
獣 • (kemono)
- an animal covered in fur, a beast
1999 February 4, “ダーク・グレイ”, in Vol.1, Konami:
- からだが灰色のけもの。あまり見かけない貴重ないきもの。
- Karada ga haīro no kemono. Amari mikakenai kichō na ikimono.
- A beast with a gray body. It is a rarely seen treasure of nature.
1999 July 5, “モン・ラーバス”, in BOOSTER 3, Konami:
- ラーバスがより進化したけもの。力がパワーアップしている。
- Rābasu ga yori shinka shita kemono. Chikara ga pawā-appu shite iru.
- A beast who evolved from Larvas and is now even more powerful.
Etymology 3
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獸 (kyūjitai) 鹿 猪 |
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From Old Japanese. First attested in the Kojiki of 712 CE.[4] From Proto-Japonic *sisi. Cognate with 肉 (shishi, “meat of a beast”).[4]
Etymology 4
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/siu/ → /ɕiu/ → /d͡ʑiu/ → /d͡ʑuː/
From Middle Chinese 獸/兽 (syuwH, “(wild) animal”). Compare modern Mandarin reading shòu, Min Nan siù.
Noun
獣 • (jū) ←じう (ziu)?
- beast
Idioms
- 獣を逐う者は目に太山を見ず (jū o ou mono wa me ni taizan o mizu)
References
- Tsukishima, Hiroshi (1079) Kojisho Ongi Shūsei 12: Konkōmyō Saishōōkyō Ongi (in Japanese), Tōkyō: Kyūko Shoin, published 1979, →ISBN.