Japanese
Etymology
From 花 (hana) + 盛り (sakari, “連用形 (ren'yōkei, “stem or continuative form”) of the verb 盛る (sakaru).”).
Pronunciation
Noun
はなざかり • (hanazakari)
- flowers being in full bloom
- 野菊の花盛り
- nogiku no hanazakari
- a bloom of wild chrysanthemums
- (figuratively) a phenomenon being at peak popularity
2020 April 16, ムラリン, “仕事で使える「バーチャル背景」を集めてみた (shigoto de tsukaeru “bācharu haikei” o atsumete mita, “We tried making a collection of 'virtual backgrounds' you can use for work”)”, in ASCII.jp [ASCII.jp][1]:
- ウェブ会議の盛り上がりを受け「バーチャル背景」の提供が花盛り
- webu kaigi no moriagari o uke “bācharu haikei” no teikyō ga hanazakari
- Provision of "virtual backgrounds" is at its peak with the rise of web conferences
References