儞
| ||||||||
Translingual
| Traditional | 儞 |
|---|---|
| Shinjitai (extended) |
你 |
| Simplified | 你 |
Han character
儞 (Kangxi radical 9, 人+14, 16 strokes, cangjie input 人一火月 (OMFB), composition ⿰亻爾)
Derived characters
- 𭌞, 𭀍, 𭀎, 𠑓
References
- Kangxi Dictionary: not present, would follow page 120, character 11
- Dai Kanwa Jiten: character 1244
- Hanyu Da Zidian (first edition): volume 1, page 230, character 8
- Unihan data for U+511E
Chinese
| For pronunciation and definitions of 儞 – see 你 (“you; your”). (This character is a variant form of 你). |
Japanese
| 你 | |
| 儞 |
Alternative forms
Kanji
儞
(Hyōgai kanji, kyūjitai kanji, shinjitai form 你)
Readings
- Go-on: に (ni)
- Kan-on: じ (ji)←ぢ (di, historical)
- Kun: おれ (ore, 儞)、なんじ (nanji, 儞)←なんぢ (nandi, 儞, historical)、しかり (shikari, 儞り)、その (sono, 儞の)、のみ (nomi, 儞)
Etymology
| Kanji in this term |
|---|
| 儞 |
| おれ Hyōgai |
| kun'yomi |
| Alternative spellings |
|---|
| 你 爾 尓 |
From Old Japanese. Found in use mostly from ancient times until roughly the Heian period,[1] used to refer in the second person to social inferiors or to insult.[1][2][3]
The second person sense of you appears to be obsolete in modern Japanese.
Not to be confused with the modern term 俺 (ore) with the first person sense of I, me. See 俺 for that sense.
Pronunciation
Pronoun
儞 • (ore)
References
- ↑ 1.0 1.1 Shōgaku Tosho (1988) 国語大辞典(新装版) [Unabridged Dictionary of Japanese (Revised Edition)] (in Japanese), Tōkyō: Shogakukan, →ISBN
- ↑ 2.0 2.1 Matsumura, Akira, editor (2006), 大辞林 [Daijirin] (in Japanese), Third edition, Tokyo: Sanseidō, →ISBN
- ^ Matsumura, Akira, editor (1995), 大辞泉 [Daijisen] (in Japanese), First edition, Tokyo: Shogakukan, →ISBN
Korean
Hanja
儞 • (i>ni) (hangeul 이>니, revised i>ni, McCune–Reischauer i>ni, Yale i>ni)
- you
- (be) so, such, right