Translingual
Han character
牡 (Kangxi radical 93, 牛+3, 7 strokes, cangjie input 竹手土 (HQG), four-corner 24510, composition ⿰牛土)
Derived characters
References
- Kangxi Dictionary: page 697, character 11
- Dai Kanwa Jiten: character 19933
- Dae Jaweon: page 1110, character 1
- Hanyu Da Zidian (first edition): volume 3, page 1801, character 2
- Unihan data for U+7261
Chinese
Glyph origin
Ideogrammic compound (會意 / 会意): 牛 (“cattle”) + 丄. Various explanations exist, some propose 丄 (here unrelated to 上) depicts a penis to represent “male”. Later 丄 came to be written 土. See also the etymology of this character.
Etymology
Austroasiatic (Schuessler, 2007). Compare Proto-Mon-Khmer *ɟm(oo)l (“male”) (whence Khmer ឈ្មោល (chmool, “to be male”)), Old Mon jmūr ~ jmur (“male (elephant)”), Proto-Waic *(k)mɔj (“(wild) ox; buffalo”), Proto-Vietic *mɔːlʔ (“person; human being”) (whence Vietnamese mọi (“savage; barbarian”), Muong mõl (“human being”)).
An oracle bone graph for this word shows a vertical stick on a horizontal ground, possibly because it had been intended for an obsolete homophone cognate with Proto-Vietic *c-mɔːlʔ (“digging stick”), which alongside "male" may derive from a stem represented in Old Khmer cval (“to enter; to penetrate; (of animals) to copulate”), Khmu [script needed] (cmɔɔl, “to plant (rice) with a digging stick”), [script needed] (crmɔɔl, “digging stick”) (ibid.; Ferlus, 1987). Schuessler (2007) further proposes a relationship with 畝 (OC *mɯʔ, “cropland; mu (a Chinese measuring unit for area)”) (ibid.); see there for more.
Pronunciation
Note: mau5 - dated variant.
Note:
- mū - vernacular;
- mēu - literary.
Baxter–Sagart system 1.1 (2014)
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Character
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牡
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Reading #
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1/1
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Modern Beijing (Pinyin)
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mǔ
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Middle Chinese
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‹ muwX ›
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Old Chinese
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/*m(r)uʔ/
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English
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male
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Notes for Old Chinese notations in the Baxter–Sagart system:
* Parentheses "()" indicate uncertain presence;
* Square brackets "[]" indicate uncertain identity, e.g. *[t] as coda may in fact be *-t or *-p;
* Angle brackets "<>" indicate infix;
* Hyphen "-" indicates morpheme boundary;
* Period "." indicates syllable boundary.
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Zhengzhang system (2003)
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Character
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牡
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Reading #
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1/1
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No.
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9321
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Phonetic component
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Rime group
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幽
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Rime subdivision
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2
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Corresponding MC rime
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母
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Old Chinese
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/*mɯwʔ/
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Definitions
牡
- (obsolete) male of animals
- Synonyms: 雄 (xióng), 公 (gōng)
- Antonym: 牝 (pìn)
駉駉牡馬,在坰之野。 [Pre-Classical Chinese, trad.]
𬳶𬳶牡马,在坰之野。 [Pre-Classical Chinese, simp.]- From: The Classic of Poetry, c. 11th – 7th centuries BCE, translated based on James Legge's version
- Jiōngjiōng mǔ mǎ, zài jiōng zhī yě. [Pinyin]
- Fat and large are the stallions [/ male horses],
On the plains of the far-distant borders.
在獸則牡為陽而牝為陰;……。 [Traditional Chinese poetry, trad.]
在兽则牡为阳而牝为阴;……。 [Traditional Chinese poetry, simp.]- From: Shuoyuan, circa 1st century BCE
- Zài shòu zé mǔ wéi yáng ér pìn wéi yīn;....... [Pinyin]
- Among quadrupeds, male are yang and female are yin; [...].
- (obsolete) male genitals
- (obsolete) bolt of door
- (obsolete) hill; hump
- used in 牡蠣/牡蛎 (mǔlì, “oyster”)
Compounds
- 四牡
- 堅牡 / 坚牡
- 松葉牡丹 / 松叶牡丹
- 求牡
- 牝牡
- 牝牡驪黃 / 牝牡骊黄
- 牝雞牡鳴 / 牝鸡牡鸣
- 牡丹 (mǔdān)
- 牡丹亭
- 牡丹江 (Mǔdānjiāng)
- 牡丹花
- 牡菣 / 牡𬜤
- 牡蒿 (mǔhāo)
- 牡蠣 / 牡蛎 (mǔlì)
- 牡鹿
- 白牡丹 (báimǔdān)
- 秋牡丹
- 野牡丹
- 門牡 / 门牡
- 關牡 / 关牡
- 雉求牡匹
References
Japanese
Kanji
牡
(Jinmeiyō kanji)
- male
- oyster
Readings
Etymology
Kanji in this term
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牡
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お Jinmeiyō
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kun'yomi
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Kanji in this term
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牡
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おす Jinmeiyō
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kun'yomi
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Kanji in this term
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牡
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おん Jinmeiyō
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kun'yomi
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For pronunciation and definitions of 牡 – see the following entry.
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(This term, 牡, is an alternative spelling of the above term.)
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Korean
Hanja
牡 • (mo) (hangeul 모, revised mo, McCune–Reischauer mo, Yale mo)
- This term needs a translation to English. Please help out and add a translation, then remove the text
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.
Vietnamese
Han character
牡: Hán Nôm readings: mẫu
- This term needs a translation to English. Please help out and add a translation, then remove the text
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.