kago
See also: kaĝo
English
Alternative forms
Etymology
Pronunciation
- (UK) IPA(key): /ˈkɑːɡəʊ/
Noun
kago (plural kagos or kago)
- (chiefly historical) An open and suspended Japanese style of sedan chair.
- 1874, Aimé Humbert, translated by Frances Cashel Hoey et al., Japan and the Japanese Illustrated, page 156:
- There are two sorts of palanquin, the norimon and the cango. The former, which requires four bearers for long journeys, is a large, heavy box, in which one may sit with tolerable comfort. The sides are in lacquered wood, and contain two sliding doors. Although this norimon is, par excellence, the vehicle of the nobility, it admits of no ornaments, and is used by the ladies of the middle class and by the registered courtesans, because both occupy a certain position of fortune and consideration in society. The cango is a light litter of bamboo, open on both sides; it requires only two bearers, who always walk with a rapid and regular step. They rest for one minute out of twenty. When they go back, each carries in his turn the cango, suspended at the end of a pole, over his shoulder.
- 1898 July, Mabel Loomis Todd, "In Aino-land", The Century Illustrated Montly Magazine, Vol. LVI, No. 3, p. 346:
- (chiefly historical, inexact) Any Japanese litter, inclusive of norimonos and other styles.
- 1895, Outing, number 26, page 7:
- With the long kagos, three coolies are always used, and sometimes four.
Translations
References
- “kago, n.”, in OED Online , Oxford: Oxford University Press, launched 2000.
Anagrams
Cebuano
Alternative forms
Pronunciation
- Hyphenation: ka‧go
Noun
kago
- a Philippine flying lemur (Cynocephalus volans); one of two species of flying lemurs, and the only member of the genus Cynocephalus
Japanese
Romanization
kago
Northern Sotho
Noun
kago
Tok Pisin
Etymology
Noun
kago
Descendants
- Ankave: kakwɨ´