mọc
See also: Appendix:Variations of "moc"
Tai Do
Etymology
From Proto-Tai *ʰmoːkᴰ (“fog; mist”), from Old Chinese 霧 (OC *moɡs, *moːŋ, “fog; mist”). Cognate with Thai หมอก (mɔ̀ɔk), Lao ໝອກ (mǭk), Lü ᦖᦸᧅᧈ (ṁoak¹), Shan မွၵ်ႇ (màuk), Tai Nüa ᥛᥩᥐᥱ (mǒak), Ahom 𑜉𑜨𑜀𑜫 (mok), Zhuang mok, Nong Zhuang moag or mog, Saek ม̄อก.
Pronunciation
- IPA(key): /mɔk¹¹/
Noun
mọc
References
- Sầm Văn Bình (2018) Từ điển Thái–Việt (Tiếng Thái Nghệ An) [Tai–Vietnamese Dictionary (Nghệ An Tai)][2], Nghệ An: Nhà xuất bản Nghệ An
Vietnamese
Pronunciation
Etymology 1
Inherited from Proto-Austroasiatic *mɔːkʔ (“to emerge”); cognate with Khmer មក (mɔɔk, “to come, come near, approach”) and Old Mon mok (“to appear”).
Verb
mọc • (木, 𠚐, 𬎳)
- (of a plant) to shoot out of the soil
- Tre già, măng mọc.
- Bamboos get old, bamboo shoots shoot.
- (of zoological hair, nails, teeth, feathers, claws, lumps, pimples or botanical roots) to start to grow, extend or expand
- (of animals) to start growing hair, nails, teeth, feathers, claws, lumps, pimples
- Bé mới mọc răng.
- The baby just grew a tooth.
- mọc mụn đầy mặt ― to have pimples/acne all over one's face
- (of the sun) to rise
- Mặt trời mọc đằng đông, lặn đằng tây.
- The sun rises in the east and sets in the west.
See also
Etymology 2
According to folk etymology: derived from the name of the Kẻ Mọc area (tên Nôm of the Nhân Mục (仁睦) villages) in current-day Hanoi, where the dish bún mọc is said to originate.[1]
Alternative forms
Noun
(classifier cục, viên) mọc • (𦙣)
Derived terms
References
Anagrams
- cọm