< Korean < Words
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Korean/Words/차
찬송
- RR: chan-song (讚頌) [1]
- to praise, extol, pay tribute to
- hyms, psalm
- to praise god
- Hypernyms
- 찬 (chan) 讚 #Chinese [2]
- 송 (song) 頌 #Chinese [3]
- Relatives
- 기리다 (girida, "to praise")
- 기림 (girim, "praise")
- 기림2 (girim, dialectal "oil")
- Comparatives
- chanson #English
- Any song with French words, but more specifically a classic, lyric-driven French song.
- (obsolete) A religious song. [4]
Korean/Words/창
Korean/Words/천
Korean/Words/청
Korean/Words/총
Korean/Words/충
Korean/Words/층
Korean/Words/치다
치우
- Compares
- See also
- Tuesday, meaning "Tiw's day"
- Thing, the ancient Germanic assembly
- Mars Thingsus in Latin, meaning "Mars
or the war god characteristicof the Thing" - Tinghus in Norwegian, meaning "Courthouse", literally, "Thing-house" cf. Korean/Words/텽집
Korean/Words/칭
- ↑
- 미덕을 기리고 칭찬함.
- [같은 말] 찬송가(1. 신성한 대상을 찬미하는 노래).
- [기독교] 하나님의 은혜를 기리고 찬양함. 또는 그런 일.
- to extol, praise
- ↑
- to praise; to commend; to eulogize
- ↑
- to laud, acclaim
- hymn
i.e., song! - ode
- ↑
- Quotations
- 1602 : Hamlet by William Shakespeare, act 2 scene 2 line 357
- The first row of the pious chanson will show you more
- ↑ The prior spelling is assumed to be *티우(tiu).
- ↑ Mandarin (Pinyin): Chīyóu
- ↑ "The ancient Germanic god of war, identified with Tyr of Norse mythology. Possibly the god after whom Tuesday was named."
- ↑ Týr is the relevant Wikipedia page.
- ↑ "(Norse mythology) The Norse god of war, identifiable with Tiu or Tiw."
- ↑ "Týr is the namesake of the Tiwaz rune (ᛏ), a letter of the runic alphabet corresponding to the Latin letter T. By way of the process of interpretatio germanica, the deity is the namesake of Tuesday ('Týr's day') in Germanic languages, including English. Interpretatio romana, in which Romans interpreted other gods as forms of their own, generally renders the god as Mars, the ancient Roman war god, and it is through that lens that most Latin references to the god occur. For example, the god may be referenced as Mars Thingsus (Latin 'Mars of the Thing') on 3rd century Latin inscription, reflecting a strong association with the Germanic thing, a legislative body among the ancient Germanic peoples."
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