匁
|
Translingual
Han character
匁 (Kangxi radical 20, 勹+2, 4 strokes, cangjie input 心大 (PK) or 難心大 (XPK), composition ⿻勹乂)
Derived characters
- 𠇢, 𢜓, 𢪣, 𣏯, 𪠴, 𫇬, 𣲢, 𥐷, 𥸼, 𦁯, 𦿯
References
- Kangxi Dictionary: not present, would follow page 150, character 24
- Dai Kanwa Jiten: character 2502
- Dae Jaweon: page 339, character 15
- Hanyu Da Zidian (first edition): not present, would follow volume 1, page 256, character 1
- Unihan data for U+5301
Japanese
Glyph origin
A 国字 (kokuji, “Japanese-coined character”). ideogrammic compound (會意/会意) : 文 + メ, a ligature of 文 (mon) and メ (me), used to phonetically spell out the word. The unit of distance could also be written as 文目 (monme), and in this character the 目 is rendered in katakana and fused with 文.
漢典 (zdic.net) posits the origin as a regular script form of 兩 (ryō), but this is dubious because the value of the 兩 was between 4 and 10 momme, and is now either 50g (mainland China) or 37.5g (Taiwan), and of similar value in Hong Kong; i.e., the units are essentially not equivalent.
Compounds
- 一匁 (ichimonme): 1 momme
- 百匁 (hyakumonme): 100 momme, 375 grams
Usage notes
Removed from the daily use Jōyō kanji by the Japanese government in 2010.[1]
Noun
匁 • (monme)
Usage notes
Now used especially for weighing pearls.
References
- The Japan Times (2009 October 21) “Get set for next year's overhaul of joyo kanji”, in www.kanjiclinic.com, archived from the original on 20 November 2021
Korean
Hanja
匁 • (mun) (hangeul 문, revised mun, McCune–Reischauer mun)
- This term needs a translation to English. Please help out and add a translation, then remove the text
{{rfdef}}
.