式部省
Japanese
Etymology 1
Kanji in this term | ||
---|---|---|
式 | 部 | 省 |
しき Grade: 3 |
ぶ Grade: 3 |
しょう Grade: 4 |
goon |
式部 (literally “Ministry of Ceremonies”) + 省 (“ministry”). 式部 seems to have been modeled after Chinese-styled ministry names with 部 (bu, “ministry”), in parallel with other similarly named ones such as 民部省 (Minbushō, literally “Ministry of Ministry of People”) and 兵部省 (Hyōbushō, literally “Ministry of Ministry of Soldiers”). Unlike in China, Korea and Vietnam, 部 has never been used to mean "ministry" and was merely fossilized in ministry names borrowed from Chinese, hence the apparent redundancy.
Proper noun
式部省 • (Shikibushō) ←しきぶしゃう (sikibusyau)?
- (historical, government) the Ministry of Ceremonial Affairs
- Synonym: 吏部 (Ribu)
Etymology 2
Kanji in this term | ||
---|---|---|
式 | 部 | 省 |
のり(の) > のん(の) | つかさ Grade: 4 | |
Grade: 3 | Grade: 3 | |
jukujikun |
Kanji in this term | ||
---|---|---|
式 | 部 | 省 |
のり(の) | つかさ Grade: 4 | |
Grade: 3 | Grade: 3 | |
jukujikun |
法 (nori, “law”) + の (no, genitive marker) + 司 (tsukasa, “position”)
Proper noun
式部省 or 式部省 • (Nori no Tsukasa or Non no Tsukasa)
- (historical, government) the Ministry of Ceremonial Affairs
See also
- 八省 (Hasshō)
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