奈良
Japanese
Kanji in this term | |
---|---|
奈 | 良 |
な Grade: 4 (ateji) |
ら Grade: 4 (ateji) |
goon | nanori |
Alternative spellings |
---|
寧楽 平城 |
Etymology
From Old Japanese. Attested from at least the early 700s.[1] The kanji are ateji (当て字).
Various ancient spellings suggest forms ending in -ku or -ki. This latter element is not attested past the Old Japanese stage:
奈羅, 那羅, 楢, 儺羅 名良, 奈良, 那良 那楽, 寧楽 平城 → ⟨nara⟩ ⟨nara⟩ ⟨naraku⟩ ⟨naraki2⟩ → /nara/ */naraᵑ/ */narakʉ/ */narakɨ/ → /nara/
According to the Nihon Shoki (720 CE), the placename is derived from the Japanese verb 均す, 平す (narasu, “to flatten”).[2] In The Study of Place Names, Kunio Yanagida stated, “Nara stands for ‘flatland’.”[3]
However, an analysis of Old Japanese phonetic spellings (man'yōgana) reveals that the city name was often spelled with a final -ku or -ki element, which makes it phonologically unlikely that the city name derives directly from the verb narasu. The root from which the verb itself derives, nar-, appears in various terms related to “flat” or “flatness”, a fitting descriptor for the local geography. The final -ku or -ki element in the ancient spellings may be Old Japanese 城 (ki2 → ki, “palisade, stronghold, fortress, castle”), as also suggested in the alternative kanji spelling 平城 (literally “flat stronghold”). See also the discussion of the city name's etymology on Wikipedia.
Proper noun
奈良 • (Nara)
- a placename, especially:
- Short for 奈良県 (Nara-ken): Nara (a prefecture of Japan)
- Short for 奈良市 (Nara-shi): Nara (the capital city of Nara Prefecture)
- a surname
Derived terms
- 奈良団扇 (Nara uchiwa)
- 奈良絵本 (Nara Ehon)
- 奈良一刀彫 (Nara ittōbori)
- 奈良街道 (Nara kaidō)
- 奈良刀 (naragatana)
- 奈良県 (Nara-ken)
- 奈良公園 (Nara Kōen)
- 奈良金剛 (Nara kongō)
- 奈良坂 (Narazaka)
- 奈良酒 (Nara-zake)
- 奈良晒 (Nara-zarashi)
- 奈良三作 (Nara Sansaku)
- 奈良時代 (Nara jidai)
- 奈良線 (Nara-sen)
- 奈良草履 (Nara zōri)
- 奈良大衆 (Nara daishu)
- 奈良茶 (Nara-cha)
- 奈良茶飯 (Nara chameshi)
- 奈良茶碗 (Nara chawan)
- 奈良朝 (Nara-chō)
- 奈良漬け (narazuke)
- 奈良人形 (Nara ningyō)
- 奈良の大仏 (Nara no Daibutsu)
- 奈良の都 (Nara no miyako)
- 奈良派 (Nara-ha)
- 奈良版 (Nara-ban)
- 奈良奉行 (Nara bugyō)
- 奈良風炉 (Nara-buro)
- 奈良法師 (Nara hōshi)
- 奈良盆地 (Nara bonchi)
- 奈良彫 (narabori)
- 奈良物 (naramono)
- 奈良山 (Nara-yama)
See also
- 平城京 (Heijō-kyō)
- 青丹よし (aoni yoshi), pillow word alluding to Nara
References
- “奈良・平城・寧楽”, in 日本国語大辞典 (Nihon Kokugo Daijiten, “Nihon Kokugo Daijiten”) (in Japanese), concise edition, Tōkyō: Shogakukan, 2000
- On the tenth year of Emperor Sujin's reign, Water Rat day of the ninth month, “then, leading selected soldiers, (the rebels) went forward, climbed Nara-yama (hills lying to the north of Heijō-kyō) and put them in order. Now the imperial forces gathered and flattened trees and plants. Therefore, the mountain is called Nara-yama.”
- 柳田国男 YANAGIDA Kunio (1936), 『地名の研究』 (The Study of Place Names), 古今書院, pp.217-219
- NHK Broadcasting Culture Research Institute, editor (1998), NHK日本語発音アクセント辞典 [NHK Japanese Pronunciation Accent Dictionary] (in Japanese), Tōkyō: NHK Publishing, →ISBN
Old Japanese
Etymology
From the Nihon Shoki (720 CE):
However, analysis of phonetic spellings reveals that the placename was often spelled with a final -ku or -ki2 element.
Proper noun
奈良 (Nara) (kana なら)
Descendants
- Japanese: 奈良 (Nara)
See also
- 靑丹よし (awoni yo1si), pillow word alluding to Nara