Matches in DBpedia 2015-10 for { <http://dbpedia.org/resource/Shinsen_Jikyō> ?p ?o }
Showing triples 1 to 63 of
63
with 100 triples per page.
- Shinsen_Jikyō abstract "The Shinsen jikyō (新撰字鏡, "Newly Compiled Mirror of Characters") is the first Japanese dictionary containing native kun'yomi "Japanese readings" of Chinese characters. The title is also written 新選字鏡 with the graphic variant sen (選 "choose; select; elect") for sen (撰 "compile; compose; edit").The Heian Period Buddhist monk Shōjū (昌住) completed the Shinsen jikyō during the Shōtai era (898-901 CE). The preface explains that his motivation for compiling a Japanese dictionary was the inconvenience of looking up Chinese characters in the Tang Dynasty dictionary by Xuan Ying (玄應), the Yiqie jing yinyi (一切經音義 "Pronunciation and Meaning in the Tripitaka"). The preface credits two other Chinese dictionaries: the (ca. 543 CE) Yupian, which enters 12,158 characters under a system of 542 radicals (bùshǒu 部首), and the (601 CE) Qieyun rime dictionary, which enters 16,917 characters categorized by tones and syllable rimes. Don C. Bailey says: In general, the Shinsen jikyō resembles the [Yupian], but Shōjū specifically states in the preface that he acquired a copy of this work only in 892 after he had completed his first draft, and that he thereafter used it as supplementary material. Whether or not the format of the [Yupian] was imitated, a dictionary or dictionaries of the same type must have served as a model. (1960:4) Shōjū's model balances two traditional methods of collating Chinese dictionaries: semantic organization like the Erya and logographic radicals like the Shuowen Jiezi. He introduces a novel Japanese system of 160 radicals (bu 部) that exhibit semantic organization. For example, the first seven are Heaven (天), Sun (日), Moon (月), Meat (肉, a graphic variant of 月), Rain (雨), Air (气), and Wind (風). The Shinsen jikyō not only reduced the number of radical headings, but also logically arranged them by meanings. Compare the earlier Japanese dictionary Tenrei Banshō Meigi that uses 534 radicals adapted from the original 540 in the Shuowen Jiezi.The received edition Shinsen jikyō dictionary contains 21,300 character entries in 12 fascicles (kan 卷). Each head entry gives the Chinese character, Chinese pronunciations (with either a homonym or fanqie spelling), definitions, and Japanese equivalents (Wakun 和訓). This dictionary notes over 3,700 Japanese pronunciations (Okimori 1996:156), and cites early texts, for instance, the circa 822 CE Buddhist Nihon Ryōiki (日本霊異記 "Accounts of Miracles in Japan"). The Shinsen jikyō is the first Japanese dictionary to include kokuji "national characters" invented in Japan (see Commons 1996). The modern Mojikyo computer font software includes character data from the ancient Shinsen Jikyō and Jikyōshū.".
- Shinsen_Jikyō wikiPageExternalLink 16writing.html.
- Shinsen_Jikyō wikiPageID "7846893".
- Shinsen_Jikyō wikiPageLength "3783".
- Shinsen_Jikyō wikiPageOutDegree "32".
- Shinsen_Jikyō wikiPageRevisionID "675197601".
- Shinsen_Jikyō wikiPageWikiLink Category:10th-century_books.
- Shinsen_Jikyō wikiPageWikiLink Category:9th-century_books.
- Shinsen_Jikyō wikiPageWikiLink Category:Japanese_dictionaries.
- Shinsen_Jikyō wikiPageWikiLink Category:Late_Old_Japanese_texts.
- Shinsen_Jikyō wikiPageWikiLink Chinese_characters.
- Shinsen_Jikyō wikiPageWikiLink Chinese_dictionaries.
- Shinsen_Jikyō wikiPageWikiLink Chinese_dictionary.
- Shinsen_Jikyō wikiPageWikiLink Erya.
- Shinsen_Jikyō wikiPageWikiLink Fanqie.
- Shinsen_Jikyō wikiPageWikiLink Heian_Period.
- Shinsen_Jikyō wikiPageWikiLink Heian_period.
- Shinsen_Jikyō wikiPageWikiLink Homonym.
- Shinsen_Jikyō wikiPageWikiLink Japanese_dictionary.
- Shinsen_Jikyō wikiPageWikiLink Kanji.
- Shinsen_Jikyō wikiPageWikiLink Kokuji.
- Shinsen_Jikyō wikiPageWikiLink Kunyomi.
- Shinsen_Jikyō wikiPageWikiLink Mojikyo.
- Shinsen_Jikyō wikiPageWikiLink Nihon_Ryōiki.
- Shinsen_Jikyō wikiPageWikiLink Qieyun.
- Shinsen_Jikyō wikiPageWikiLink Radical_(Chinese_character).
- Shinsen_Jikyō wikiPageWikiLink Radical_(Chinese_characters).
- Shinsen_Jikyō wikiPageWikiLink Rime_dictionary.
- Shinsen_Jikyō wikiPageWikiLink Shuowen_Jiezi.
- Shinsen_Jikyō wikiPageWikiLink Shōtai.
- Shinsen_Jikyō wikiPageWikiLink Syllable.
- Shinsen_Jikyō wikiPageWikiLink Syllable_rime.
- Shinsen_Jikyō wikiPageWikiLink Tang_Dynasty.
- Shinsen_Jikyō wikiPageWikiLink Tang_dynasty.
- Shinsen_Jikyō wikiPageWikiLink Tenrei_Banshō_Meigi.
- Shinsen_Jikyō wikiPageWikiLink Tone_(linguistics).
- Shinsen_Jikyō wikiPageWikiLink Tripitaka.
- Shinsen_Jikyō wikiPageWikiLink Tripiṭaka.
- Shinsen_Jikyō wikiPageWikiLink Wikt:_卷.
- Shinsen_Jikyō wikiPageWikiLink Wikt:撰.
- Shinsen_Jikyō wikiPageWikiLink Wikt:選.
- Shinsen_Jikyō wikiPageWikiLink Wikt:部.
- Shinsen_Jikyō wikiPageWikiLink Wikt:部首.
- Shinsen_Jikyō wikiPageWikiLink Yupian.
- Shinsen_Jikyō wikiPageWikiLinkText "Shinsen Jikyō".
- Shinsen_Jikyō hasPhotoCollection Shinsen_Jikyō.
- Shinsen_Jikyō wikiPageUsesTemplate Template:Italic_title.
- Shinsen_Jikyō wikiPageUsesTemplate Template:Nihongo.
- Shinsen_Jikyō wikiPageUsesTemplate Template:Nofootnotes.
- Shinsen_Jikyō subject Category:10th-century_books.
- Shinsen_Jikyō subject Category:9th-century_books.
- Shinsen_Jikyō subject Category:Japanese_dictionaries.
- Shinsen_Jikyō subject Category:Late_Old_Japanese_texts.
- Shinsen_Jikyō comment "The Shinsen jikyō (新撰字鏡, "Newly Compiled Mirror of Characters") is the first Japanese dictionary containing native kun'yomi "Japanese readings" of Chinese characters. The title is also written 新選字鏡 with the graphic variant sen (選 "choose; select; elect") for sen (撰 "compile; compose; edit").The Heian Period Buddhist monk Shōjū (昌住) completed the Shinsen jikyō during the Shōtai era (898-901 CE).".
- Shinsen_Jikyō label "Shinsen Jikyō".
- Shinsen_Jikyō sameAs شینسن_جیکئو.
- Shinsen_Jikyō sameAs 新撰字鏡.
- Shinsen_Jikyō sameAs m.026g20l.
- Shinsen_Jikyō sameAs Q4753272.
- Shinsen_Jikyō sameAs Q4753272.
- Shinsen_Jikyō sameAs 新撰字鏡.
- Shinsen_Jikyō wasDerivedFrom Shinsen_Jikyō?oldid=675197601.
- Shinsen_Jikyō isPrimaryTopicOf Shinsen_Jikyō.