Sleep Like a River
The Chinese writing system, kanji, is an inseperable part of the Japanese language, the same way Latin or Greek is a part of Western languages, and this relationship with the written word pops up in the language in interesting ways. In Sazae-san, the long-running anime that captures in calming, peaceful tones the happiness of a traditional Japanese family, Sazae and her husband Masuo sleep on futons with their son, Tara-chan, sandwiched in between. This is called sleeping in kawa no ji style, literally "sleeping like the character for river" since it imitates the three flowing lines that make up the character for river. Similarly, my daughter, rambunctious tomboy that she is, usually sleeps in a dai no ji, or the shape of the character for "big", with her arms extended and legs spread as far as possible, the better to take up as much room as possible when sleeping with her mom and dad.




5 Comments:
kanji is amazing. I like how you combine the kanji for "small" and "mountain", and you have "hill". a nice sort of logic there, but not always the case, I know.
3:30 AM
Yes, there is a lot of imagery at the base. And more abstract later. And this has been in use for 3500 years or so, amazing!
10:28 AM
This post has been removed by the author.
7:33 PM
Best one is that the kanji that means among other things noisy/boisterous/wicked/seduce is the kanji for "woman" times 3. Cracks me up every time I come across it.
7:35 PM
Yes, 姦. It's also, er, a kanji for rape, strangely enough. There's a word called 輪姦 (rinkan) in the Cannon Wordtank that's translated as "raping a woman in turns." I always wondered what the HELL a word like that is doing existing in the first place, but also sitting there in the dictionary when you casually checking through words.
10:28 PM
Post a Comment
<< Home