Another character for the word “rice plant” in Old Chinese

Masaki Nohara
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Abstract

Two kinds of grain, “millet, 粟米 sùmǐ” and “husked rice, 稻 dào”, frequently appear in the Liye Qin Slips. Aside from these grains, another character seen in the Liye Qin Slips, nǎo, is thought to represent grain. It also represents the words for “brain, 腦 nǎo” in other excavated documents. Since the archaeological data show that rice cultivation was practised around the middle and lower Yangtze Valley, the homeland of Proto-Hmong Mien (formerly the state of Chu 楚地), the word for “rice plant, 稻 dào” seems to be a loanword from Proto-Hmong Mien *mbləu. The character nǎo is reconstructed as *nˤuʔ, which bears the same onset as the sound for “rice plant (or husked rice)” in North and East Hmongic languages nɯ (< *mbləu). Hence, we propose that the assimilation (*mbl- > *n-) in these languages could have occurred at the latest just before or after the Qin dynasty.
古汉语 "秧 "的另一个字
粟sùmǐ "和 "稻dào "这两种谷物经常出现在《离骚》中。除了这些谷物,《礼记-秦始皇本纪》中的另一个字 "粟"(nǎo)也被认为代表谷物。在其他出土文献中,它也代表 "脑 nǎo"。由于考古资料表明,原苗族(原楚地国)的故乡长江中下游流域一带有水稻种植,因此 "稻 dào "一词似乎是从原苗族的*mbləu借来的。nǎo "字被重构为*nˤuʔ,与北苗语和东苗语中 "秧(或稻壳)"的发音 nɯ(< *mbləu)相同。因此,我们认为这些语言中的同化现象(*mbl- > *n-)最迟可能发生在秦朝前后。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
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