Wednesday, November 04, 2009

Two Moons Under A Mountain

Japanese character of the day: kuzu ~ two moons (see left) under a mountain (see right). 崩れる kuzureru ~ to collapse, fall to pieces; 崩す kuzusu ~ 1. to demolish 2. to break a large ¥ note or bill 3. to write simplified Chinese characters (!) This is the poetry of writing.

What do two moons under a mountain really signify?


If you literally see two moons under a mountain (as reflected in a pool) you're either seeing double or the water is agitated ~ either way is a way to unrest or even destruction. But a moon 月 (tsuki) usually signifies a month 月 (gatsu). If you take a mountain 山 (yama) to mean a city or civilization the two months under the mountain would be a siege leading to collapse of society.

And there we have it: two moons under a mountain 崩.

Utter demolition and ruin!

5 comments:

  1. I have agitated water but no moon as the sun is out and my washing machine is at work ;)

    ... just to let you know Gleds I'm having a break from posting and have put my blog to bed for the time being. I'll still be visiting*!*

    ReplyDelete
  2. Bimbimbie: why? Did something happen..?

    ReplyDelete
  3. That means "it is, isn't it?" : so desu-ne.

    And that famous "karate chop" phrase looks like this:

    ああ、そう!

    "aa ~ so!"

    but really it means ~ "oh right" ~ nothing to do with chopping wood with the side of your hand at all!

    ReplyDelete

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