黄金
Chinese
| For pronunciation and definitions of 黄金 – see 黃金 (“gold; money; etc.”). (This term, 黄金, is the simplified form of 黃金.) |
Notes:
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Japanese
Etymology 1
| Kanji in this term | |
|---|---|
| 黄 | 金 |
| おう Grade: 2 |
こん > ごん Grade: 1 |
| on’yomi | |
/wauɡon/ → /wɔːɡon/ → /oːɡon/
From Middle Chinese 黃金 (MC ɦwɑŋ kˠiɪm, “yellow + metal”). Compare modern Cantonese wong4 gam1.
Pronunciation
Noun
黄金 (hiragana おうごん, rōmaji ōgon, historical hiragana わうごん)
- the metal gold (Au)
- the color gold
- money, more specifically, the large 大判 (ōban) gold coins formerly used in Japan.
Usage notes
The ōgon reading is the more common on'yomi for this term.
Synonyms
Etymology 2
| Kanji in this term | |
|---|---|
| 黄 | 金 |
| こう Grade: 2 |
きん Grade: 1 |
| on’yomi | |
/kwaukin/ → /kwɔːkin/ → /koːkin/
From Middle Chinese 黃金 (MC ɦwɑŋ kˠiɪm, “yellow + metal”). Compare modern Min Nan reading hông-kim.
Pronunciation
Noun
黄金 (hiragana こうきん, rōmaji kōkin, historical hiragana くわうきん)
Usage notes
The ōgon reading is the more common on'yomi for this term.
Etymology 3
| Kanji in this term | |
|---|---|
| 黄 | 金 |
| き Grade: 2 |
かね > がね Grade: 1 |
| kun’yomi | |
Compound of 黄 (ki, “yellow”) + 金 (kane, “metal”).[2] The kane changes to gane as an instance of rendaku (連濁).
Pronunciation
Noun
黄金 (hiragana きがね, rōmaji kigane)
Usage notes
The kogane reading is the more common kun'yomi for this term.[2][1]
Etymology 4
| Kanji in this term | |
|---|---|
| 黄 | 金 |
| く Grade: 2 |
かね > がね Grade: 1 |
| kun’yomi | |
Variant of kigane above.[2]
Pronunciation
Alternative forms
Noun
黄金 (hiragana くがね, rōmaji kugane)
Usage notes
The kogane reading is the more common kun'yomi for this term.
Etymology 5
| Kanji in this term | |
|---|---|
| 黄 | 金 |
| こ Grade: 2 |
かね > がね Grade: 1 |
| kun’yomi | |
Variant of kugane above.[2][1]
Pronunciation
Alternative forms
Noun
黄金 (hiragana こがね, rōmaji kogane)
- the metal gold (Au)
- money
- the color gold
- short for 黄金の泥 (kogane no dei): powdered gold suspended in a base and used as a paint
Usage notes
The kogane reading is the more common kun'yomi for this term.