miya: Revision history

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22 January 2020

  • curprev 04:3304:33, 22 January 2020-sche talk contribs 1,637 bytes +1 →‎English: null edit to expand on my previous edit summary: I searched most heavily for modern examples of "miyas" and found none, but even searching for "miya", even sifting through the chaff of unrelated romanizations of things, I find reprints of older works, quotations of older works, and explicit mentions like "shrines were called miya", no modern uses. it surprises me that I wasn't able to find modern uses. add some if they exist. undo
  • curprev 04:2904:29, 22 January 2020-sche talk contribs 1,636 bytes −8 cf my previous edit summary, where I added this as an HTML comment - I can't find modern examples. the only ostensibly modern Google Books hits are reprints of older works (even, apparently, things like https://books.google.com/books?id=HXn_AQAAQBAJ&pg=PA228)), e.g. Christopher Dresser, William Elliot Griffis,... undo
  • curprev 03:2103:21, 22 January 2020-sche talk contribs 1,644 bytes +27 →‎English: is this word obsolete? or "now rare"? I am having a hard time finding uses [even italicized ones] from after the early 1900s that are not just reprints or quotes of works from the 1800s to early 1900s, or else ''explicit'' mentions like "temples are called Miyas". undo
  • curprev 03:1403:14, 22 January 2020Metaknowledge talk contribs 1,617 bytes +21 →‎Etymology undo
  • curprev 03:1203:12, 22 January 2020-sche talk contribs 1,596 bytes −56 →‎English: could sidestep this issue - see Eq's talk page for more discussion of the issue btw - by ellipsis here... undo

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6 January 2020

  • curprev 00:2300:23, 6 January 2020Equinox talk contribs 1,582 bytes +425 ==English== ===Etymology=== {{bor|en|ja|みや}} ===Noun=== {{en-noun|s|miya}} # A Japanese shrine. #* '''1878''', N. McLeod, ''Epitome of the Ancient History of Japan'' (page 52) #*: In the great matsuris or religious festivals of the Jewish race the Samurais' wives and families may be seen holding these festivals at the '''miyas''' where the harlots worship and mixing freely in the crowd amongst them. undo

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