拾遺和歌集

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Japanese[edit]

Examples
春立つといふばかりにやみ吉野の山も霞みてけさは見ゆらむ
haru tatsu to iu bakari ni ya mi-Yoshino no yama mo kasumite kesa wa miyuran
But is it because we say spring has come [lit. “stood”], that we see fair Yoshino’s mountains misting in the morning?
  • Poem 1351 (poet unknown, attributed to “a beggar”):
いかるがや富の緒川のたえばこそわが大君のみ名を忘れめ
Ikaruga ya Tominoo-gawa no taeba koso waga ōkimi no mina o wasureme
By Ikaruga’s river Tominoo drying up [lit. “breaking”], only then I will forget my great lord’s name.


Kanji in this term
しゅう
Grade: 3

Grade: 6

Grade: 3

Grade: 2
しゅう
Grade: 3
kan’on goon kan’on
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Etymology[edit]

From 拾遺 (shūi, gleaning) +‎ 和歌 (waka, classical Japanese poem) +‎ (shū, collection).

Proper noun[edit]

(しゅう)()()()(しゅう) (Shūi Wakashūしふゐわかしふ (Sifuwi Wakasifu)?

  1. the third of the 勅撰和歌集 (chokusen wakashū, imperial waka anthologies), compiled in c. 1005-07 CE
    Synonyms: 拾遺 (Shūi), 拾遺集 (Shūishū)
    Hypernym: 八代集 (Hachidaishū)

Derived terms[edit]

See also[edit]