あがた
Japanese
Etymology 1
Alternative spelling |
---|
県 |
From Old Japanese. Further derivation unknown; speculatively, might be from 彼 (a, “that”, distal marker) + 方 (kata, “side; direction”), as in "over there, far away" and not near the central capital.
First cited in the Nihon Shoki of 720 with the administrative district sense.[1]
Pronunciation
Noun
- [from 720] (historical) agata
- This was a class of administrative district in use in western Japan prior to the Taika Reform and the establishment of the Ritsuryō system. The agata were under direct control of the imperial government, in contrast to the 国 (kuni) that were under the control of the 姓 (kabane, “hereditary clans”). The agata were established as a kind of royal land preserve.[1]
- [from 759] (literary) countryside
- Synonym: 田舎 (inaka)
- [from early 900s] (historical) a provincial governorship; a provincial governor
Derived terms
- 県主 (agatanushi)
Etymology 2
Likely derived from agata ("administrative district").
Pronunciation
Proper noun
References
Categories:
- Japanese terms inherited from Old Japanese
- Japanese terms derived from Old Japanese
- Japanese terms with unknown etymologies
- Japanese terms with IPA pronunciation
- Japanese lemmas
- Japanese nouns
- Japanese hiragana
- Japanese terms with historical senses
- Japanese literary terms
- ja:Political subdivisions
- Japanese proper nouns
- Japanese surnames