otsu
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English[edit]
Etymology[edit]
Borrowed from Japanese 乙 (“second”).
Adjective[edit]
otsu (not comparable)
- (linguistics) In Old Japanese, one of two sets of vowels of uncertain pronunciation which fell together in modern Japanese.
- 1991, Christopher Seeley, A History of Writing in Japan:
- Later—during the ninth century—the kō and otsu groups did come to be used interchangeably.
- 2001, John R. Bentley, A Descriptive Grammar of Early Old Japanese Prose:
- He rejects the claim of Matsumoto (1984) that the kô and otsu -o- vowels are in complementary distribution, and therefore these two vowels are allophones of a single vowel.
See also[edit]
Anagrams[edit]
Japanese[edit]
Romanization[edit]
otsu