フレ

Ainu

Alternative forms

Etymology

Proto-Ainu *guurE HLL (“red”).[1]

Proto-Ainu *huure HL (“red”).[2]

Pronunciation

IPA(key): /hú.ɾe/

Verb

フレ (Latin spelling hure, Cyrillic spelling хурэ)

  1. to be red
  2. (Hokkaido, Kuril, South Kuril) red

Derived terms

dialect table: red (1960)[3]
area pronunciation
Yakumo (八雲) húre
Oshamambe (長万部) húre
Horobetsu (幌別) húre
Hiratori (平取) húre
Nukkibetsu (貫気別) húre
Niikappu (新冠) húre
Samani (様似) húre
Obihiro (帯広) húre
Kushiro (釧路) húre
Bihoro (美幌) húre
Asahikawa (旭川) húre
Nayoro (名寄) húre
Soya (宗谷) húre
Ochiho (落帆) huure
Tarantomari (多蘭泊) huure
Maoka (真岡) huure
Shiraura (白浦) huure
Raichishka (ライチシカ) huure
Nairo (内路) huure

See also

Colors in Ainu · iro / イロ (layout · text)
     retar / レタㇻ / テタラ      ruretar / ルレタㇻ      kunne / クンネ
             hure / フレ / フーレ                           sikerpepeus / シケㇾペペウㇱ
                          hukinane / フキナネ             
                          nis iro / ニㇲ イロ              siwnin / シウニン
                                       ruhure / ルフレ

References

  1. ^ Vovin, Alexander V. (1993) Leiden: E.J. Brill, editors, A Reconstruction of Proto-Ainu.
  2. ^ 服部四郎・知里真志保 (Shirō Hattori & Mashiho Chiri) (1960) 『アイヌ語諸方言の基礎語彙統計学的研究』「民族學研究」 (Ainu Go Shohōgen No Kiso Goi Tōkeigaku Teki Kenkyū, A Lexicostatistic Study on the Ainu Dialects)[1] (in Japanese), Japan: 日本文化人類学会 (Japanese Society of Cultural Anthropology)
  3. ^ 服部四郎・知里真志保 (Shirō Hattori & Mashiho Chiri) (1960) 『アイヌ語諸方言の基礎語彙統計学的研究』「民族學研究」 (Ainu Go Shohōgen No Kiso Goi Tōkeigaku Teki Kenkyū, A Lexicostatistic Study on the Ainu Dialects)[2] (in Japanese), Japan: 日本文化人類学会 (Japanese Society of Cultural Anthropology)
  • 単語リスト(アイヌ語・日本語)―石狩川― (Tango List Ainu-go Nihon-go - Ishikari River, Word List (Ainu / Japanese) - Ishikari River)[3] (in Japanese), Sapporo, Hokkaidō: 公益財団法人アイヌ文化振興・研究推進機構 (Zaidan Hōjin Ainu Bunka Shinkō / Kenkyū Suishin Kikō, Foundation for the Advancement, Research, and Promotion of Ainu Culture), 2014 (Hokkaido)
  • Anna Bugaeva and Tomomi Satō (2021) A Kuril Ainu Glossary by Captain V. M. Golovnin (1811)[4], Tokyo: International Journal of Eurasian Linguistics (Kuril)