tsov
White Hmong
Etymology
From Proto-Hmong *tsjoᴮ (“tiger”), borrowed from Middle Chinese 祖 (MC tsuX, “ancestor”). The semantic shift from "ancestor" > "tiger" comes from the traditional Southeast Asian association and addressing of tigers as ancestors.[1]
Pronunciation
- IPA(key): /t͡ʂɒ˧˦/
Noun
tsov (classifier: tus)
Derived terms
- tsov cuam (“a legendary tiger, reportedly small, swift, and with a human face”)
- tsov dub (“black panther”)
- tsov nplooj suab (“Bengal tiger”)
- tsov ntxhuav (“lion”)
- tsov pom teev (“leopard”)
- tsov txaij (“leopard”)
References
- Heimbach, Ernest E. (1979) White Hmong — English Dictionary[1], SEAP Publications, →ISBN, page 355.
- ^ Ratliff, Martha (2010) Hmong-Mien language history (Studies in Language Change; 8), Camberra, Australia: Pacific Linguistics, →ISBN, page 74; 284.