. . "19245815"^^ . . . . . . "Kan-on (\u6F22\u97F3, Japanese pronunciation: [ka\uA71C\u0270\u0303.o\u0274] or [ka\u0270\u0303.o\u0274], \"Han sound\") is one of the sources of pronunciation of Japanese kanji. They were borrowed during the Tang dynasty (7th to 9th century), introduced by, among others, envoys from Japanese missions to Tang China. This period corresponds with the Japanese Nara period. Not to be confused with T\u014D-on \"Tang sound\", which actually refers to later phonetic loans. Kan-on is based on the central Chang'an pronunciation of Middle Chinese. The name Kan could refer to the Han dynasty, which also had Chang'an as its capital city. Furthermore, Kan has also become a description for all things Chinese, e.g., Kanji ('Chinese characters'). Kan'on partly displaced the earlier go'on, which were \"just imitations of Korean imitations, but Kan-on were imitations of the real things.\" A minority of characters never had their Kan-on transmitted to Japan; their Kan-on are sometimes reconstructed in Japanese dictionaries although not specifically marked as such. A few dictionaries go as far as to discard attested Kan-on in favour of more systematic pronunciations."@en . . . "Kan-on"@en . . "\u6F22\u97F3\uFF08\u304B\u3093\u304A\u3093\uFF09\u3068\u306F\u3001\u65E5\u672C\u6F22\u5B57\u97F3\uFF08\u97F3\u8AAD\u307F\uFF09\u306E\u4E00\u3064\u3002\u53E4\u304F\u306F\u300C\u304B\u3089\u3054\u3048\u300D\u3068\u3082\u547C\u3093\u3060\u30027, 8\u4E16\u7D00\u3001\u5948\u826F\u6642\u4EE3\u5F8C\u671F\u304B\u3089\u5E73\u5B89\u6642\u4EE3\u306E\u521D\u3081\u3054\u308D\u307E\u3067\u306B\u3001\u9063\u968B\u4F7F\u30FB\u9063\u5510\u4F7F\u3084\u7559\u5B66\u50E7\u306A\u3069\u306B\u3088\u308A\u4F1D\u3048\u3089\u308C\u305F\u97F3\u3092\u3044\u3046\u3002\u4E2D\u56FD\u8A9E\u306E\u4E2D\u53E4\u97F3\u306E\u3046\u3061\u3001\u5510\u4E2D\u8449\u9803\u306E\u9577\u5B89\u5730\u65B9\u306E\u97F3\u97FB\u4F53\u7CFB\uFF08\u79E6\u97F3\uFF09\u3092\u591A\u304F\u53CD\u6620\u3057\u3066\u3044\u308B\u3002\u4ED6\u306E\u5449\u97F3\u3084\u5510\u97F3\u306B\u6BD4\u3079\u3066\u6700\u3082\u4F53\u7CFB\u6027\u3092\u5099\u3048\u3066\u3044\u308B\u3002\u307E\u305F\u5510\u672B\u306B\u6E21\u822A\u3057\u305F\u50E7\u4FB6\u305F\u3061\u304C\u6301\u3061\u5E30\u3063\u305F\u6F22\u5B57\u97F3\u306F\u4E2D\u56FD\u8A9E\u306E\u8FD1\u4E16\u97F3\u7684\u306A\u7279\u5FB4\u3092\u591A\u304F\u4F1D\u3048\u3066\u304A\u308A\u3001\u901A\u5E38\u306E\u6F22\u97F3\u306B\u5BFE\u3057\u3066\u65B0\u6F22\u97F3\u3068\u547C\u3070\u308C\u308B\u3053\u3068\u304C\u3042\u308B\u3002"@ja . . . . . . . . . . . . . . "Kan-on"@fr . . . "Kan-on (\u6F22\u97F3), litt\u00E9ralement, prononciation han, est la prononciation provenant de la dynastie Tang dans la prononciation phon\u00E9tique on'yomi (\u97F3\u8AAD\u307F) des caract\u00E8res chinois kanji (\u6F22\u5B57) en japonais. Elle se distingue de la prononciation go-on (\u5449\u97F3), originaire de la famille des langues Wu (parl\u00E9es \u00E0 Shangha\u00EF, ainsi que dans les provinces du Jiangsu et Zhejiang, ancien royaume de Wu), et de la prononciation t\u014D-on (\u5510\u97F3), litt\u00E9ralement, prononciation Tang, import\u00E9 des prononciations des dynasties Song et Ming. L'autre famille de prononciation des kanji est la prononciation kun'yomi (\u8A13\u8AAD\u307F) lit. prononciation s\u00E9mantique, dont la s\u00E9mantique chinoise est conserv\u00E9e, mais la prononciation d'origine japonaise est utilis\u00E9e."@fr . . . "\u6F22\u97F3\u662F\u65E5\u672C\u6F22\u5B57\u97F3\uFF08\u97F3\u8B80\uFF09\u7684\u4E00\u985E\uFF0C\u53E4\u4EE3\u8BAD\u8BFB\u70BA\u300C\u6F22\u8072\uFF08\u304B\u3089\u3053\u3048\uFF09\u300D\u3002\u6F22\u97F3\u662F\u516C\u5143\u516B\u3001\u4E5D\u4E16\u7D00\u7684\u5948\u826F\u6642\u4EE3\u5F8C\u671F\u81F3\u5E73\u5B89\u6642\u4EE3\u521D\u671F\u7531\u9063\u5510\u4F7F\u548C\u7559\u5B78\u50E7\u5F9E\u4E2D\u539F\u7FD2\u5F97\u5E36\u56DE\u65E5\u672C\u7684\u6F22\u5B57\u97F3\u3002\u76F8\u5C0D\u65BC\u901A\u5E38\u7684\u6F22\u97F3\uFF0C\u5F80\u5F80\u88AB\u7A31\u70BA\u300C\u65B0\u6F22\u97F3\u300D\u3002"@zh . "Kan-on (\u6F22\u97F3, Japanese pronunciation: [ka\uA71C\u0270\u0303.o\u0274] or [ka\u0270\u0303.o\u0274], \"Han sound\") is one of the sources of pronunciation of Japanese kanji. They were borrowed during the Tang dynasty (7th to 9th century), introduced by, among others, envoys from Japanese missions to Tang China. This period corresponds with the Japanese Nara period. Not to be confused with T\u014D-on \"Tang sound\", which actually refers to later phonetic loans. Kan'on partly displaced the earlier go'on, which were \"just imitations of Korean imitations, but Kan-on were imitations of the real things.\""@en . "\u6F22\u97F3"@ja . . . . . "\u6F22\u97F3\u662F\u65E5\u672C\u6F22\u5B57\u97F3\uFF08\u97F3\u8B80\uFF09\u7684\u4E00\u985E\uFF0C\u53E4\u4EE3\u8BAD\u8BFB\u70BA\u300C\u6F22\u8072\uFF08\u304B\u3089\u3053\u3048\uFF09\u300D\u3002\u6F22\u97F3\u662F\u516C\u5143\u516B\u3001\u4E5D\u4E16\u7D00\u7684\u5948\u826F\u6642\u4EE3\u5F8C\u671F\u81F3\u5E73\u5B89\u6642\u4EE3\u521D\u671F\u7531\u9063\u5510\u4F7F\u548C\u7559\u5B78\u50E7\u5F9E\u4E2D\u539F\u7FD2\u5F97\u5E36\u56DE\u65E5\u672C\u7684\u6F22\u5B57\u97F3\u3002\u76F8\u5C0D\u65BC\u901A\u5E38\u7684\u6F22\u97F3\uFF0C\u5F80\u5F80\u88AB\u7A31\u70BA\u300C\u65B0\u6F22\u97F3\u300D\u3002"@zh . . . "\u6F22\u97F3\uFF08\u304B\u3093\u304A\u3093\uFF09\u3068\u306F\u3001\u65E5\u672C\u6F22\u5B57\u97F3\uFF08\u97F3\u8AAD\u307F\uFF09\u306E\u4E00\u3064\u3002\u53E4\u304F\u306F\u300C\u304B\u3089\u3054\u3048\u300D\u3068\u3082\u547C\u3093\u3060\u30027, 8\u4E16\u7D00\u3001\u5948\u826F\u6642\u4EE3\u5F8C\u671F\u304B\u3089\u5E73\u5B89\u6642\u4EE3\u306E\u521D\u3081\u3054\u308D\u307E\u3067\u306B\u3001\u9063\u968B\u4F7F\u30FB\u9063\u5510\u4F7F\u3084\u7559\u5B66\u50E7\u306A\u3069\u306B\u3088\u308A\u4F1D\u3048\u3089\u308C\u305F\u97F3\u3092\u3044\u3046\u3002\u4E2D\u56FD\u8A9E\u306E\u4E2D\u53E4\u97F3\u306E\u3046\u3061\u3001\u5510\u4E2D\u8449\u9803\u306E\u9577\u5B89\u5730\u65B9\u306E\u97F3\u97FB\u4F53\u7CFB\uFF08\u79E6\u97F3\uFF09\u3092\u591A\u304F\u53CD\u6620\u3057\u3066\u3044\u308B\u3002\u4ED6\u306E\u5449\u97F3\u3084\u5510\u97F3\u306B\u6BD4\u3079\u3066\u6700\u3082\u4F53\u7CFB\u6027\u3092\u5099\u3048\u3066\u3044\u308B\u3002\u307E\u305F\u5510\u672B\u306B\u6E21\u822A\u3057\u305F\u50E7\u4FB6\u305F\u3061\u304C\u6301\u3061\u5E30\u3063\u305F\u6F22\u5B57\u97F3\u306F\u4E2D\u56FD\u8A9E\u306E\u8FD1\u4E16\u97F3\u7684\u306A\u7279\u5FB4\u3092\u591A\u304F\u4F1D\u3048\u3066\u304A\u308A\u3001\u901A\u5E38\u306E\u6F22\u97F3\u306B\u5BFE\u3057\u3066\u65B0\u6F22\u97F3\u3068\u547C\u3070\u308C\u308B\u3053\u3068\u304C\u3042\u308B\u3002"@ja . . "4514"^^ . . . "\u6F22\u97F3"@zh . . . "1112721613"^^ . "Kan-on (\u6F22\u97F3), litt\u00E9ralement, prononciation han, est la prononciation provenant de la dynastie Tang dans la prononciation phon\u00E9tique on'yomi (\u97F3\u8AAD\u307F) des caract\u00E8res chinois kanji (\u6F22\u5B57) en japonais. Elle se distingue de la prononciation go-on (\u5449\u97F3), originaire de la famille des langues Wu (parl\u00E9es \u00E0 Shangha\u00EF, ainsi que dans les provinces du Jiangsu et Zhejiang, ancien royaume de Wu), et de la prononciation t\u014D-on (\u5510\u97F3), litt\u00E9ralement, prononciation Tang, import\u00E9 des prononciations des dynasties Song et Ming."@fr . . . .