kamuy
English
Alternative forms
Etymology
Noun
kamuy (plural kamuy)
Translations
Ainu
Etymology
Likely related to Old Japanese 神 (kamu, “god”). The exact relationship between the two terms is unclear. Modern Japanese 神 (kami) also has an ancient compounding form kamu, with suggestions that modern standalone kami may have been the result of a monophthongization of an older kamui, borrowed into Ainu as kamuy.
John Batchelor, however, analyses kamuy as being made up of the root ka (“above”), which is then kamu (“to cover”) and finally, through the addition of nominalising particle y, kamuy (“he who covers or overshadows”). In this case, Japanese 神 (kami) could be, in fact, a borrowing from Ainu.
Pronunciation
- IPA(key): [kàꜛmúj]
Noun
kamuy (Kana spelling カムイ)
- a god (deity)
- ape kamuy
- the fire god
- (by extension from the god sense) a bear (large mammal of family Ursidae)
- Synonym: ciramamtep
Adjective
kamuy (Kana spelling カムイ)
- an honorific-like title applied to anything great, important, or terrible, not necessarily implying divinity
Derived terms
- kamuyhumbe (“orca”)
- kamuycep (“salmon”)
- kamuymosir (“heaven”)
- kimunkamuy (“bear”)
- wose-kamuy (“wolf”)
References
John Batchelor (1905), An Ainu-English-Japanese dictionary (including a grammar of the Ainu language)[1], Tokyo; London: Methodist Publishing House; Kegan Paul, Trench, Trubner Co.