jmdict
1572040
Active
(id:
2186916)
<entry id="2186916" stat="A" corpus="jmdict" type="jmdict">
<ent_corp type="jmdict">jmdict</ent_corp>
<ent_seq>1572040</ent_seq>
<k_ele>
<keb>蜥蜴</keb>
</k_ele>
<k_ele>
<keb>石龍子</keb>
<ke_inf>&rK;</ke_inf>
</k_ele>
<k_ele>
<keb>石竜子</keb>
<ke_inf>&rK;</ke_inf>
</k_ele>
<k_ele>
<keb>蝘蜓</keb>
<ke_inf>&rK;</ke_inf>
</k_ele>
<r_ele>
<reb>とかげ</reb>
</r_ele>
<r_ele>
<reb>トカゲ</reb>
<re_nokanji/>
</r_ele>
<sense>
<pos>&n;</pos>
<misc>&uk;</misc>
<gloss>lizard</gloss>
</sense>
<sense>
<pos>&n;</pos>
<misc>&uk;</misc>
<gloss>skink lizard (Scincidae spp.)</gloss>
</sense>
<info>
<audit time="2014-05-20 11:46:23" stat="A" unap="true">
<upd_name>Marcus Richert</upd_name>
<upd_refs>http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Skink
daij
せきえき is not in daij. and it's marked ik? should it be in
there at all?</upd_refs>
<upd_diff>@@ -24 +24,2 @@
-<gloss>lizard</gloss>
+<misc>&uk;</misc>
+<gloss>skink lizard (Scincidae spp.)</gloss></upd_diff>
</audit>
<audit time="2014-05-20 23:09:07" stat="A">
<upd_uid>jwb</upd_uid>
<upd_name>Jim Breen</upd_name>
<upd_email>...address hidden...</upd_email>
<upd_detl>In 2009 Rene commented: "せきえき is not something that any dictionary has. it's mentioned in the kanwa entries for 蜥 and 蜴 though."
I guess it's harmless.</upd_detl>
<upd_diff>@@ -14,4 +13,0 @@
-<reb>トカゲ</reb>
-<re_nokanji/>
-</r_ele>
-<r_ele>
@@ -20,0 +17,4 @@
+</r_ele>
+<r_ele>
+<reb>トカゲ</reb>
+<re_nokanji/></upd_diff>
</audit>
<audit time="2016-10-14 14:44:29" stat="A" unap="true">
<upd_uid>johan</upd_uid>
<upd_name>Johan Råde</upd_name>
<upd_email>...address hidden...</upd_email>
<upd_detl>If someone asks "what is the Japanese word for lizard", the obvious answer is "トカゲ", even though technically a gekko may be a lizard but not a トカゲ.
But it is not easy to find this entry by searching for "lizard".
I propose splitting this into an everyday non-technical common usage sense and a technical biologically precise sense.</upd_detl>
<upd_refs>gg5: simply defines トカゲ as lizard
daijs: 目スキンク科の爬虫 (はちゅう) 類</upd_refs>
<upd_diff>@@ -24,0 +25,5 @@
+<gloss>lizard</gloss>
+</sense>
+<sense>
+<pos>&n;</pos>
+<misc>&uk;</misc></upd_diff>
</audit>
<audit time="2016-10-15 01:38:44" stat="A">
<upd_uid>jwb</upd_uid>
<upd_name>Jim Breen</upd_name>
<upd_email>...address hidden...</upd_email>
</audit>
<audit time="2021-11-13 01:57:36" stat="A">
<upd_uid>Marcus</upd_uid>
<upd_name>Marcus Richert</upd_name>
<upd_email>...address hidden...</upd_email>
<upd_refs>とかげ 132291
蜥蜴 85813
石竜子 376
トカゲ 464600</upd_refs>
<upd_diff>@@ -8,0 +9 @@
+<ke_inf>&rK;</ke_inf>
@@ -12,5 +12,0 @@
-</r_ele>
-<r_ele>
-<reb>せきえき</reb>
-<re_restr>蜥蜴</re_restr>
-<re_inf>&ik;</re_inf></upd_diff>
</audit>
<audit time="2022-05-17 19:27:15" stat="A" unap="true">
<upd_name>Stephen Kraus</upd_name>
<upd_email>...address hidden...</upd_email>
<upd_refs>nikk has 石龍子
daijr/s, koj, and nikk have 蝘蜓. It doesn't play nicely with the n-gram counter.
Google N-gram Corpus Counts
85,813 12.5% 蜥蜴
376 0.1% 石竜子
1,097 0.2% 石龍子
132,291 19.3% とかげ
464,600 67.9% トカゲ</upd_refs>
<upd_diff>@@ -7,0 +8,4 @@
+<keb>石龍子</keb>
+<ke_inf>&rK;</ke_inf>
+</k_ele>
+<k_ele>
@@ -8,0 +13,4 @@
+<ke_inf>&rK;</ke_inf>
+</k_ele>
+<k_ele>
+<keb>蝘蜓</keb></upd_diff>
</audit>
<audit time="2022-05-18 00:25:33" stat="A">
<upd_uid>jwb</upd_uid>
<upd_name>Jim Breen</upd_name>
<upd_email>...address hidden...</upd_email>
<upd_detl>蝘 and 蜓 were only added to the JIS standards in 2000. They were probably not used on WWW pages in 2007 when the n-gram data was scraped. Even now they're uncommon.</upd_detl>
</audit>
</info>
</entry>