7. |
A 2022-02-04 17:40:08 Robin Scott <...address hidden...>
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Diff: |
@@ -20 +20 @@
-<xref type="see" seq="2080720">両・りょう・4</xref>
+<xref type="see" seq="2080720">両・4</xref>
@@ -23 +23 @@
-<gloss g_type="expl">Edo-period silver coin worth between 1/50th-1/80th of a ryō</gloss>
+<gloss g_type="expl">Edo-period silver coin worth between 1/50th and 1/80th of a ryō</gloss> |
6. |
A 2022-02-03 12:35:33 Marcus Richert <...address hidden...>
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Diff: |
@@ -23 +23 @@
-<gloss g_type="expl">Edo period silver coin worth between 1/50th-1/80th of a ryō</gloss>
+<gloss g_type="expl">Edo-period silver coin worth between 1/50th-1/80th of a ryō</gloss> |
5. |
A 2020-07-30 05:18:52 Jim Breen <...address hidden...>
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4. |
A* 2020-07-30 04:56:29 Marcus Richert <...address hidden...>
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Refs: |
daij
"なお、浮世草子「傾城禁短気」(宝永八年(一七一一〉)には「布袋屋の骨牌代、一匁二分」
とあって、当時のかるたの代金がしられる。"
(from a book)
https://www.imes.boj.or.jp/cm/english/history/content/
https://www.imes.boj.or.jp/cm/english/FAQs/FAQcurrency/answer.html |
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Comments: |
daijr seems to be saying it's "1 silver coin/mon", while nikk and daijs say the value of a monme was between 1/50th-1/80th of a ryo.
daijr: (「文目」と書く)銭を数える単位。銭一枚を一文目とした。文。 → 貫 一② |
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Diff: |
@@ -6,0 +7,3 @@
+<k_ele>
+<keb>文目</keb>
+</k_ele>
@@ -10,0 +14 @@
+<stagk>匁</stagk>
@@ -13,0 +18,7 @@
+<sense>
+<pos>&n;</pos>
+<xref type="see" seq="2080720">両・りょう・4</xref>
+<misc>&hist;</misc>
+<gloss>monme</gloss>
+<gloss g_type="expl">Edo period silver coin worth between 1/50th-1/80th of a ryō</gloss>
+</sense> |
3. |
A 2017-10-19 11:05:56 Jim Breen <...address hidden...>
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Comments: |
OK. |
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Diff: |
@@ -12 +12 @@
-<gloss>monme (unit of weight, approx. 3.75 g)</gloss>
+<gloss>monme (unit of weight, 3.75 g)</gloss> |
(show/hide 2 older log entries)
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2. |
A* 2017-10-19 07:07:29 Johan Råde <...address hidden...>
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Refs: |
wiki: Japan signed the Treaty of the Metre in 1885, with its terms taking effect in 1886.[1] It received its prototype metre and kilogram from the International Bureau of Weights and Measures in 1890.[1] The next year, a weights and measurements law codified the Japanese system, taking its fundamental units to be the shaku and kan and deriving the others from them.[1] The law codified the values of the traditional and metric units in terms of one another,[1] but retained the traditional units as the formal standard and metric values as secondary.[2] |
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Comments: |
should we skip the approx on Japanese units?
The monme was approximately 3.75g before 1891
and exactly 3.75g after 1891 |
1. |
A 2017-10-19 05:57:42 Johan Råde <...address hidden...>
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Refs: |
gg5 |
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Diff: |
@@ -12 +12 @@
-<gloss>unit of weight, approx. 3.75 g</gloss>
+<gloss>monme (unit of weight, approx. 3.75 g)</gloss> |