What does it mean when multiple 々 marks follow a 、?












10















I was glancing at some old manuscripts from the Heian period (左経記 pg. 10) when I saw the following:
左経記 pg. 10



I know that typically 々 means to repeat the previous kanji, but what does it mean when its following a 、? Also, is there a reason there are so many of them in a row like in 々々々應召?










share|improve this question




















  • 1





    Wild guess, the two in a row stand for 巳及, and the three in row stand for 令召右.

    – 永劫回帰
    2 hours ago






  • 2





    This is not really Classical Japanese, it's Kanbun(漢文), which is really just Classical Chinese(文言文)

    – sazarando
    2 hours ago






  • 2





    The「、」is just a generic pause mark - notice how there's no「。」in the entire book, which means「、」would be rendered as either「、」or「。」in a more modern orthography. Also @sazarando JSE doesn't seem to have a tag for kanbun hmm...

    – droooze
    2 hours ago











  • The forward(part of the 標題 section)is in Classical Japanese though...

    – sazarando
    2 hours ago








  • 2





    Making a new tag for kanbun makes sense. I wouldn't say kanbun is "just" Classical Chinese, though.

    – snailboat
    2 hours ago
















10















I was glancing at some old manuscripts from the Heian period (左経記 pg. 10) when I saw the following:
左経記 pg. 10



I know that typically 々 means to repeat the previous kanji, but what does it mean when its following a 、? Also, is there a reason there are so many of them in a row like in 々々々應召?










share|improve this question




















  • 1





    Wild guess, the two in a row stand for 巳及, and the three in row stand for 令召右.

    – 永劫回帰
    2 hours ago






  • 2





    This is not really Classical Japanese, it's Kanbun(漢文), which is really just Classical Chinese(文言文)

    – sazarando
    2 hours ago






  • 2





    The「、」is just a generic pause mark - notice how there's no「。」in the entire book, which means「、」would be rendered as either「、」or「。」in a more modern orthography. Also @sazarando JSE doesn't seem to have a tag for kanbun hmm...

    – droooze
    2 hours ago











  • The forward(part of the 標題 section)is in Classical Japanese though...

    – sazarando
    2 hours ago








  • 2





    Making a new tag for kanbun makes sense. I wouldn't say kanbun is "just" Classical Chinese, though.

    – snailboat
    2 hours ago














10












10








10


1






I was glancing at some old manuscripts from the Heian period (左経記 pg. 10) when I saw the following:
左経記 pg. 10



I know that typically 々 means to repeat the previous kanji, but what does it mean when its following a 、? Also, is there a reason there are so many of them in a row like in 々々々應召?










share|improve this question
















I was glancing at some old manuscripts from the Heian period (左経記 pg. 10) when I saw the following:
左経記 pg. 10



I know that typically 々 means to repeat the previous kanji, but what does it mean when its following a 、? Also, is there a reason there are so many of them in a row like in 々々々應召?







punctuation symbols kanbun






share|improve this question















share|improve this question













share|improve this question




share|improve this question








edited 1 hour ago







Ringil

















asked 6 hours ago









RingilRingil

4,09421134




4,09421134








  • 1





    Wild guess, the two in a row stand for 巳及, and the three in row stand for 令召右.

    – 永劫回帰
    2 hours ago






  • 2





    This is not really Classical Japanese, it's Kanbun(漢文), which is really just Classical Chinese(文言文)

    – sazarando
    2 hours ago






  • 2





    The「、」is just a generic pause mark - notice how there's no「。」in the entire book, which means「、」would be rendered as either「、」or「。」in a more modern orthography. Also @sazarando JSE doesn't seem to have a tag for kanbun hmm...

    – droooze
    2 hours ago











  • The forward(part of the 標題 section)is in Classical Japanese though...

    – sazarando
    2 hours ago








  • 2





    Making a new tag for kanbun makes sense. I wouldn't say kanbun is "just" Classical Chinese, though.

    – snailboat
    2 hours ago














  • 1





    Wild guess, the two in a row stand for 巳及, and the three in row stand for 令召右.

    – 永劫回帰
    2 hours ago






  • 2





    This is not really Classical Japanese, it's Kanbun(漢文), which is really just Classical Chinese(文言文)

    – sazarando
    2 hours ago






  • 2





    The「、」is just a generic pause mark - notice how there's no「。」in the entire book, which means「、」would be rendered as either「、」or「。」in a more modern orthography. Also @sazarando JSE doesn't seem to have a tag for kanbun hmm...

    – droooze
    2 hours ago











  • The forward(part of the 標題 section)is in Classical Japanese though...

    – sazarando
    2 hours ago








  • 2





    Making a new tag for kanbun makes sense. I wouldn't say kanbun is "just" Classical Chinese, though.

    – snailboat
    2 hours ago








1




1





Wild guess, the two in a row stand for 巳及, and the three in row stand for 令召右.

– 永劫回帰
2 hours ago





Wild guess, the two in a row stand for 巳及, and the three in row stand for 令召右.

– 永劫回帰
2 hours ago




2




2





This is not really Classical Japanese, it's Kanbun(漢文), which is really just Classical Chinese(文言文)

– sazarando
2 hours ago





This is not really Classical Japanese, it's Kanbun(漢文), which is really just Classical Chinese(文言文)

– sazarando
2 hours ago




2




2





The「、」is just a generic pause mark - notice how there's no「。」in the entire book, which means「、」would be rendered as either「、」or「。」in a more modern orthography. Also @sazarando JSE doesn't seem to have a tag for kanbun hmm...

– droooze
2 hours ago





The「、」is just a generic pause mark - notice how there's no「。」in the entire book, which means「、」would be rendered as either「、」or「。」in a more modern orthography. Also @sazarando JSE doesn't seem to have a tag for kanbun hmm...

– droooze
2 hours ago













The forward(part of the 標題 section)is in Classical Japanese though...

– sazarando
2 hours ago







The forward(part of the 標題 section)is in Classical Japanese though...

– sazarando
2 hours ago






2




2





Making a new tag for kanbun makes sense. I wouldn't say kanbun is "just" Classical Chinese, though.

– snailboat
2 hours ago





Making a new tag for kanbun makes sense. I wouldn't say kanbun is "just" Classical Chinese, though.

– snailboat
2 hours ago










1 Answer
1






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4














「々」is called「同{どう}の字{じ}点{てん}」it is used to repeat 1 previous character.




 = 人




When there are multiple 同の字点 it means to repeat 'n' previous characters.





  • 已及深更、深更後... =


  • 已及深更、々々後...





&





  • 令召右大辨、右大辨應召 =

  • 令召右大辨、々々々應召







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    1 Answer
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    1 Answer
    1






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    oldest

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    active

    oldest

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    active

    oldest

    votes









    4














    「々」is called「同{どう}の字{じ}点{てん}」it is used to repeat 1 previous character.




     = 人




    When there are multiple 同の字点 it means to repeat 'n' previous characters.





    • 已及深更、深更後... =


    • 已及深更、々々後...





    &





    • 令召右大辨、右大辨應召 =

    • 令召右大辨、々々々應召







    share|improve this answer






























      4














      「々」is called「同{どう}の字{じ}点{てん}」it is used to repeat 1 previous character.




       = 人




      When there are multiple 同の字点 it means to repeat 'n' previous characters.





      • 已及深更、深更後... =


      • 已及深更、々々後...





      &





      • 令召右大辨、右大辨應召 =

      • 令召右大辨、々々々應召







      share|improve this answer




























        4












        4








        4







        「々」is called「同{どう}の字{じ}点{てん}」it is used to repeat 1 previous character.




         = 人




        When there are multiple 同の字点 it means to repeat 'n' previous characters.





        • 已及深更、深更後... =


        • 已及深更、々々後...





        &





        • 令召右大辨、右大辨應召 =

        • 令召右大辨、々々々應召







        share|improve this answer















        「々」is called「同{どう}の字{じ}点{てん}」it is used to repeat 1 previous character.




         = 人




        When there are multiple 同の字点 it means to repeat 'n' previous characters.





        • 已及深更、深更後... =


        • 已及深更、々々後...





        &





        • 令召右大辨、右大辨應召 =

        • 令召右大辨、々々々應召








        share|improve this answer














        share|improve this answer



        share|improve this answer








        edited 1 hour ago

























        answered 2 hours ago









        sazarandosazarando

        5,883720




        5,883720






























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