Japanese edit

Etymology edit

Kanji in this term
ふく
Grade: S
kun’yomi
Alternative spelling
脹れる

From Old Japanese 膨る (pukuru), following 下二段活用 (shimo nidan katsuyō, lower bigrade conjugation), from Proto-Japonic *pukoru.

Compare 膨らむ (fukuramu, to swell, to get bigger), 膨らます (fukuramasu, to make swell, to fill up), and (fukuro, bag), from the way a bag is filled with items.

First cited to the Man’yōshū, completed sometime after 759 CE.[1]

Pronunciation edit

  • Tokyo pitch accent of conjugated forms of "膨れる"
Source: Online Japanese Accent Dictionary
Stem forms
Terminal (終止形)
Attributive (連体形)
膨れる くれる [fùkúrérú]
Imperative (命令形) 膨れろ くれろ [fùkúréró]
Key constructions
Passive 膨れられる くれられる [fùkúrérárérú]
Causative 膨れさせる くれさせる [fùkúrésásérú]
Potential - - -
Volitional 膨れよう くれよ [fùkúréyóꜜò]
Negative 膨れない くれない [fùkúrénáí]
Negative perfective 膨れなかった くれなかった [fùkúrénáꜜkàttà]
Formal 膨れます くれま [fùkúrémáꜜsù]
Perfective 膨れた くれた [fùkúrétá]
Conjunctive 膨れて くれて [fùkúrété]
Hypothetical conditional 膨れれば くれれ [fùkúréréꜜbà]

Verb edit

(ふく)れる (fukureruintransitive ichidan (stem (ふく) (fukure), past (ふく)れた (fukureta))

  1. to swell, to expand

Usage notes edit

膨れる (fukureru) is used to describe something that happens due to an abnormality or external force, not necessarily with a positive sense.

  • パンが(ふく)れる(むくろ)(ふく)れる(ほお)(ふく)れる
    pan ga fukureru, mukuro ga fukureru, hō ga fukureru
    the bread rises, the corpse bloats, one's cheeks puff up (→ one pouts or sulks)

Its synonym, the intransitive verb 膨らむ (fukuramu) is used to describe something that happens naturally of its own accord, generally with a positive sense.

  • (つぼみ)(ふく)らむ(ゆめ)(ふく)らむ(むね)が〔(しあわ)せなどで〕(ふく)らむ
    tsubomi ga fukuramu, yume ga fukuramu, mune ga 〔shiawase nado de〕 fukuramu
    the buds swell, one's dreams grow bigger, one's chest swells [with joy, etc.]

Conjugation edit

References edit

  1. ^ 脹・膨”, in 日本国語大辞典 (Nihon Kokugo Daijiten, Nihon Kokugo Daijiten)[1] (in Japanese), concise edition, Tōkyō: Shogakukan, 2000
  2. ^ Matsumura, Akira, editor (2006), 大辞林 [Daijirin] (in Japanese), Third edition, Tōkyō: Sanseidō, →ISBN