めり

Japanese

Etymology

From Early Middle Japanese めり (meri).

Thought to be a contraction of (me, "eye") + あり (ari, to be) or (mi, "to see") + あり (ari, to be).[1]

Suffix

めり • (-meri) -ri

  1. (Classical Japanese) A modal auxiliary verb indicating conjecture based on what is seen: it looks like; it seems like

Usage notes

  • This word is morphologically a clitic. It is classified as 助動詞 (jodōshi, auxiliary verb) in traditional Japanese grammar.
  • Attaches to the 終止形 (shūshikei, terminal form) of most inflectable words, but to the 連体形 (rentaikei, attributive form) of ラ行変格活用 (ra-irregular) verbs. In the latter case, the final is usually omitted in writing, e.g. はべめり (habemeri) instead of はべるめり (haberumeri); this is interpreted as unwritten 撥音便 (hatsuonbin), so that はべめり (habemeri) is read as はべんめり (habenmeri).[2]
  • Conjectures based on something seen, as opposed to なり (nari) which conjectures based on something heard.

Conjugation

References

  1. Frellesvig, Bjarke (2010) A History of the Japanese Language, Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, →ISBN, page 102
  2. Frellesvig, Bjarke (2010) A History of the Japanese Language, Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, →ISBN, page 232
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