chồng

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See also: chong, chóng, chòng, chông, chōng, and chǒng

Vietnamese[edit]

Pronunciation[edit]

Etymology 1[edit]

From Northern Middle Vietnamese chào᷄, from Proto-Vietic *p-ʄoːŋ, *ɟoːŋ. Compare North Central nhôông, Mlabri ɟioŋ ("father"), Khmu joŋ ("man").

This word originally just meant "man, male", as with North Central gấy/cấy (wife), originally just meant "woman, female".

Alternative forms[edit]

Noun[edit]

chồng (, 𫯰, 𫯳)

  1. husband
    lấy chồng(of a woman) to get married
    bố/mẹ chồnghusband's father/mother
Usage notes[edit]
  • In vợ chồng (wife and husband), chú (paternal aunt and her husband), cậu (you girls and boys), dượng (maternal aunt and her husband; stepmother and stepfather), the words for females always come first. In most other phrases, the words for males usually come first, except in certain poetic contexts (e.g. mẹ cha (mum and dad) as opposed to the usual cha mẹ (dad and mum)).
See also[edit]
Derived terms
Further reading[edit]

Etymology 2[edit]

Non-Sino-Vietnamese reading of Chinese (SV: trùng).

Verb[edit]

chồng (𠽚, 𥔧, 𨤯)

  1. to stack up
Derived terms[edit]
Derived terms

Noun[edit]

chồng

  1. a stack