Darryl Wee
Is this an uncommon way to describe hands? "無骨な手 " I was reading this sentence, and came across what I think is unusual kanji usage, hope someone can tell me if this is used often: ”無骨な手”. 例: "おじさんの無骨な手が添えられた花々は、なぜかみだらに、なまめいて見えた。” Thank you~
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الإجابات · 6
1
Hi, to describe the man's clumsy, rough hand with the banch of flower, it can stress the beauty/sweetness/daintiness of the flower more and such the usage it is not unusual at all. 無骨 can also be interpreted clumsy, unmannered, rough, unsofisticated due to context.
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It is hard to explain 無骨. I searched 無骨 of a dictionary it says 骨ばってごつごつしていること。 do you know ごつごつ?ごつごつ means rugged; scraggy; angular. 骨ばっている means to be bony; to be angular So my image of 無骨な手 is like farmer or carpenter who especially getting old. Sorry for the bad explaining. Hope someone will explain it better.
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