haboku

发音

US /hɑˈboʊ.ku/

释义与例句

n.
  1. 1.

    A technique of using splashed ink in brushwork painting, especially for painting a landscape.

    不可数

    1979, John M. Rosenfield & William Jay Rathbun, Song of the Brush: Japanese paintings from the Sansō Collection, Seattle Art Museum The haboku idiom had appeared in South China in the thirteenth century, and appealed greatly to visiting Japanese Zen Buddhists, who took examples back with them.

词源

From Japanese 破墨 (haboku はぼく), from Middle Chinese 破 (pʰà "broken up") + 墨 (mok "ink") (compare Mandarin pòmò 破墨, Cantonese po³-mak⁶ 破墨).

来源:wiktionary