シネマ

Confident

shinema

cinema

katakana

Origin

Source language
French (fr)
Source form
cinema / cinéma
Borrowing route
フランス語映画語 → 近代日本語の映画文化語へ
Semantic shift
映画装置・映画館・映画芸術 → 映画全般の文化語
First attested
1920

Story

French cinéma, with the accent in cinéma, is the source form behind Japanese シネマ. It is a shortened form of cinématographe, the motion-picture device associated with Auguste and Louis Lumière. Their public screening in Paris on 28 December 1895 made the French term internationally known; the deeper Greek element kinēma means movement. Japan received moving-picture technology soon after. Screenings of imported devices took place in Kobe, Osaka, and Tokyo around 1896-1897, and Meiji and Taishō Japanese used several terms: 活動写真, キネマ, シネマ, and later 映画. シネマ kept a link with French film vocabulary while English cinema also became familiar through film distribution and criticism in the twentieth century. In present Japanese, 映画 is the neutral everyday word for a movie, while シネマ often appears in venue names, media titles, and compounds such as シネマコンプレックス and シネコン. English cinema can mean a movie theater or film as an art form; Japanese シネマ is less common in plain conversation than 映画. It appears in modern chain names such as Toho Cinemas in Japan. Example: シネマ好き means a person interested in film culture.

Sources

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Other art loanwords

Other French (fr) loanwords

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