tomoshihino, as a lit beacon; used with akashi, bright, illumed, in Akashi no Ohoto, great gate or passage, of Akashi (pl. n.).
tonamiharu (tori no ami wo haru—spread fowler’s net); applied to saka, hill-pass, part of pl. n. Sakate—birds being found in numbers in such places, [134].
tonogumori (tana gumori), spreading of clouds; used with pl. n. Amefuru River; — ame furu = rain-pour, [153].
toriganaku, cock-crowing; traditional m. k. of Adzuma, Eastland, [24], [43], [124], [258].
torizhimono, like birds; used with tachi (rise up); nadzusahi, swim in water; uki, float.
tsubasanasu, like the wings of a bird; used with arigayohitsutsu, going to and fro; according to Kogi refers to flying through the air of a man’s soul when he dies.
tsuganokino, like tsuga, tree (abies tsuga); used, by sound-quibble with tsugitsugi (in succession), [9], [39], [71].
tsuginefu, tsugi-mine-fu, where serried peaks are abundant;, descriptive m. k. of Yamashiro. But the ne may refer to forest-trees, [180].
tsukanedomo, though-not-bind; used, by sound-quibble with Tsukunu (pl. n.).
tsukikusano, like tsuki-blossom, of which the colour is easily transferred—hence used with words denoting change, impermanence, &c.