In Japanese, yon is "four". It mostly is 'four' unless the context of the sentence changes its meaning.
Don't worry so much about it though. It means "four".
"Yon" means the same as "yonder", something like "over there" in modern English. The narrator is seeing the calm around Mary and the young Jesus from some distance away.
The words 'round yon virgin' form part of the sentence: 'All is calm, all is bright,round yon virgin mother and child.'This means that everything around Mary (the virgin mother) and Jesus (the child) is calm and bright. 'Yon' is a form of 'yonder', which means 'over there'.'Everything is calm and bright around that virgin mother over there and her child.'
bob
It means "apple".
It's actually Kevin Yon.
"juu yon" is a Japanese word and in English it means "fourteen"
Yes; 四 is the Japanese for '4' and it reads both 'yon' and 'shi'. You will hear it in making bigger numbers too, example:Juu = 10 , Yon = 4Juu Yon = 14Yon Juu = 40Yon Juu Yon = 44
ni hyaku yon juu yon
å››å五 (yon-juu-go) means 'forty-five' in Japanese.
In romaji, the number 5 in Japanese is spelled "go."
It is 'ni juu yon' in Japanese.
四 Yon
jū-yon
Rokujuu-yon.
14 is pronounced 'Ju-u-yon' in Japanese
yon-jū 四十
yon hyaku nijyu