出典:Wiktionary
Borrowed from Russian Пермь (Permʹ), probably from a Proto-Finno-Permic (Uralic) stem; compared to Estonian põrand, dialectal põrmand (“floor, ground”) by P. Alvre in Keel ja Kirjandus No 7, 1981, pp. 407-413. Compare Bjarmaland.
Appears on western maps as latinized Permia in the late 16th century (Mercator (1595)). The Russian city of Perm is a modern foundation, established under Peter I in 1723.
Perm
perm.
go for a perm
uj
the premium
have one's hair permed
a mortgage
a rope
the muster
a dot written beside a Japanese character in order to modify the pronunciation
the remitter