You Collection, Lower Volume
Radical: Wine (yǒu)
酲
Kangxi Strokes: 14
Page 1283, Entry 09
Pronounced chéng.
Shuowen Jiezi (Shuowen): The condition of being sick from alcohol. Another definition is the state of waking up while still intoxicated.
Yupian: Intoxicated and not yet awake.
Book of Odes (Shijing), Lesser Odes (Xiao Ya): My worried heart is like one sick from alcohol.
Commentary: To be sick from alcohol is called chéng.
History of the Former Han Dynasty (Qian Hanshu), Treatises on Rites and Music: A great vessel of sugarcane juice to dispel morning intoxication.
Note: Ying Shao says: Chéng means sickness. Xī means to dispel. This means that sugarcane juice can dispel the effects of morning intoxication.
Zhang Heng, Rhapsody on the Southern Capital (Nanduf): Its sweetness does not cloy; one is intoxicated but not sick from alcohol.
Also, Guangya: Chéng means long.
Also, Jiyun: Pronounced chēng. Means to be sick.
Textual verification: History of the Former Han Dynasty, Treatises on Rites and Music: Sugarcane juice to dispel morning intoxication. In accordance with the original text, the two characters for great vessel have been added before sugarcane juice.