蠆

Pronunciationchài
Five Elements
Strokes19 strokes

Basic Info

Pronunciation chài
Five Elements
Fortune
Radical
Simplified Strokes 18 strokes
Traditional Strokes 19 strokes

Naming Meaning

Kangxi Dictionary

View Original Page 1099
View Original Page 1099
Shen Collection, Middle Volume. Radical: Insect (chóng). Character: chài. Kangxi stroke count: 19. Page 1099, Entry 24. Pronounced chài. Jade Chapter (Yupian): A stinging insect. Book of Odes (Shijing), Lesser Odes of the Kingdom: Those noble ladies, with hair gathered in tufts like scorpions (chài). Commentary: The tail of a scorpion is lifted and curved, resembling the way women curl the ends of their hair upward. Apocrypha to the Classic of Filial Piety (Xiaojing wei): Bees and scorpions have stingers; their venom lies at the rear. Zuo Commentary (Zuozhuan), Twenty-second Year of Duke Xi: Bees and scorpions have venom. Annotation: The Common Records (Tongsu wen) states: A long-tailed scorpion is called a xiē. Records of Wei (Weizhi), Biography of Hua Tuo: When the wife of the Governor of Pengcheng went to the latrine at night, a scorpion stung her hand; Hua Tuo ordered her to soak the area in warm water. Also a name. Zuo Commentary (Zuozhuan), Ninth Year of Duke Xiang: Gongsun Chài, Gongsun Shezhi, and their senior officials and gate attendants all followed the Earl of Zheng. Also used interchangeably with dì (stalk). Zhang Heng, Western Capital Rhapsody (Xijing fu): Like the irritation of a scorpion or a mustard seed. Annotation: Scorpion and mustard seed refer to stings and bones stuck in the throat. Also pronounced tà. Same meaning. Sometimes written in a variant form.

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