縗

Pronunciationcuī
Strokes16 strokes

Basic Info

Pronunciation cuī
Five Elements None
Fortune None
Radical
Simplified Strokes 16 strokes
Traditional Strokes 16 strokes

Naming Meaning

Kangxi Dictionary

View Original Page 933
View Original Page 933
Wei Collection, Lower Volume Radical: Silk (mì) 縗 Kangxi strokes: 16 Page 933, Entry 37 Guangyun (Broad Rhymes), Jiyun (Collected Rhymes), Yunhui (Collection of Rhymes), Zhengyun (Correct Rhymes): Pronounced cui. Shuowen (Explaining Graphs and Analyzing Characters): A mourning garment, six inches long and four inches wide, hanging straight down the chest. Yupian (Jade Chapters): A mourning garment. Zuo Tradition (Zuo Zhuan): Yan Ying wore a coarse mourning garment with hemmed edges. Note: The garment is worn on the chest. Explication: The character was originally also written as a variant form (shuai). Jiyun (Collected Rhymes): Pronounced cui. Refers to the feathers on the head of an egret. Jiyun (Collected Rhymes): Pronounced sui. Refers to a garment woven from egret feathers. Jiyun (Collected Rhymes): Pronounced suo. The meaning is the same.

Kangxi Dictionary Modern Version

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