Shen Collection, Upper Volume
Radical: Grass (cǎo)
Kangxi Strokes: 18
Page 1058, Entry 42
Pronounced dang (rising tone).
Meaning vast and expansive.
Analects (Lunyu): Describes the achievements of Emperor Yao as vast, boundless, and beyond the people's ability to praise with words.
Explanation of Names (Shiming): Defined as to wash away or cleanse impurities.
Book of Rites (Liji): To sweep away hidden evils under heaven.
Book of Rites (Liji): During the mid-winter, all living things begin to sprout and grow.
Book of Documents (Shujing): To be indulgent or dissipated in virtue.
Book of Documents (Shujing): To be scattered and live in displacement.
Book of Odes (Shijing): Describing the state of laws and regulations being in decay.
As a surname.
Spring and Autumn Annals (Chunqiu): Notes that the son of Duke Huan of Song was named Dang, and his descendants adopted it as a surname.
Pronounced tang (rising tone).
Meaning is the same as the previous entry.
Pronounced dang (rising tone).
Zhou Rites (Zhouli): To use irrigation ditches to channel the flow of water.
History of the Former Han (Qianhan shu): Describing one's demeanor as relaxed and unhurried.
Pronounced tang (level tone).
A geographical name.
Records of the Grand Historian (Shiji): Stopping at Dangyin without advancing; notes indicate Dangyin County was located in Henei Commandery.
Also refers to a river name.
History of the Former Han (Qianhan shu): Records that the Dang River flows east into the Neihuang Marsh.
Pronounced tang (rising tone).
Meaning flat or level.
Book of Odes (Shijing): The road to Lu is flat and level; Xu Miao pronounced this as tang (rising tone).