You Collection, Lower Volume
Radical: Walk (chuò)
Kangxi Strokes: 17
Page 1257, Entry 03
Guangyun: Pronounced ti. Jiyun, Yunhui, Zhengyun: Pronounced ti.
Shuowen: To alternate or replace.
Guangyun: To substitute.
Zhengyun: To rotate or change.
Erya, Explaining Words: To substitute, to alternate. Note: Meaning to rotate or interspace one another in substitution.
Book of Han (Qianshu): The four seasons rise and fall in alternating transformation, and winds from the eight directions arise accordingly.
Zhengyun: Distant, far away.
Zengyun: To transmit or relay, as in the station-to-station delivery of messages.
Dizhong: Name of a zither. Book of Han (Wang Bao Zhuan): Bo Ya played the Dizhong zither.
Guangyun: Pronounced di. Jiyun, Yunhui, Zhengyun: Pronounced di. The meaning is the same.
Dang-gai qie: Pronounced dai. Meaning to surround or encircle. Book of Han (Wang Mang Zhuan): The Marquis of Jiang relied on the encirclement of the various generals, holding a position of mutual support. Note: This means the generals were of one mind, surrounding and protecting him.
Ye: Tu-jie qie, pronounced die. Wang Jian Chu Yuan Stele Inscription: Excellent strategies have no one to carry them on, and the model examples fade away into the distance. Melancholy remains in these thoughts, while the resounding and grand achievements endure forever. Note: Changdi is like saying long-departed and never to return. It also means distant and far away.
Jiyun: Sometimes written as a variant form. The common form is written as a variant form.
Textual Research: Book of Han (Wang Mang Zhuan): The Marquis of Jiang relied on the encirclement of the generals, holding a position of mutual support. Note: This means the generals were of one mind, surrounding and acting as wings. Carefully corrected according to the original text.