匐

Pronunciation
Five Elements
Strokes11 strokes

Basic Info

Pronunciation
Five Elements
Fortune None
Radical
Simplified Strokes 11 strokes
Traditional Strokes 11 strokes

Naming Meaning

Kangxi Dictionary

View Original Page 151
View Original Page 151
Zi Collection, Page Position: Lower Radical: Wrap (bāo) Pronounced fú (entering tone) Kangxi Stroke Count: 11 Page 151, Entry 34 Pronounced pū bei (falling tone), bì mò (entering tone), bù hēi (entering tone). Pronunciation same as "bǔ". Explanation: To prostrate oneself on the ground. The character is composed of "bāo" and "fú", where "fú" indicates the pronunciation. "Great Odes (Daya)" from the Book of Odes (Shijing) contains the phrase "dàn shí pū fú". Note: Refers to an infant crawling on hands and knees. Also means to run with all one's might. "All the people, when there is a disaster, will crawl to save them" — Book of Odes (Shijing), section "Bei Feng". Annotation: Explained as exerting all one's strength. Also written as "fú". "Kneeling and crawling" — Records of the Grand Historian (Shiji), biography of Fan Sui. Written as "fú fú kòu tóu" — Book of Han (Qian Hanshu), biography of Huo Guang. Also written as "fú". "Humbly crawled out from under his trousers, prostrating himself" — Book of Han (Qian Hanshu), biography of Han Xin. Also, pronounced bù mù (entering tone). Pronunciation same as "pū". Meaning is the same. In "Jiyun", it is sometimes written with other forms. Textual research: "All the people, when there is a disaster, will crawl to save them" — Book of Odes (Shijing), section "Bei Feng". Annotation: Originally mistakenly written as "jìn fāng yě", now corrected to "jìn lì yě" according to the original text.

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