Wei Collection, Middle Volume
Radical: Silk (mì)
Kangxi Strokes: 16
Page 934, Entry 01
Guangyun: Pronounced fu (falling tone). Jiyun, Yunhui: Pronounced fu (entering tone). Zhengyun: Pronounced fu (entering tone).
Shuowen: To bind.
Shiming: Bound, pressed. To cause to be pressed against one another.
Guangyun: To tie.
Zuo Zhuan (Zuozhuan): The Viscount of Xu came with his face bound and holding a jade ring in his mouth — Commentary on the Zuo Zhuan (Zuozhuan), Year 6 of Duke Xi.
Also: With two lengths of silk fabric, bound like a jian ornament — Commentary on the Zuo Zhuan (Zuozhuan), Year 26 of Duke Zhao. Note: Bound, meaning rolled up.
Shiming: Bound beneath the carriage, connecting the carriage body.
Jijiu Pian (Jijiupian) Note: Bound beneath the carriage, used to bind the axle to connect the body, which is what is now called a hook-heart.
Guangyun, Jiyun, Yunhui, Zhengyun: Pronounced fu (falling tone). The meaning is the same.
Jiyun: Pronounced fu (falling tone). A variant form is written as fu (a variant). A rope.
Yunhui: It is a common error to write it as zhuan using the component for specialized.
Textual research: Shiming states: Bound, pressed. To cause to be pressed against one another. Per the original text, the word that was originally written as person has been corrected to attached.