㺔

Pronunciationhài,wèi
Strokes16 strokes

Basic Info

Pronunciation hài,wèi
Five Elements None
Fortune None
Radical
Simplified Strokes 15 strokes
Traditional Strokes 16 strokes

Naming Meaning

Kangxi Dictionary

View Original Page 718
View Original Page 718
Zi Collection, Middle Volume, Page 1350, Entry 07 Pronounced xū (falling tone) — Jiyun (Jiyun) Pronounced huī (falling tone) — Shenyi Jing (Shenyi Jing) In the "Shenyi Jing (Shenyi Jing)," it is recorded that in the desolate lands of the west, there exists a creature about as tall as a person, dressed in tattered clothes, with hands like tiger claws, named Mo hu. It lurks for lone travelers, desiring to eat their brains. The "Jiyun (Jiyun)" mentions that the tongue of the Mo hu can extend over a zhang. This is attributed to Dongfang Shuo. Furthermore, in the "Guangyun (Guangyun)," it is pronounced hū ài (falling tone), pronounced ài. It is the name of a type of beast. From Yinpu (Yinpu).

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