怳

Pronunciationhuǎng
Strokes9 strokes

Basic Info

Pronunciation huǎng
Five Elements None
Fortune None
Radical
Simplified Strokes 8 strokes
Traditional Strokes 9 strokes

Naming Meaning

Kangxi Dictionary

View Original Page 382
View Original Page 382
Mao Collection, Upper Volume Radical: Heart (xīn) Character: Huang Kangxi Stroke Count: 9 Page 382, Entry 23 Guangyun (Comprehensive Rhymes): Pronounced huang. Jiyun (Collection of Rhymes), Yunhui (Collection of Rhymes), Zhengyun (Correct Rhymes): Pronounced huang (rising tone). Shuowen (Explaining Graphs): The appearance of being deranged. Also, the appearance of being distraught, as if having lost something. Chu Ci (Songs of Chu), Nine Songs: Looking toward the wind, distracted and singing loudly. Zhu Xi Commentary: Huang denotes the appearance of being dispirited. Jiyun: Pronounced huang (falling-rising tone). Interchangeable with huang. Laozi, Daodejing: The nature of the Dao is indistinct and elusive. Also written as huang. It describes an empty, subtle, and indescribable state. Jiyun: Pronounced xu. Boya (Broad Glossary): To be deranged. Shuowen Changjian (Long Annotations on Shuowen): Kuang and huang are identical. It uses xiong as a phonetic element. Shuowen states it is a shortened phonetic form of kuang, which is redundant. In the Songs of Chu, it appears as huang, gazing into the distance. Changing it to huang with the heart radical is a vulgar form.

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