稽

Pronunciationjī,qǐ
Five Elements
Strokes15 strokes

Basic Info

Pronunciation jī,qǐ
Five Elements
Fortune None
Radical
Simplified Strokes 15 strokes
Traditional Strokes 15 strokes

Naming Meaning

Kangxi Dictionary

View Original Page 858
View Original Page 858
Wu Collection, Lower Volume Radical: Grain (hé) Kangxi Strokes: 15 Page 858, Entry 01 Ancient form. Pronounced ji. To examine, to calculate, to discuss, to join, to govern. Book of Documents (Shujing), Yao Canon: Said regarding examining the ancient Emperor Yao. Book of Changes (Yijing), Appended Statements: To examine their categories. Commentary: To examine. Record of Rites (Liji), Black Robes: Actions must be examined for their flaws. Commentary: Means to examine, to discuss. Also, Confucian Conduct: The ancients and those who agree. Commentary: Ji means to join; if one agrees with the ancients, then one does not agree with modern men. Rites of Zhou (Zhouli), Offices of Heaven, Small Steward: Listen to the military hunts in order to examine. Commentary: Examine means to review. Ji means to calculate and to join. To calculate the soldiers of the units and review their weaponry, making a summary register. History of the Former Han (Qianshu), Biography of Jia Yi: If the mother-in-law and daughter-in-law are not in accord, they bite back and argue with each other. Commentary: Arguing and calculating with one another. Also, to stay or stop. Xu’s Commentary on the Analytical Dictionary of Characters (Shuowen): The curvature and stopping of grain. The term refers to something being different. Where there is a difference, one must examine it, which leads to delay. History of the Former Han (Qianshu), Treatise on Food and Money: Storing the remaining surplus to accumulate market goods. Commentary: Ji means to store or stagnate. Book of the Later Han (Houhanshu), Biography of Ma Yuan: Why linger long among the scholars of the world. Also, to reach. Zhuangzi, Free and Easy Wandering: The great flood reached the sky but did not drown them. Also, gujī (witty/jocular). Records of the Grand Historian (Shiji), Biography of Chuli Zi: Witty and wise. Commentary: Hua means to confuse; ji means to unify. A person who is eloquent and quick-witted, saying what is wrong is right and what is right is wrong, able to confuse identity and difference. Another source says it refers to a wine vessel that can be turned to pour, indicating a jester whose words are inexhaustible, like the unending flow of wine. Also, Wu Sayings (Wuyu): Holding the bell. Commentary: Hold means to embrace. Arch means to grasp. Ji means a halberd. Also, the name of a mountain. Rites of Zhou (Zhouli), Summer Offices, Official Divisions: The mountain guardian of Yangzhou is called Kuaiji. Also, a surname. Annals of Lü Buwei (Lüshi Chunqiu): In the State of Qin, there was a virtuous man named Ji Huang. Also, pronounced qi. To bow low with the head touching the ground. Book of Documents (Shujing), Shun Canon: Yu bowed and touched his head to the ground. Commentary: The head touching the ground is the ritual of a subject serving a ruler. Rites of Zhou (Zhouli), Spring Offices, Great Invoker: Differentiate the nine types of bowing, the first is called bowing with head to the ground. Record of Rites (Liji), Tan Gong: Bowing with the forehead touching the ground is the depth of sorrow and grief. Commentary: Touching the forehead to the ground means touching it to the earth without restriction. Analytical Dictionary of Characters (Shuowen): The character is composed of the radical for reaching and the sound component for intent, and constitutes its own section.

Kangxi Dictionary Modern Version

扫码使用更多功能

康熙字典小程序

康熙字典小程序

下载 iOS App 下载 Android App