觭

Pronunciation
Strokes15 strokes

Basic Info

Pronunciation
Five Elements None
Fortune None
Radical
Simplified Strokes 15 strokes
Traditional Strokes 15 strokes

Naming Meaning

Kangxi Dictionary

View Original Page 1143
View Original Page 1143
You Collection, Upper Volume Radical: Horn (jiǎo) Kangxi Strokes: 15 Page 1143, Entry 31 Tang Rhyme (Tang Yun): Pronounced qi (falling tone). Collected Rhymes (Jiyun) and Rhyme Collection (Yunhui): Pronounced qi (level tone). Erya: Explaining Domestic Animals (Erya: Shichu): If one horn points down and one points up, it is called qi. Commentary: When a bull's horns are one lowered and one raised, it is called qi, which means tilted or unbalanced. Also, Guang Rhyme (Guang Yun): Pronounced bi (rising tone). Collected Rhymes (Jiyun) and Rhyme Collection (Yunhui): Pronounced qi (rising tone). Correct Rhymes (Zhengyun): Pronounced bi (rising tone). Meaning is the same. Also, Collected Rhymes (Jiyun) and Rhyme Collection (Yunhui): Pronounced ji (level tone). To obtain. Rites of Zhou: Spring Officials (Zhouli: Chunguan): The Grand Diviner manages the methods of the three dreams, the second of which is the qi dream. Commentary: Refers to what is obtained from a dream; the Yin people practiced this. Zheng Kangcheng also reads this with a rising tone, equivalent to ji. Du Zichun reads it like the qi in qiwei (extraordinary/magnificent); qi is simply the character for extraordinary. Collected Rhymes (Jiyun): Sometimes written in a variant form (ji). Also means single. Book of Han: Records of the Five Phases (Qianhan: Wuxingzhi): When Jin defeated the Qin army, not a single horse or a single wheel returned. Commentary: A single wheel. Zhuangzi: Under Heaven Chapter (Zhuangzi: Tianxiapian): Responding with words that are singular, paired, and incompatible. Classified Chapters (Leipian): Citing Zhuangzi, also pronounced ji (falling tone).

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