茭

Pronunciationjiāo
Five Elements
Strokes12 strokes

Basic Info

Pronunciation jiāo
Five Elements
Fortune None
Radical
Simplified Strokes 9 strokes
Traditional Strokes 12 strokes

Naming Meaning

Kangxi Dictionary

View Original Page 1028
View Original Page 1028
Shen Collection, Upper Volume Radical: Grass (cǎo) Jiao; Kangxi stroke count: 12; Page 1028, Entry 21 Ancient text: According to Tang Rhymes (Tangyun), pronounced jiao; according to Zheng Rhymes (Zhengyun), pronounced jiao. Shuowen Jiezi: Dried grass for fodder. Book of Documents (Shangshu), Feishi chapter: Store up good fodder. Commentary: Accumulate fodder to supply oxen and horses for the army. Rhyme Anthology (Yunhui): Name of a grass. Also known as gu grass. Grass that is cut for use is called fodder, and sun-dried grass is called jiao, hence the instruction to store good fodder. Records of the Grand Historian (Shiji), River and Canal Treatise: Throughout the abandoned lands along the Yellow River, the common people cut grass and grazed their livestock. Also, Erya: Explaining Plants: Jiao is known as niuqi. Commentary: Jiao resembles celery and is edible. Compendium of Materia Medica (Bencao) Commentary: Grows in marshes. The sprouts resemble beggar-ticks, the flowers are blue-white, and the seeds are yellow-black, resembling the seeds of fangfeng. Also, Book of Han (Hanshu), Treatise on Rivers and Canals: Pulling on long bamboo ropes and sinking beautiful jade. Commentary: Ropes woven from bamboo or reeds are called jiao, used to tow and position earth and stone. Also, Collection of Rhymes (Jiyun): Pronounced qiao, synonymous with the roots of the water caltrop. Erya: Explaining Plants: Yun jiao. Commentary: Nowadays in the Jiangdong region, the finger-like, hollow, edible filaments found within lotus roots are called ba jiao, which belongs to this category. Also, pronounced qiao. Yangzi: Regional Speech (Fangyan): Jiao ti refers to deceptive or confusing speech. Also, Collection of Rhymes (Jiyun): Pronounced ji. Rites of Zhou (Zhouli), Winter Official, Bow Maker Commentary: Jiao is read as the jiao of excitation, referring to a corrective device for bows. Textual research: In the Book of Han, Treatise on Rivers and Canals, the text reads: Pulling on long jiao ropes and sinking beautiful jade. Following the original text, changed Late Han to Former Han.

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