Hai Collection, Upper Volume
Radical: Bone (gǔ)
Kangxi stroke count: 18
Page 1449, Entry 46
Tang Rhymes (Tangyun) and Collected Rhymes (Jiyun): Pronounced ke (falling tone), same pronunciation as ke (falling tone).
Explaining Graphs and Analyzing Characters (Shuowen): The thigh bone.
Broad Compendium (Boya): The term for the end of a thigh bone.
General Rhymes (Guangyun): Kneecap.
Also, Collected Rhymes (Jiyun): Pronounced ke (third tone), same pronunciation as ke (third tone).
Also pronounced he (rising tone), same pronunciation as ke (level tone). The meaning is the same.
Also, Collected Rhymes (Jiyun): Pronounced kua (falling tone), same pronunciation as kua (falling tone).
Zhuangzi, All Under Heaven chapter: Describing a state of being uneven or distorted without responsibility.
Explication of Texts (Shiwen): Describing a crooked or oblique appearance. Wang Bi explains it as resembling a harsh or demanding nature.
Collection of Rhymes (Yunhui): The character is now written as the variant form (kua).
Also, Collected Rhymes (Jiyun): Pronounced hui (falling tone), same pronunciation as hui (falling tone). The meaning is the same. Alternatively written as a variant form.