Wu Collection, Upper Volume
Radical: Jade (yù)
Kun
Kangxi Strokes: 13
Page 734, Entry 26
Pronounced kun.
Shuowen Jiezi (Dictionary of Explaining Graphs and Analyzing Characters): A beautiful stone.
Guangyun (Broad Rhymes): Kun, a type of jade.
Yunhui (Collection of Rhymes): One account says it is a stone resembling a pearl.
Zhengyun (Correct Rhymes): Yao-kun, a beautiful jade.
Book of Documents (Shangshu), Tribute of Yu: Yao and kun, small bamboo and large bamboo.
Commentary: Yao and kun are both beautiful jades.
Sub-commentary: Wang Su states: Yao and kun are beautiful stones that are inferior to jade.
Explanation of Texts: Kun, the Ma edition uses the character transliterated as kuan.
Also found in Records of the Grand Historian (Shiji), Biography of Sima Xiangru: Lin, min, kun, and wu.
Book of Han (Hanshu), Sounds and Meanings: Kun-wu is the name of a mountain which produces high-quality metal.
Also found in Yunbu (Supplement to Rhymes): Rhymes with jun.
Su Shi, Inscription for the Li Family Qianzhen Pavilion: Dazzling like the hundred-foot ancient pool, containing ten thousand images within the yao-kun. The bright lunar essence lasts all night, reflecting the celestial appearance in the square of spring.