拋

Pronunciationpāo
Five Elements
FortuneAuspicious
Strokes9 strokes

Basic Info

Pronunciation pāo
Five Elements
Fortune Auspicious
Radical
Simplified Strokes 8 strokes
Traditional Strokes 9 strokes

Naming Meaning

Kangxi Dictionary

View Original Page 425
View Original Page 425
Mao Collection, Middle Volume. Radical: Hand (shǒu). Kangxi strokes: 9. Page 425, Entry 03. Pronounced pao. Shuowen Jiezi (Explanation of Simple and Compound Characters): To abandon. Guangyun (Broad Rhymes): To throw. Also pronounced pao (falling tone). Meaning is the same. In military use, a machine for launching stones is called a throwing cart. Book of the Later Han (Hou Hanshu), Biography of Yuan Shao: Cao Cao used stone-launching carts to attack Yuan Shao's army; they were called thunderbolt carts. Annotation: These are what are known today as throwing carts. Book of Tang (Tangshu), Biography of Goguryeo: Li Ji arranged throwing carts to launch large stones; wherever they struck, the enemy ranks collapsed. Jiyun (Collection of Rhymes): Also written as a variant form. Shuowen Jiezi (Explanation of Simple and Compound Characters): Or written with the hand radical and the element piao acting as a phonetic marker. Commonly used interchangeably with the character biao. See the detailed entry for the character biao. Jiyun (Collection of Rhymes), Yunhui (Collection of Rhymes and Notes), Zhengyun (Correct Rhymes): Sometimes also written as the character bao. See the detailed entry for the character bao.

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