"Tang Yun" (Tang Yun) pronounces it qì qí qiè. "Ji Yun" (Ji Yun) pronounces it qiū qí qiè, with the same pronunciation as "yī". "Shuo Wen Jie Zi" (Shuo Wen Jie Zi) explains it as to abandon. The colloquial term for death is "dà jī".
Also, "Guang Yun" (Guang Yun) and "Ji Yun" (Ji Yun) provide the pronunciation as jū yí qiè, with the same pronunciation as "jī". The meaning is the same.
Also, "Guang Yun" (Guang Yun) provides the pronunciation as jū qǐ qiè, and "Ji Yun" (Ji Yun) provides the pronunciation as jǔ qǐ qiè, with the same pronunciation as "jī". The meaning is the same.
Also, in "Nei Jing · Su Wen" (Nei Jing · Su Wen), there is the "Da Ji Pian" (Da Ji Pian). It is also used interchangeably with "dà qī". "Chang Jian" (Chang Jian) considers it a colloquialism, now written as "chāo ji". ○ Note: "Jī" and "ji" have the same pronunciation but different meanings. The statement in "Chang Jian" (Chang Jian) is incorrect.