Yin Collection, Middle Volume
Radical: Mountain (shān)
崎
Kangxi Strokes: 11
Page 313, Entry 19
Guangyun: Pronounced qi. Jiyun and Yunhui: Pronounced qi.
Shuowen: Dangerous. Originally written as the character composed of the radical for danger with the phonetic element pu. Now written as 崎.
Yupian: Qiqu, meaning a mountain path that is not level.
Zhang Heng, Southern Capital Rhapsody (Nandu Fu): Above it is level and vast, below it is overgrown and rugged.
Also, Jiyun: Pronounced qi. Meaning is the same.
Also, Pronounced qi. Kuiqi, the appearance of a mountain. One source says it is the appearance of being unsettled.
Wang Bao, Bamboo Flute Rhapsody (Dongxiao Fu): Observing the sides of the mountain, it is rugged and uneven.
Also, rhyming as he: Pronounced ke.
Sima Xiangru, Park Rhapsody (Shanglin Fu): Deep forests and giant trees, steep and jagged. The nine peaks of Zong and Jie, Mount Nan is towering. The rock slopes are high and uneven, the cliffs are crumbling and rugged.
Also, Jiyun: Pronounced yi. A place name. The slope of the Qi clan in Shangdang.
Also, Pronounced qi. A curved bank. Note: The Qi clan in Shangdang was originally written with a different character, it need not be changed to the mountain radical. Also, when defined as a curved bank, it has the same pronunciation and meaning as the character qi in the stone radical; these are repetitions and should not be followed.
Zhengzitong: The characters for variants and synonyms of these forms are interchangeable.