Wei Collection, Upper Volume
Radical: Rice (mǐ)
Qiu
Kangxi Strokes: 16
Page 911, Entry 39
Guangyun, Jiyun, Yunhui, Zhengyun: Pronounced qiu (falling tone).
Shuowen Jiezi: Fried or roasted rice or wheat. Also refers to dry food crumbs. It generally refers to grain.
Boya: Qiu means dry food.
Book of Documents (Shujing): Prepare your dry food.
Commentary: Qiu is grain that has been pounded and roasted. It refers to rice or wheat that is roasted and then pounded into powder.
Book of Rites (Liji): Contains dry food cakes.
Note: Dry food cakes made from pounded and roasted grain.
Rites of Zhou (Zhouli): Offering food in bamboo baskets, including dry food cakes and rice flour cakes.
Note: Qiu is roasted soybeans and rice.
Zuo Tradition (Zuozhuan): Yuan Po fled to the State of Zheng, and his clansman Yuan Xuan presented sweet rice wine, fine millet rice, dry food, and dried meat.
Note: Qiu is dry food.
Shiming: Qiu means the sound of teeth biting and crushing. Food that has been ground to become fine.
Also used as a surname.
Fengsu Tong: In the Han Dynasty, there was Qiu Zong, who served as the Magistrate of Ying County.
Yupian: Pronounced zhao (rising tone). Same meaning.
Jiyun, Yunhui, Zhengyun: Pronounced qiu (falling tone). Same meaning.
Liushu Yinyi: The same as the character for dry food.
Textual Research: Rites of Zhou, Heaven Section: Regarding the food in the bamboo baskets, it mentions dry food cakes and rice flour cakes. The original text used the character for side; it has been corrected to the character for bamboo basket.