Chen Collection, Upper Volume
Radical: Sun (rì)
Kangxi Strokes: 10
Page 494, Entry 01
Ancient form: Shi. Pronounced shi.
Shuowen Jiezi (Shuowen): The four seasons.
Shiming (Shiming): The four seasons correspond to the four directions, each having a specific season. Shi refers to the temporal limit; the birth and death of all things occur according to their respective seasonal limits.
Book of Documents (Shujing), Canon of Yao: Reverently convey the celestial times to the people.
Commentary: Reverently record the celestial times to pass them on to the people.
Also: A year consists of three hundred and sixty-six days, using intercalary months to determine the four seasons of the year.
Book of Rites (Liji), Kongzi Xianju: Heaven has four seasons: spring, autumn, winter, and summer.
Huainanzi, Treatise on Astronomy: The essence of yin and yang condenses to form the four seasons.
Also: Three months constitute one season.
Also: Pronounced shi. Temporal units, the twelve double-hours.
Also: Pronounced shi. Right; correct.
Book of Documents (Shujing), Canon of Yao: The common people were thus brought into harmony.
Commentary: Shi means to be right or correct.
Book of Odes (Shijing), Daya: Deciding to stop, deciding to settle, building a dwelling here.
Zhu Xi Commentary: One may stop here and construct a residence.
Also: Guangya: To wait; to observe.
Analects (Lunyu): Confucius waited for the time when Yang Huo was away from home to pay him a return visit.
Sub-commentary: It refers to waiting for Yang Huo to be out in order to visit and express thanks.
Also: Guangya: Good; virtuous.
Guangyun: In accordance with; conforming to.
Also: A place name.
Zuo Tradition (Zuo Zhuan), Ninth Year of Duke Zhuang: Battle at Qianshi.
Annotation: Qianshi is a place name in the State of Qi. The Shi River is in the territory of Le'an; its tributaries dry up when there is a drought, hence the name Qianshi.
Also: A surname.
Guangyun: In the Biographies of Good Officials, there is a person named Shi Miao. The He Family Genealogy of Surnames states: Present-day descendants are from Julu.
Also: Equivalent to the character shi (roost).
Book of Odes (Shijing), Wang Feng: The chickens roost on the chicken perch.
Annotation: Shi was originally written as the character shi.
Also: Yunbu: Rhyming as shi (rising tone).
Wang Can, Qishi: Do not change principles because of ambition; do not lag behind the times because of personal gains or losses. Advance in moral cultivation and academic studies, and govern in harmony with the world.
Also: Rhyming as li (falling tone).
Qu Yuan, Lisao: I am sorrowful, depressed, and frustrated, yet I am impoverished and distressed at such a time as this. Rhymes with the word tai; tai is pronounced as ti.