Xu Collection, Upper Volume
Radical: Metal (jīn)
Character: Shuo
Kangxi Dictionary Stroke Count: 23
Page 1326, Entry 01
Pronounced shuo
Shuo Wen Jie Zi (Explaining Graphs and Analyzing Characters): To melt.
Mencius (Mengzi): It is not that it is melted into me from the outside.
Records of the Grand Historian (Shiji), Biography of Zhang Yi: The mouths of the multitude can melt metal.
Also, Er Ya (Approaching Elegance), Explanations of Ancient Terms: Beautiful.
Book of Odes (Shijing), Zhou Songs (Zhousong): Ah, the beautiful royal army.
Commentary: Shuo means beautiful.
Records of the Grand Historian (Shiji), Biography of Li Si: Melting one hundred yi of gold.
Commentary: The Suoyin commentary says: Shuo means beautiful.
Also, Yang Xiong, Dialects (Fangyan): To rub.
Also, Book of the Later Han (Hou Hanshu), Biography of Ma Yuan: How spirited and robust is this old man.
Commentary: Jue-shuo refers to a courageous appearance. It also refers to having attractive eyes.
Yang Xiong, Dialects (Fangyan): In the regions of Song, Wei, Han, and Zheng, it is called shuo.
Commentary: It refers to being bright and luminous.
Also, He Yan, Rhapsody on the Jingfu Hall (Jingfu Dian Fu): Therefore, the ornate pillars are bright and shimmering.
Commentary: All these refer to being radiant, bright, and clearly manifest.
Also, Jyun (Collection of Rhymes): Sometimes written as yao.
History of the Former Han (Qian Hanshu), Treatise on Literature and Arts (Yiwenzhi): To heat metal to make a blade.
Also, Jyun (Collection of Rhymes): Pronounced yao. To brand.
Zhuangzi, Section on Rifling Trunks (Quqie): To burn off the strings of the reed pipe and the zither.
Also, another definition is to melt.
Also, Jyun (Collection of Rhymes): Pronounced li. A type of tripod vessel. Originally written as the character with the same radical.