舒

Pronunciationshū
Five Elements
FortuneAuspicious
Strokes12 strokes

Basic Info

Pronunciation shū
Five Elements
Fortune Auspicious
Radical
Simplified Strokes 12 strokes
Traditional Strokes 12 strokes

Naming Meaning

Kangxi Dictionary

View Original Page 1007
View Original Page 1007
Wei Collection, Lower Volume Radical: Tongue (shé) Kangxi Strokes: 12 Page 1007, Entry 11 Pronounced shu. Shuowen Jiezi: To extend. Guangya: Shu means to unfold. Fangyan by Yang Xiong: Shu means to spread out. In the regions east of Qi, to spread something out is called shu-bo. Also, Guangya: Slow, delayed, leisurely. Erya: Shu means to arrange in order. Book of Odes (Shijing): The King slowly maintained his work. Commentary: Shu means leisurely. Shiwens: Shu means to arrange in order. Book of Rites (Liji): The demeanor of a gentleman is leisurely and slow. Commentary: Leisurely and slow means composed and elegant. Huainanzi: Yielding and gentle yet quiet, leisurely and calm yet steady. Commentary: Shu means detailed and careful. Also, Erya: A beginning. Commentary: Also signifies the start of something. Yunhui: To scatter, to open. Also, a country name. Book of Odes (Shijing): Chastising the Jing-Shu states. Commentary: Shu was an allied state of Chu. Spring and Autumn Annals (Chunqiu): The people of Xu seized Shu. Commentary: The state of Shu is the present-day Shu County in Lujiang. Yunhui: During the Tang Dynasty, Shu Prefecture was established; during the Song Dynasty, it was changed to Anqing Prefecture. Also, Zuo Zhuan: Tomorrow we shall fight again, meeting at Shushu. Commentary: Shushu is a location in the state of Ju. Also, a surname. There was Shu Yuanxing of the Tang Dynasty. Also, the name of a tripod vessel. Zuo Zhuan: The Shu tripod of the Wen era, the auspicious omens of the Cheng era, the ornamental sash and mirror of the Ding era. Commentary: The Shu tripod is the name of a vessel. Also, the charioteer of the moon is called Wangshu. Baopuzi: Xihe rises with light to begin the dawn, Wangshu shines with radiance to illuminate the night. Also, Book of Rites (Liji): Domesticated goose, swan, owl meat, and domesticated duck. Commentary: Domesticated goose is a goose. Domesticated duck is a mallard. Also, Yunhui: Interchangeable with the character tu. Records of the Grand Historian (Shiji): Chastising the Jing-Tu states. Commentary: Tu is pronounced shu. Also, Rites of Zhou (Zhouli): When the bow-maker carves the notches, they must be tu. Commentary: Tu is read as shu. In ancient texts, shu and tu are loan characters for one another. Also, Wuyin Jiyun: Pronounced yu. Equivalent to the character yu. Book of Jin (Jinshu): Yu means to decorate. It refers to those endowed with harmonious spirit, whose nature and principles are calm and comfortable. Shu is read as yu. Also, Yunbu: Rhymes with shi. Song of the Herb-Gathering Woman of Yue: With increased fiefs and added lands, gifts of feathers are bestowed; staff, mat, and cushion are the rites of the feudal lords. When the courtiers bow and dance, the King's countenance is relaxed; why should our King worry that he cannot prevail? Textual Corrections: Rites of Zhou: When the bow-maker carves the notches... following the original text, corrected from "cuts the day" to "carves the notches." Wuyin Jiyun: Pronounced yu... following the original text, corrected from "yang-ru" to "yang-ru."

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