Shen Collection, Upper Volume
Radical: Grass (cǎo)
Tuò; Kangxi strokes: 22
Page 1067, Entry 18
Tang Yun (phonetic rhyme dictionary): Pronounced tuò. Yunhui (collection of rhymes): Pronounced tuò.
Shuowen Jiezi (explanation of characters): Refers to the bark or leaves of plants that have fallen to the ground.
Book of Odes (Shijing), Zheng Feng section: Oh, tuò, oh, tuò, may the wind blow you away.
Commentary: Tuò means withered.
Also in the Bin Feng section: In the tenth month, the tuò falls.
Also in Western Capital Miscellany (Xijing Zaji): The leaves of reeds and rushes that have not yet detached are called purple tuò.
Also in Zihui Bu (supplement to the collection of characters): The name of a plant. It grows on Ganzhao Mountain, has the appearance of a mallow tree, and leaves like an apricot tree; see the Classic of Mountains and Seas (Shanhaijing).
Yupian (jade chapters): Written as a variant form.
Correction: In the Book of Odes (Shijing), Bin Feng section, the tenth month, the character for fallen has been corrected based on the original text.