帷

Pronunciationwéi
Five Elements
FortuneAuspicious
Strokes11 strokes

Basic Info

Pronunciation wéi
Five Elements
Fortune Auspicious
Radical
Simplified Strokes 11 strokes
Traditional Strokes 11 strokes

Naming Meaning

Kangxi Dictionary

View Original Page 333
View Original Page 333
Yin Collection, Middle Volume. Radical: Cloth (jīn). Kangxi stroke count: 11. Page 333, Entry 10. Ancient form. Pronounced wéi. Jade Encyclopedia (Yupian): A screen or a curtain. Collected Rhymes (Jiyun): A tent or covering. Explanation of Names (Shiming): A curtain is a surrounding. It is that which is used to obstruct and enclose oneself. Rites of Zhou (Zhouli): The Master of Curtains manages matters regarding curtains, screens, canopies, and banners. Note: Those placed at the sides are called curtains. In the Illustrations of the Three Rites (Sanli Tu), those at the four sides and above are called curtains. Also: An official manages the setting up of curtain palaces and arranges banner gates. Note: To stretch out curtains to form a palace. Also: A curtain skirt. Analects of Confucius (Lunyu): If it is not a curtain skirt, one must taper it. Commentary: This refers to the skirt worn at the bottom. Regarding its construction, it is a full width of fabric like a curtain, so it is called a curtain skirt, and it is not tapered or sewn. Also: A carriage curtain. Book of Odes (Shijing), Odes of Wei: Drenching the carriage and the curtain skirt. Commentary: The curtain skirt is a decorative covering for the carriage. Commentary: The appearance is referred to as a carriage screen. In the region east of the mountains, it is called a skirt curtain. Also, it is a child’s ornament used to screen the side of a carriage, like a skirt used for decorative embellishment; therefore, it is sometimes called a screen skirt or a child’s ornament.

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