讶

Pronunciation
Five Elements
Strokes11 strokes

Basic Info

Pronunciation
Five Elements
Fortune None
Radical
Simplified Strokes 6 strokes
Traditional Strokes 11 strokes
Traditional Form
Variant Form

Naming Meaning

Kangxi Dictionary

View Original Page 1149
View Original Page 1149
You Collection, Upper Volume Radical: Speech (yán) Kangxi Strokes: 11 Page 1149, Entry 01 Pronounced yà Shuowen Jiezi (Dictionary of Graphic Components): To greet one another. Cites the Rites of Zhou (Zhouli), Autumn Offices section: Among the feudal lords, there are ministers of greeting. Xu Shen states: According to the Rites of Zhou, when an envoy arrives, a minister is sent to greet them. This refers to using polite words to receive and comfort them. Also, a note on greeting officers: These are the officials responsible for receiving guests from all directions. Book of Etiquette and Ceremonial (Yili), Appointment Rites: The following day, greeting the guest at the guesthouse. Annotation: The meaning is to greet. Guangyun (Broad Rhymes): To exclaim in surprise. Zengyun (Additional Rhymes): To suspect or find strange. Lüshi Chunqiu (Master Lü's Spring and Autumn Annals), Chapter Bi Yi: Do not be surprised and do not disparage. Old Book of Tang (Tangshu), Biography of Li Ji: When the envoy arrived, the High Ancestor was surprised that there was no memorial. Han Yu, Poem Written in the County Study: Staring in mutual suspicion and surprise. Yupian (Jade Chapters): Same as yà (to welcome). Book of Documents (Shangshu), Pan Geng: I greet and continue your lives by the grace of Heaven. Commentary: Yà means to greet. Jiyun (Collection of Rhymes): Sometimes written as yù (to drive/meet). Book of Odes (Shijing), Shao Nan: One hundred carriages to greet her. Explanatory Text: Yù was originally written as yà. Jiyun (Collection of Rhymes): Sometimes written as lù (to welcome). Zuo Tradition (Zuo Zhuan), Second Year of Duke Xuan: Kuang Jiao of the State of Song greeted the people of the State of Zheng. Annotation: Lù means to greet. Yinxue Wushu (Five Books on Phonology): Generally written as wú. Book of Etiquette and Ceremonial (Yili), Appointment Rites: The guest steps forward with surprise and receives the small table before the mat. Annotation: In the ancient text, yà was written as wú, pronounced wú. Also interchangeable with yá (tooth). Rites of Zhou (Zhouli), Winter Offices: The wheelwright makes the wheel's rim to ensure it is firmly joined. Annotation: Zheng Sinong says: Yá is pronounced like yà. Commentary: Yà means to greet. This wheel rim is also shaped so that the two ends meet and greet each other, hence the pronunciation follows it. Shuowen Jiezi: The variant form written with the radical for movement is yà; in clerical script, it is simplified as yà. The character yà is composed of the radical for movement and the phonetic component for tooth.

Kangxi Dictionary Modern Version

扫码使用更多功能

康熙字典小程序

康熙字典小程序

下载 iOS App 下载 Android App