踦

Pronunciationyǐ,qī
Strokes15 strokes

Basic Info

Pronunciation yǐ,qī
Five Elements 0
Fortune
Radical
Simplified Strokes 15 strokes
Traditional Strokes 15 strokes

Naming Meaning

Kangxi Dictionary

View Original Page 1228
View Original Page 1228
You Collection, Middle Volume Radical: Foot (zú) Kangxi Strokes: 15 Page 1228, Entry 30 Pronounced qi. Shuowen Jiezi (Explanation of Simple and Compound Characters): One foot. Guangya (Broad Refinement): A lame foot. Yang Xiong’s Fangyan (Regional Speech): Qi means odd or incomplete. From west of the Hangu Pass, in the regions of Qin and Jin, anything complete in essence but incomplete in form is called yi. Between the regions of Liang and Chu, it is called qi. In the western suburbs of Yong and Liang, any livestock with incomplete limbs is called qi. Guangyun (Broad Rhymes): Also written as a variant form. Also, Book of Han (Hanshu), Biography of Duan Huizong: It is enough to compensate for the unruliness in Yanmen. Commentary by Ying Shao: Qi means single. Qi zhi means not in a pair. Also, Zuo Si, Shudu Fu (Rhapsody on the Capital of Shu): Mountains and hills piled up in disorder, leaning and rugged. Commentary: Leaning or tilted to the side. Note: It is the same as the character qi (rugged). Also, Jiyun (Compilation of Rhymes): Pronounced ji. The lower leg. Erya (Approaching Literary Language), Shichu (Explaining Domestic Animals): Left front leg is white. Commentary: Left front leg is white. Also, Shichong (Explaining Insects): Long legs of the xiaoxiao (a type of small spider). Commentary: Long legs of a small spider. Also, Guangyun: Pronounced ji. Gongyang Zhuan (Gongyang’s Commentary on the Spring and Autumn Annals), Second Year of Duke Cheng: Leaning against the gate of the neighborhood lane to speak. Commentary: Lu refers to the gate on the main road. If one leaf is closed and the other is open, with one person outside and one person inside, it is called qilu. Han Feizi (Master Han Fei), Wangzheng Pian (Essays on Omens of Ruin): One must observe its governance and chaos; its strength and weakness are mutually unbalanced. Also, Jiyun: Pronounced yi. The meaning is the same. Also, Jiyun: Pronounced yi. To touch or press against. Zhuangzi (Master Zhuang), Yangsheng Zhu (Nourishing the Principle of Life): The place pressed by the knees. Commentary: To press or prop up. Also, Jiyun: Pronounced ji. Same as ji (to reside temporarily). Residing away from home. Also, Yang Xiong’s Taixuan Jing (Classic of Supreme Mystery): Add two stanzas, qi and ying, to complete the three hundred and sixty-five days.

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