释义 |
Examples:part of Chinese character indicating the meaning—(expr. of praise for noble character, beautiful surrounding, future prospects etc)—the spirit or character of a political party—character (of a person, verse, object etc)—pronunciation of a character other than the standard—in classical Chinese, first character of phrase having auxiliary grammatical function—reading (phonetic value of a character)—phonetic component of a Chinese character—strokes of a Chinese character—Chinese character that combines the meanings of existing elements—walk (side part of split character)—traditional system expressing the phonetic value of a Chinese character using two other characters, the first for the initial consonant, the second for the rhyme and tone—common coding for components of Chinese character—stroke count (number of brushstrokes of a Chinese character)—colloquial (rather than literary) pronunciation of a Chinese character—stroke of a Chinese character—erroneous reading (of character)—oracle bone character (an early form of Chinese script)—the strokes of a character—the left- and right-side of a split Chinese character, often the key (radical) and phonetic—left-hand side of a split Chinese character, often the key or radical—phonetic value of a character—variant form (of a Chinese character)—(phonetic character used in transliteration of foreign names)—person of good character—Shakespearean character, father of Ophelia, accidentally killed by Hamlet—Longkan Shoujian, Chinese character dictionary from 997 AD containing 26,430 entries, with radicals placed in240 rhyme groups and arranged according to the four tones, and the rest of the characters similarly arranged under each radical—archaic form of a Chinese character—ancient (esp. pre-Qin) pronunciation of a Chinese character—Aladdin, character in one of the tales in the The Book of One Thousand and One Nights—standard form (of a character or spelling)—meaning of character is unclear, and no known compounds—reading or phonetic value of a character—original form of a Chinese character—pronunciation (of a Chinese character)—Three character classic, a 13th century reading primer consisting of Confucian tenets in lines of 3 characters—common form of Chinese character (versus the etymologically correct form)—non-standard or corrupted form of a Chinese character—of noble character and unquestionable integrity [idiom.]— |