释义 |
Examples:strokes of a Chinese character—part of Chinese character indicating the meaning—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—stroke count (number of brushstrokes of a Chinese character)—colloquial (rather than literary) pronunciation of a Chinese character—stroke of a Chinese character—Chinese character input method for entering characters by numbered strokes—variant Chinese character—stroke order (when writing Chinese character)—Zhonghua Zihai, the most comprehensive Chinese character dictionary with 85,568 entries, compiled in 1994—Hanyu Da Zidian, one of the most comprehensive Chinese character dictionaries with 54,678 (and later 60,370) entries, first published between 1986-1990—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—UCS, Chinese character coding adopted in PRC 1986—the small or lesser seal, the form of Chinese character standardized by the Qin dynasty—literary (rather than colloquial) pronunciation of a Chinese character—variant form (of a Chinese character)—Big5 Chinese character coding (developed by Taiwanese companies from 1984)—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—Zilin, Chinese character dictionary with 12,824 entries from ca. 400 AD—modern (i.e. not ancient) pronunciation of a Chinese character—phonetic component of Chinese character—original form of a Chinese character—pronunciation (of a Chinese character)—the right-hand side of split Chinese character, often the phonetic—look-up table for Chinese character based on radical and stroke-count—CNS 11643, Chinese character coding adopted in Taiwan, 1986-1992—another name for traditional Chinese character (mainly in Taiwan)—alternate term for Traditional Chinese character, used in Taiwan—common form of Chinese character (versus the etymologically correct form)—non-standard or corrupted form of a Chinese character—traditional Chinese character—Chinese character derived from a picture—phonetic component of a Chinese character—Chinese character that combines the meanings of existing elements—Chinese character indicating an idea, such as up and down—Guangyun, Chinese rime dictionary from 11th century, containing 26,194 single-character entries— |