释义 |
dictionaries noun, plural—Examples:Hanyu Da Zidian, one of the most comprehensive Chinese character dictionaries with 54,678 (and later 60,370) entries, first published between 1986-1990—dictionary (of Chinese compound words)—dictionary arrangement of Chinese characters under radicals—reference book (such as dictionary, almanac, gazetteer etc)—Qieyun, the first Chinese rime dictionary from 601 AD, containing 11,500 single-character entries—entry (in a dictionary, encyclopedia etc)—the key or radical by which a character is arranged in a traditional Chinese dictionary—Zhonghua Zihai, the most comprehensive Chinese character dictionary with 85,568 entries, compiled in 1994—word index (of a dictionary)—harvest entries for a dictionary—subdivision of a rhyming dictionary (containing all words with the given rhyme)—the Kangxi Dictionary, named after the Kangxi Emperor, who in 1710 ordered its compilation, containing 47,035 single-character entries—indexing system for Chinese characters in a dictionary—Merriam-Webster (dictionary)—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—iCIBA, online dictionary by Kingsoft Corporation, at www.iciba.com—"Shiming", late Han dictionary, containing 1502 entries, using puns on the pronunciation of headwords explain their meaning—Zihui, Chinese character dictionary with 33,179 entries, released in 17th century—Guangyun, Chinese rime dictionary from 11th century, containing 26,194 single-character entries—Wiktionary (online dictionary)—edit an entry (in online dictionary)—Hanyu Da Cidian, the most comprehensive Chinese dictionary with over 375,000 word entries, first published between 1986-1994—(of a dictionary etc) revised edition—Jiyun, Chinese rime dictionary with 53,525 single-character entries, published in 11th century—"Erya" or "The Ready Guide", first extant Chinese dictionary, c. 3rd century BC, with glossaries on classical texts—Shenglei, the earliest Chinese rime dictionary with 11,520 single-character entries, released in 3rd century (was not preserved this day)—Ci Hai, an encyclopedic dictionary first published in 1915, most recent edition 1999— |