Traditional Culture Encyclopedia - Traditional culture - The Research Content of China Traditional Literature

The Research Content of China Traditional Literature

Three aspects of primary school research in China: 1. Glyph; 2. Meaning; 3. Pronunciation. The following are the corresponding important ancient books. Shuowen Jiezi, or Shuowen for short. The author is Xu Shen, a Confucian scholar and philologist in the Eastern Han Dynasty. Xu Shen founded 540 radicals according to the glyphs, and classified 9353 words into 540 parts. In Shuo Wen Jie Zi, Xu Shen systematically expounded the law of Chinese characters-Liu Shu. Shuowen Jiezi pioneered the radical search for Chinese characters, which was mostly adopted by later dictionaries. Duan Yucai called this book "an unprecedented book, written by Xu Jun". Many scholars have studied Shuo Wen Jie Zi in the past dynasties, and the study in Qing Dynasty was the most prosperous. Duan Yucai's Notes on Shuowen Jiezi, Gui Fu's Shuowen Jiezi Certificate, Zhu's Shuowen Tongxun, ieee fellow's Shuowen Example and Shuowen Judu are especially praised, and the four of them are also regarded as "four masters of Shuowen". Erya is the earliest book to explain the meaning of words in China, and it is also a dictionary in ancient China. Guang Yun is called Rebuilding Guang Yun in the Great Song Dynasty and consists of five volumes. It is an official rhyme book compiled in the Northern Song Dynasty (1008). It was compiled on the basis of previous rhymes by Chen Pengnian and others. It is the most important rhyme book preserved completely and widely in the history of China, and a master of rhyme books before the Song Dynasty in China. There is Lu Fayan's "Qieyun" in the Sui and Tang Dynasties. Qieyun is the earliest rhyme book that can be tested today, and the original book has been lost.