Traditional Culture Encyclopedia - Traditional stories - Where are Chinese characters written?

Where are Chinese characters written?

How to write Wo in Tian Zige (pictured)

I. Interpretation

1, rice seedlings, especially rice plants.

2. Ancient books refer to millet.

3. Last name.

Second, the interpretation of words.

Classical Chinese version of Shuo Wen Jie Zi: He, Oracle Bone Inscriptions. Born in February, that is, in August, it is called Wo in the middle. Wo, mu ye. The king of wood was born, but the king of gold died.

Vernacular version of Shuowen Jiezi: He and Oracle bones. It began to grow in February and became like this in August. In the four seasons, it gets the sum of yin and yang, so it is called him (him). Grain belongs to wood, so its geography is flourishing and dying.

Third, the original meaning of coinage

Noun is the general term for ear-bearing cereal crops.

Extended data

Glyph evolution (as shown in figure)

Composition: Miao, Chang, Hangzhou, Zhu, Qi, Jiahe, Wei, Cao, Ma, Chou He, He Dan, He Yi, Qi and Hui.

I. Grain fields [hé cháng]?

A place where rice is threshed or dried.

Second, He Hui [hé hu]?

Cereal crops.

Third, grass [o heck]?

Generic term for Gramineae plants. Monocotyledons are composed of leaf sheaths at the base of leaves, which tightly wrap the stem like a cracked tube, with long and narrow leaves on the upper part and parallel veins.

Fourth, what chicken [héjι]?

A wild bird that lives in rice fields.

Verb (short for verb) Harmony [Muhe]?

The legendary tall cereal plant.