吳
|
Translingual
Traditional | 吳 |
---|---|
Shinjitai | 呉 |
Simplified | 吴 |
Han character
吳 (radical 30, 口+4, 7 strokes, cangjie input 口女弓大 (RVNK), four-corner 26801, composition ⿺⿱𠃑大口)
References
- KangXi: page 179, character 4
- Dai Kanwa Jiten: character 3365
- Dae Jaweon: page 396, character 15
- Hanyu Da Zidian: volume 1, page 595, character 8
- Unihan data for U+5433
Chinese
trad. | 吳/吴* | |
---|---|---|
simp. | 吴* | |
variant forms | 呉 𠯵 㕦 𡗾 𡗿 |
Glyph origin
Historical forms of the character 吳 | |||
---|---|---|---|
Shang | Western Zhou | Shuowen Jiezi (compiled in Han) | Liushutong (compiled in Ming) |
Oracle bone script | Bronze inscriptions | Small seal script | Transcribed ancient scripts |
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Characters in the same phonetic series (吳) (Zhengzhang, 2003) | |
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Old Chinese | |
吳 | *ŋʷaː |
蜈 | *ŋʷaː |
Ideogrammic compound (會意) : 口 (“mouth”) + 夨 (“man with tilted head”) – to speak loudly.
Etymology 1
Perhaps related to Tibetan ངར་སྐད (ngar skad, “roar; shout”), Tibetan ང་རོ (nga ro, “roar; yell; shout”) (Schuessler, 2007).
Pronunciation
Definitions
吳
- † to speak loudly; to shout
- 不吳不敖,胡考之休。 [Classical Chinese, trad.]
- From: The Classic of Poetry, circa 11th – 7th centuries BCE, translated based on James Legge's version
- Bù wú bù áo, hú kǎo zhī xiū. [Pinyin]
- There is no noise, no insolence: An auspice, [all this], of great longevity.
不吴不敖,胡考之休。 [Classical Chinese, simp.]
- † big
- (historical) (~國) one of the Warring States
- (historical) (~國) Eastern Wu, one of the Three Kingdoms
- the territory those states held, around the Yangtze delta
- Wu; the Chinese dialects of that territory, including Suzhounese and Shanghainese
- ⇒ 吳語
- A surname.
- 吳作棟 / 吴作栋 [Min Nan] ― Gô͘ Chok-tòng [Pe̍h-ōe-jī] ― Goh Chok Tong (Singapore's second Prime Minister; currently Emeritus Senior Minister)
- (~港) a harbor in Hiroshima Prefecture, Japan
Compounds
See also
Pronunciation
Japanese
Kanji
吳
- This term needs a translation to English. Please help out and add a translation, then remove the text
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Readings
1) Pronunciations of Kanji from before the 7th / 8th centuries. Possibly from the Korean peninsula or southern China. Often used in Buddhist texts.
Korean
Vietnamese
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