舌
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Translingual
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Alternative forms
- In traditional Chinese (Taiwan, Hong Kong and Macau), this character is written with 干 as the upper component, which is also the historical form found in the Kangxi dictionary.
- In simplified Chinese, (mainland China and Singapore), Japanese Kanji, Korean Hanja and Vietnamese Nom script, this character is written with 千 as the upper component.
Han character
舌 (radical 135, 舌+0, 6 strokes, cangjie input 竹十口 (HJR), four-corner 20604, composition ⿱千口(GJKV) or ⿱干口(HT))
- Kangxi radical #135, ⾆.
Derived characters
References
- KangXi: page 1006, character 22
- Dai Kanwa Jiten: character 30277
- Dae Jaweon: page 1463, character 12
- Hanyu Da Zidian: volume 5, page 2941, character 1
- Unihan data for U+820C
Chinese
trad. | 舌 | |
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simp. # | 舌 |
Glyph origin
Historical forms of the character 舌 | ||
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Shang | Shuowen Jiezi (compiled in Han) | Liushutong (compiled in Ming) |
Oracle bone script | Small seal script | Transcribed ancient scripts |
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Characters in the same phonetic series (舌) (Zhengzhang, 2003) | |
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Old Chinese | |
絬 | *sled |
舌 | *ɡroːd, *ɦbljed |
Pictogram (象形) – a forked tongue emerging upwards from a mouth (口).
Etymology 1
From 舐 (OC *ɦljeʔ, “to lick”) + *-t (“nominal suffix for natural objects”), literally “licker” (Schuessler, 2007).
Pronunciation
Synonyms
Compounds
Derived terms from 舌
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Kunigami
Pronunciation
- IPA(key): /ɕit͡ɕaː/
Miyako
Pronunciation
- IPA(key): /ss̩da/
Okinawan
Pronunciation
- IPA(key): /ɕit͡ɕa/
Vietnamese
Yaeyama
Pronunciation
- IPA(key): /sɨta/
Yonaguni
Pronunciation
- IPA(key): /tˀa/
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