舐
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Translingual
Han character
舐 (radical 135, 舌+4, 10 strokes, cangjie input 竹口竹女心 (HRHVP), four-corner 22640, composition ⿰舌氏)
References
- KangXi: page 1007, character 3
- Dai Kanwa Jiten: character 30283
- Dae Jaweon: page 1464, character 5
- Hanyu Da Zidian: volume 5, page 2943, character 7
- Unihan data for U+8210
Chinese
simp. and trad. |
舐 | |
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variant forms | 舓 𦧇 𦧺 Cantonese vernacular |
Glyph origin
Characters in the same phonetic series (氏) (Zhengzhang, 2003) | |
---|---|
Old Chinese | |
氏 | *skeŋ, *kje, *ɡjeʔ |
衹 | *kje, *ɡe |
紙 | *kjeʔ |
帋 | *kjeʔ |
扺 | *kjeʔ |
坁 | *kjeʔ |
汦 | *kjeʔ, *tjil |
忯 | *ɡje, *ɡe |
眂 | *ɡje, *ɡils |
舐 | *ɦljeʔ |
芪 | *ɡe |
祇 | *ɡe |
疧 | *ɡe |
軝 | *ɡe |
蚔 | *ɡe |
Phono-semantic compound (形聲, OC *ɦljeʔ) : semantic 舌 + phonetic 氏 (OC *skeŋ, *kje, *ɡjeʔ).
The glyphs recorded in Shuowen are 舓 (with phonetic 易 (OC *leːɡs, *leɡ)) and 𦧇 (with phonetic 也 (OC *laːlʔ)).
Etymology 1
From Proto-Sino-Tibetan *m/s/g-ljak (“to lick; tongue”). The Cantonese vernacular reading laai2 preserves the Old Chinese initial *l-.
Pronunciation
Compounds
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Japanese
Kanji
舐
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Korean
Hanja
舐 (eum 지 (ji))
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Vietnamese
Han character
舐: Hán Nôm readings: liếm, thỉ
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References
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