Read what?

Read biāo

Yi is a Chinese character, pinyin biāo, a knowing word, which comes from three "dogs". It means the way dogs run. Extension refers to running, and it can also refer to storms and cyclones.

Basic explanation

The way dogs run. Three dogs are intertwined to show the way dogs run; Take a step, and you will derive the meaning of rapid and rapid development.

Quickly said, "The spirit emperor Xi has descended, far away in the clouds."

Gutong "hurricane", storm; Cyclone: "~ wind and rain will always come." "Burning the wheel is called depression, and skyrocketing is called depression. The wind and fire are strong, the return air floats, the sunrise is violent, the wind is hazy, the rain is hazy, and the wind is cloudy [y]. " -"Erya Shi Tian"

A kind of grass mentioned in ancient books

Interpretation of ancient books

Tang Yunfu cut Ji Yun, Yunhui and Zheng Yun? Remote cutting? The phonetic symbol "Shuo Wen" looks like a dog. From three dogs.

"Erya Shi Tian" is booming. Note: storms are from the bottom up. "Shu" Li Xun said: Hey, go up. Interpretation of the text, it must be in the foreseeable future.

"Erya Cao Shi" is also very embarrassed. "Note" is another name for tobacco. Shu won, a man.

Also known as hairy genus.

There are also many strokes and loud voices in Jiyun. So is the return air. Li Yueling reminds me that storms will always come. Pay attention to the trouble of returning air. The interpretation text floated again. Xu Yinfang is in the distance.

Jiyun is a phonological work compiled by Ding Du, Li Shu and other ancient officials. The book is arranged according to the phonology of Chinese characters and was completed in the second year of Renzong Baoyuan (1039).

There are ten volumes in the book, four volumes in Ji Ping Sheng, two volumes in Shang Qu Ru, and 206 rhymes in * * *. Not only the variant characters (53525 * * *) were widely collected, but also consonants were added, which preserved the time and dialect sounds at that time, and exegesis was also widely collected.

Jiyun is one of the most important rhyme books in the history of China, and it is a must-read rhyme book for learning languages and characters.

The number of rhymes is the same as that of Guang Yun. It's just that the order of words used in rhymes and some rhymes is slightly different from the same use and single use noted in the following rhymes. In the early Tang Dynasty, Xu et al. had requested to combine the narrow rhyme and the adjacent rhyme in Qieyun into one. In the early Song Dynasty, Jia Changchao also called for "three narrow rhymes, which can be used by scholars" (Jade Sea).