Sticking pole is a Chinese vocabulary, and its pinyin is zhān gān, which is interpreted as a kind of bamboo pole that sticks to the top to catch birds. The seventh time of "Water Margin": "Lin Chong bid farewell to Shen Zhi ... When he grabbed the Wuyue Building to see it, I saw several people standing by the railing with slingshots, blowpipes and sticky poles." ?
Sticking is a polyphonic word, which is pronounced as zhān and nián n. When pronounced as nián, it can be used as an adjective to indicate that an object is attached and sticky. It can also be used as a surname, and the sticky family was originally a Jurchen family.
When pronounced zhān, the part of speech is a verb, indicating that something sticky is connected or attached to something else; Stick one thing to another with glue or paste. In Weiqi, it also refers to connecting two unrelated pieces to enhance their strength.
When pronounced as nián, the part of speech is an adjective, a pictophonetic word, from meter to pronunciation. The original meaning is sticky. Such as sticky porridge (sticky porridge); Step on something sticky; Viscous saliva (oral saliva; It is also said in the dialect, and the words and actions are not good and boring); Sticky (thick and sticky); Sticky saliva (description is not simple).
In metrical poetry, the second word (the first sentence) of the last couplet must be the same as the second word (the second sentence) of the previous couplet, which is called "paste". At the same time, when "sticky" is pronounced as nián, it means that the adhesion of the object is very high.