"Zheng" is a first-class word, pronounced zhěng, which means upward movement.
Modern interpretation
Salvation: Salvation. Save hunger. Save evil (cure evil). Save people from the mire.
(1) pictophonetic characters. From the hand, cheng (chéng) sound. Original meaning: lift upward
(2) It is the same as the original meaning and does not exist. -"One Root". Wang Bi's note: "I like my toes. Stop it, so its toes are hopeless. " Kong Shu: "Save, lift."
(3) relief; Rescue; I will do my best to save our village. -Qing Xu ke "Qing paper money and war"; Get up and save.
(4) such as: saving disadvantages (saving aging diseases); Salvation; Save things (save the world); Life-saving (assistance; Relief); Rescue (relief and comfort); Save the economy (rescue; Relief)
Interpretation of ancient books
Tang Yun's rhymes? Steam it. "Rhyme Club" and "Zheng Yun"? Cut, read and integrate. Save and help. "Zengyun" also helps. Twelve years of Zuo Zhuan Xuan aims at saving wells. Give it again. "A melon" sticks to its fly, but doesn't save it. "Note" refers to toes. Ji Yun is a masterpiece. Or make a promise Here we go again. "Rhyme Club" or a work? . Explain in detail.
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Radical is the word-forming component of compound words. In ancient times, Chinese characters with left and right structures were called "pian" on the left and "bian" on the right. Now, all the combined Chinese characters without Li Qiwei are collectively referred to as parallel.
Chinese characters are mostly pictophonetic characters, which are composed of pictophonetic characters and homophonic characters. Therefore, "radical" mainly includes pictophonetic characters and homophonic characters. For example, the word "Yu" consists of two radicals, Yan and Wu. The word "basin" consists of two radicals: "fen" and "pan bottom";
The word "radical" is often mentioned when analyzing glyphs. The first volume of "Primary School Chinese" edited and published by People's Education Publishing House, a teacher's teaching book, contains a list of radical names. So what is "radical"? Generally speaking, radicals are ideographic radicals. Radicals are also radicals, but radicals are not necessarily radicals, and radicals and radicals are the whole and part relationship.
Among the radicals, the number of radicals is very small, but the commonly used radicals exceed 100, and the number of radicals listed in the above-mentioned radical name table is 99. A large number of radical capitals are phonetic components, mainly phonetic components, and there are more than 1000 commonly used. Nearly 90% of syllables are monosyllabic words, such as "Bian", "Jia" and "Gu".
In Chinese teaching in primary schools, those syllables with strong word-formation ability are called "basic words". Calling the ideographic radical "radical" originated from an ancient dictionary represented by Shuo Wen Jie Zi. In ancient dictionaries, Chinese characters were classified by the method of "association according to shapes", and words with homographs were classified into one part, with homographs as the title and placed in the first place in this part.
Because it is at the head of a department, it is called "radical". For example, the words "Ma", "Mei", "Miao" and "Gu" all have the same shape as "female", and "female" is the radical of these words.