How to drink water at four o'clock?

In Pinyin input huǒ and biāo, Wubi OYYY.

Pinyin: huǒ or biāo, pinyin: ㄏㄨㄛˇ or ㄅㄧㄠ, Zheng code: UOAA, U: 706C, GBK: ECE1, Wubi: OYYY.

Interpretation:

[ huǒ ]

It is the same as "fire" in ancient times.

[ biāo ]

Fire.

Symbol. Due to the increase in modern Internet terms, 灁 is often used as a symbol to embellish online nicknames, names, etc.

No phrase

Words with Qi

Stroke 8: Qi, Jie.

Stroke 9: 炰, dot.

Stroke 10: 烝, 热, Lie, 烋, lamb.

Stroke 11: Cook, simmer, 玎, Yan, 焏, 瘘.

Stroke 12: Boil, simmer, burn, and burn.

Stroke 13: Xi, Xuan, Jian, Sha, Xu, Zhao.

Stroke order

Interpretation of ancient books:

"Ji Yun" has the same fire.

Also "Jiyun" and "Leipian"? Remote cut, phonetic notation. Fire. "Zhengzitong" variant of the character "灬卍火". Anyone with four points at the bottom belongs to the fire department, just like water follows the water department. No phonetic symbols. No. ◎According to the word "灬古彍火", and the rhyme of the collection, the different chapters have phonetic notation, which must be not unfounded. "Zhengzitong" is too muddy.

Fire:

Fire, pictogram. The oracle bone inscriptions on fire resemble the shape of an object burning, time, and flames bursting out.

The bronze character for fire is composed of the pictogram of a flame plus two dots. The two dots represent that something in the flame is radiating to both sides. The whole character is a schematic diagram of something that emits light and heat around it, thus giving rise to the meaning of fire.

The Warring States characters split the shape of fire into four strokes, but still retained a bit of light and flame rising up; the subsequent Xiaozhuan (Figure 6) is in the same vein as the Warring States characters, and the regular script for fire has been used ever since. to date.