Shocked, the horse neighed when it encountered the police. The glyph uses "horse" as the side word and "Jing" as the sound side. ?
Jing is both a phonetic and a form tense, and is the omission of "police". Jing, a bronze inscription (a deformation of "Jing", i.e. "alert", alert to danger) (horse), means that the horse is highly alert when stimulated. The original meaning of the coined word is: verb, the horse hesitates because it is alert to danger. In seal script, write the words in the gold characters as , and write the words in the gold characters as . After Liliization, the regular script will write the characters in the seal characters as , and the characters in the seal characters will be written as . The "Chinese Character Simplification Plan" created another picophonetic character "jing" with the shape of "忄" and the sound of "京" to replace it, emphasizing the psychological meaning of "fear" in "jing". "Jing" means that the horse is alert to danger and hesitates to move forward; "fright" means that the horse is alert to danger and hesitates to move forward; It's a horse neighing when it encounters a policeman.