Traditional Chinese characters for stall

The traditional Chinese character for stall

Idioms containing the word "stall"

Stand tān

Only the following two official word groups were found :

Lazy stall [lǎnlǎntāntān] listless.

Source: "Best Stories from the West Lake·Sansheng Stone Traces": "Li Yuan expected that he could not catch up with him, so he had to take the moonlight and lazily spread his stall, and he would come back."

Spreading his hands Spreading one's feet [tānshǒutānjiǎo] still saying that it's a big deal

Source: Volume 13 of "The Surprise at the First Cut": "_Wang San_spreading one's hands and feet, without saying goodbye, went out on his own.

Radical: 扌

Strokes: 13

Five Elements: Fire

Traditional Chinese: Tan

Detailed explanation:

Lay out: ~Place the question ~on the table.

Pour the batter into the pan: ~Eggs.

Share. :~ Pie.

Encounter, encounter: This thing made him happy.

Quantifier, used for spreading paste: a thin mud.

Traditional Chinese characters, a font form of Chinese characters, generally refer to the Chinese characters that were replaced by simplified characters during the Chinese character simplification movement. Sometimes they also refer to the entire Chinese regular script and official script writing systems before the Chinese character simplification movement. With a history of more than two thousand years, it was the standard Chinese character commonly used by Chinese people everywhere until 1956.

The areas where traditional characters are still used include Hong Kong, Macao and Taiwan, Singapore and Malaysia and other overseas Chinese communities. In order for traditional and simplified Chinese to coexist, mainland China retains or uses traditional Chinese characters in cases such as cultural relics and historical sites, variant characters of surnames, calligraphy and seal cutting, handwritten inscriptions, and special needs.