Hua (pinyin: huá, huà, huā) is a commonly used Chinese character, which was first seen in the inscriptions on bronze in the Western Zhou Dynasty. China's ancient glyph is like a flower, and its original meaning refers to the flower of vegetation. Read huā. Used as a verb, referring to flowering. The word "flower" came into being in the Southern and Northern Dynasties, and was used to mean flower.
Flowers are beautiful, so "Hua" means brilliant. Then it refers to the essence of things, and then it refers to literary talent. Read huá as a noun. China was called "Huaxia" in ancient times. Later, "Huaxia" became synonymous with the Han nationality, and later it was extended to "China". "Hua" is also pronounced Hu, which is used for "Huashan", one of the five mountains, and is also used as a surname.
"Hua" was originally written as "?" There is no "damn" prefix. "?" In the inscriptions of the Western Zhou Dynasty, the shape of flowers is the original word of "flower": the upper part is like petals, the middle part is like calyx and receptacle, and the lower part is like stems and roots. Others think "?" Like a flowering plant. There are plants in the middle, roots below, branches beside and flowers above.
Is Hua there? "On the basis of increasing the side complexity. Maybe it's because of "?" It is impossible to express the original meaning of Chinese characters intuitively. Regarding the Warring States Period, "?" The word "Hua" is formed by adding the prefix "Mi" to the upper part of the word to express the meaning of flowers, thus becoming a word with both sound and meaning. As a shape symbol, cursive prefix indicates that it is related to flowers and plants.