Chinese characters for chuāng

Window: chuāng ㄔㄨㄤˉ. "Shuowen Jiezi": "A chimney is called a chimney on a wall, and a chimney on a house. A window is called a hole. [1]". The through-hole in the house wall helps the household to see the light, which is the paradigm of windows.

Original meaning: a device for ventilation and lighting of a house. [2] Such as: window, window, window, window friend (i.e. classmate), window grille. Window sills, window screens, curtains, window curtains and windows are bright and clean. [3]

Extension: also used as a surname[4]. Detailed explanation

Window: chuāng ㄔㄨㄤˉ. The through-hole in the house wall helps the household to see the light, which is the paradigm of windows.

Original meaning: a device for ventilation and lighting of a house.

1 direction pictogram. From 倀 (mián), from the mouth. "倀" means house. In oracle bone inscriptions, it looks like a house wall with a window shape. Original meaning: a window that opens to the north. To the north comes out of the tunnel. - "Shuowen". The ancient palace is located in the north, and there are no doors and windows, but the people may have them, and they are called Xiang. The sky suffocates the smoked rats and marches towards Yihu. - "Poetry·Binfeng·July"

2 牖 means understanding. From Katado. A piece of wood is a sawed piece of wood, and "house" refers to a window. In the pre-Qin period, futons were mostly used, but windows were rare. Original meaning: window. A window is made of wood that passes through the wall. - "Shuowen". Paragraph note: "The cross-window is made of straight wood, which is the current window. On the wall, it is called a window, and on the house, it is called a window." The clan's door is under the window. - "Poetry·Zhaonan·Cai"

3 Xuan shape sound. From the car, dry sound. Original meaning: A kind of car in ancient China with a high front roof and a curtain, for officials and above. The meaning of window is extension. Kaixuan is slightly cool. ——Du Fu's "Summer Night Sigh" Open the Xuan noodle garden. - Meng Haoran of the Tang Dynasty, "Passing the Old Friend's Village"

4 Xuanmu also means window. I'm tired of borrowing Xuan Fu. ——Cangqulou Poetry Collection Volume 1 by Chen Baochen of the Qing Dynasty

Shuowen Chimbu: "A chimney is called a chimney on the wall, and it is called a chimney on the house. It is pictographic." Also seen in "Liu Ziyu" by Su Shi of the Song Dynasty He Yin sent it as a gift and sent it to his brother, Taoist Zhang: "The clear chimney swallows the sun and the liver and intestines are warm, and the ancient palace is full of fragrance." Chim, a book called "Window".

There are two windows on the four sides. - "Kao Gong Ji·Craftsman". Note: "The window helps the window to provide light."

The skylight is beautiful. -Wang Yi's "Ode to Lu Lingguang Hall"

Cell the windows to open up the windows to help the households see the light. - "Lunheng·Bie Tong"

There are four windows in the front and a wall surrounding the courtyard. ——Gui Youguang's "Xiang Ji Xuan Zhi"

When you are arranging your hair by the window, you are applying yellow flowers to the mirror. - "Mulan Poems" by Yuefu in the Northern Dynasties

Window 1

There are small windows on the side, four on the left and eight on the left. —Ming Dynasty Wei Xuezhen's "He Zhou Ji"

Words

Window under the window (under the window; studying at school); window friend (in the old days, refers to classmates in the private school); window pane (with grids) Window; also known as window lattice); window eye (window lattice); window work (referring to knowledge).

Chuāng [chuāng]

Sore: chuāng ㄔㄨㄤˉ. The radical "Cang" is simplified to "Cang". Based on the ancient calligraphy stroke saving and simplification [1]. From 疒, warehouse sound. The shape of a person leaning on chopsticks when he is sick is a paradigm of disease. The place where the valley is hidden is the paradigm of the warehouse. The two paradigms of Zan and Cang are superimposed. The place where the virus hides on the skin is a sore.

Original meaning: a disease of swollen, rotten and ulcerated skin [2]. Such as: scars, sores, chilblains, hemorrhoids. Detailed explanation

Phonetic. From 疒 (chuáng), from Cang, Cang Yisheng. "Cang" originally refers to a cylindrical heap of millet, and then refers to the red bumps that grow on the skin. The surface is raised and covered with pustule particles. The shape is like a heap of millet in a barn. "疒" and "Cang" are combined to mean "a lump like a heap of millet". Original meaning: a millet-like lump on the skin.

The general term for carbuncle, paralysis, gangrene, boil, etc. [sore;skin ulcer]

Sore, sore. ——"Jade Pian"

What you do evil turns into sores. ——Zhang Heng's "Ode to Xijing". Xue's note: "Sores are also called scars."

Healing the sores in front of the eyes but gouging out the flesh in the heart. ——Nie Yizhong's "Yong Tian Jia"

Another example: sores (swollen sores); sores (referring to rashes); sores (generally referring to scabies, carbuncles and other skin and surgical diseases)< /p>

Wound; trauma. Also used as "create" [wound].

Such as: sores (injury); sores (patients suffering from sores); sores (wounds, scars, referring to people's livelihood suffering)

It refers to pain; pain [pain]. Such as: scabies disease (metaphor for minor disasters; metaphor for painful experience); sore pain (pain in sores or wounds; pain from sores)

Common phrases

scar chuāngbā< /p>

[scar] The scar left after the sore is healed

The scar is healed and the pain is forgotten

The scar chuānghén

[scar on skin] scar

scar chuāngyí

[desolation after destruction or a disaster] Trauma, also a metaphor for the scene of devastation after a disaster

The world is filled with desolation and worry. When will it end? - Du Fu's "Northern Expedition"

Chuāngyí-mǎnmù

[everywhere a scene of devastation meets the eye] is a metaphor for natural and man-made disasters, poverty and displacement, The scene of people living in dire straits

A devastated mess.