気qì is the same as the Chinese character for qi, and is a common concept in Chinese philosophy, Taoism and traditional Chinese medicine. Thinkers from the Spring and Autumn Period and the Warring States Period in China abstracted the concept of Qi and made it the basic element of everything in the heaven and earth, with flowing characteristics like gas. It is believed that the life energy or power possessed by human beings and all living things is also called Qi. All things in the universe are the result of the movement and changes of Qi. Traditional Chinese medicine believes that Qi is the first line of defense of the human body. It gathers in the body to protect the internal organs, and circulates on the surface of the skin to prevent the invasion of external evils and cause diseases.
Text interpretation
1. Objects that have no definite shape or volume and can spread freely: gas.
2. Breathing: out of breath, breathlessness, shortness of breath, breathlessness, all in one breath.
3. Cold, warm, cloudy, sunny and other phenomena in nature: climate, temperature, weather.
4. What the nose smells: smell, odor.
5. A person's mental state: spirit, integrity, courage, magnanimity, discouragement, heroism, anger, loyalty, heroic spirit, righteousness, vigor, talent, harmony, courage, and ambition.
6. Anger, or making people angry: Don't be angry with me, get angry, be angry (shèng), swallow your anger.
7. Oppression: being angered.
8. Traditional Chinese Medicine refers to the driving forces that enable the body's organs to function: Qigong, Qi and Blood, and Qi Deficiency.
9. Traditional Chinese medicine refers to certain symptoms: phlegm, dampness, Qi deficiency, Qi deficiency, Qi blockage...
10. Scene: harmony, atmosphere, charm (the artistic conception or charm of articles or calligraphy paintings).