Read what?

The pronunciation is zh.

1, interpretation

The original meaning of the cave is to release poultry. Birds fly up (from the ground in the yard).

2. Stroke order

The word * * * is drawn in 14, and the stroke order is horizontal, vertical, horizontal, vertical, horizontal, horizontal, horizontal, horizontal hook, point, lift, horizontal hook, point and lift.

3. The role of Hong in historical research.

The existence of the word "dong" shows that the ancients also domesticated birds. Domesticated birds, such as falconry, starling and pigeons, were all passed down from ancient people to modern people. The word "East" preserves the data and evidence of raising birds and beasts in ancient China, which has certain historical research significance.

4. Phonetic dialects

International phonetic symbol t? u? , Tang dynasty pronunciation Ji, Japanese pronunciation AGARU, Vietnamese ch? . Hakka dialect [Hailu dialect] zhu5, [Meixian dialect] zhu5, [Sixian dialect in Taiwan Province province] zu5, [Hakka English dictionary] zhu5, [Hakka pinyin vocabulary] zu4, Cantonese zyu3.

The related idioms of "Dong" and their definitions and sources;

1, Phoenix Longpan

Phoenix Dragon Pan is interpreted as flying like a phoenix, and dragons are entrenched, which is a metaphor for flying and vigorous calligraphy style.

The idiom comes from the biography of Wang Xizhi in the Book of Jin: "Look at its slow work, fine cutting, smoke dew, even if it is broken;" The phoenix is like a dragon, and the trend is oblique and straight. "

The idioms in the near sense are "Dragon Pan Feng barks" and "Long Fengjiao thinks".

2. Luanxiang Feng Jian

Luan Xiang Zhu Feng is defined as a phoenix flying in the sky, describing the winding mountains, proud career and bold and fluent calligraphy style.

The idiom comes from Jin's floating clouds: "Phoenix flies in love, cranes fly in fear, whales fly back to the waves, and crocodiles rush."

There are some idioms with close meanings, such as "Phoenix has feelings" and "Phoenix has feelings".

3. Hongxuan Fengqi

Hongxuan Phoenix is interpreted as a swan flying high and a phoenix flying high. Refers to noble behavior, used to describe extraordinary behavior, noble behavior.

The idiom comes from Song Fan Zhongyan's "Epitaph of Mrs. Teng Gong's Diaojia": "And the ancestral hall is full of goodwill, and the Hongxuan is elegant."