The pinyin of the word genus

The pinyin and meaning of the word genus are as follows:

Gen: shǔ, zhǔ?. "Genus" is simplified to "genus". According to ancient calligraphy, strokes are saved and simplified. "Shuowen Jiezi": "Genuine, Lian Ye. From the end, Shu sound.". The silkworms among the outcropping sunflowers are the paradigm of Shu. The two paradigms of Wei and Shu are superimposed. The worms connected head to tail are the paradigm of the genus.

Genus: shǔ. Original meaning: of the same family. Such as: relatives, dependents, martyrs. Derived meaning: The extended meaning refers to "jurisdictional relationship, classification". Such as: belong to, subordinate to, belong to, belong to, directly belong to, affiliate to, subordinate to. Meaning: also used as surname

phonetic. The traditional characters come from Xi Province, from Shu, and Shu also sounds. "Rhinoceros" refers to "an animal that is difficult to classify". "Shu" originally refers to "grill with holes", which is extended to "independent system" and "independent system". "Rhinoceros" and "Shu" are combined to represent "animals that slip out of the general category and form a category of their own". Original meaning: special animal species. Extended meaning: type, category.

Genus: zhǔ. Derived meaning: The extended meaning means "continuously, successively". Such as: Wen, He (hé). Derived meaning: The extended meaning is "concentrating (the idea) on one point". Such as: belonging to Yang (looking up), belonging to hope, belonging to intention.

Attribution: Same as "zhi", exhortation, exhortation. When Gongshi fell ill, he wrote in a book called Zuzhe: "I will die soon. Bury me at the foot of Songshan Mountain, and my son will be my inscription." - "Mr. Dongpo's Epitaph"; The plot to seize the direct descendant. ——Feng Menglong, Ming Dynasty, "Chronicles of the Nations of the Eastern Zhou Dynasty"