Qi is the same as Qi in ancient times. Meaning:
1. Objects that have no certain shape or volume and can be scattered freely: ~ body.
2. Breathing: No ~; ~ syncope; ~ promote; ~ interest; One ~ ha cheng.
3. Natural phenomena such as cold, warm, cloudy and sunny: ~ weather; ~ temperature; ~ like.
4. Smell of nose: ~ smell; Smelly.
5. People's mental state: ~; ~ section; ~ hey; ~ pie; ~ grace.
6, anger, or make people angry: don't ~ me; ~ annoyed; ~ sheng (sheng); Hold your breath.
7. Be bullied: suffer ~.
8. Chinese medicine refers to the power that can make human organs function: ~ work; ~ blood; ~ virtual.
9. Chinese medicine refers to a certain symptom: phlegm ~; Wet ~.
1, scene: and ~; ~ atmosphere; ~ rhyme (artistic conception or charm of an article or calligraphy painting).
Extended data
"Qi (Jane)" is an ideographic character. Oracle Bone Inscriptions used three horizontal lines to represent clouds, with the upper and lower horizontal lines being longer and the middle horizontal line being shorter, which is different from the "three" word Oracle Bone Inscriptions. The inscriptions on bronze in the Western Zhou Dynasty followed the form of Oracle Bone Inscriptions, and in the Spring and Autumn Period, the upper part of the word "Qi" was bent horizontally in order to highlight the difference with the word "Three".
In the Warring States period, the lower part was bent horizontally, and at the same time, two variants appeared, which changed the word "Qi" into a pictophonetic character from big, angry sound and from fire to sound. The characters in Qin dynasty basically followed the writing style of "Qi" in Warring States. There was little change in writing form after the Han Dynasty.