Explanation of phonetic characters
Chinese characters with homophones or close-sounding characters used for phonetic notation. Zhang Shoujie of the Tang Dynasty wrote in "Historical Records Zhengyi · On Phonetic Examples": "However, the Confucian phonetic characters were first used, and the analogy was yin." Wang Mingsheng of the Qing Dynasty, "Moshu Bian·On Fanqie Suo Zhi": "Zheng Kangcheng annotated the 'Six Classics', and Gao Yujie "Lü Lan", "Huainan", Xu Shen's "Shuowen", and Liu Xizhi's "Shi Ming" began to have examples, which were used to prove the pronunciation of the word. The explanation of sound ī sound also refers specifically to rhythmic sound: sound. music(?). temperament. timbre. volume. Sound area. Phonology. audiovisual. Vocal (voice, appearance). implication. Information, news: news. Good news. news. Radical: Sound; Explanation of character: Character ì is a symbol used to record language: text. Chinese character. character . letter . dictionary. words. Between the lines (俷). weigh every word. Different forms of writing, schools of calligraphy: cursive characters. Seal characters. The word Yan. Liu character. European character. The word Zhao. Calligraphy works: calligraphy and painting. Font size. The pronunciation of the word: Zi Zhengqiang