Question:
What is the word "和" for "mixing" station?
Answer:
Mixing station Or mixing station is right.
The following information is quoted from Baidu Encyclopedia:
Mixing station (also known as mixing station) is the collective name for large machinery used in civil construction mixing construction and other industrial construction.
Mixing plants are subdivided into stabilized soil mixing plants, water-stabilized mixing plants, asphalt mixing plants, concrete mixing plants and other categories.
和——Chinese characters
和, Chinese characters.
Pinyin: ?hé?hè?huó?huò?hú?huo?hàn
1. Pronunciation: hé
2. Pronunciation: hè
(1) Echo; sing along.
Jing Ke sang in harmony. ——Liu Xiang of the Western Han Dynasty, "Warring States Policy·Yan Policy"
(2) Another example: singing harmoniously; singing high and low; harmonious singing (singing in response to the singing of others).
(3) Echo; respond. Such as: He Cong (agreeing and obeying); one initiative leads to a hundred harmonies; one chant leads to a hundred harmonies.
(4) Respond with poetry; compose poems based on the themes of other people’s poems.
(5) Agree; allow. Such as: He Ying (Yu Ying He).
3. Pronunciation: huó
Mixed, such as: noodles
The surname (huó) is a dialect of Huaxian, Anyang, Henan.
4. Pronunciation: huò
(1) Mix powder or liquid.
(2) Wash more frequently.
Mix powdery or granular substances together, or add water and stir: mix medicine. Milk and some sugar. and get. And thin mud.
Quantifiers refer to the number of times to change the water for washing clothes or the number of times to decoct a dose of medicine: the clothes were washed with Sanhe water.
5. Pronunciation: hú
Mahjong term, success
When playing mahjong or playing cards, a certain family's cards meet the prescribed requirements and they win. There is a saying about "Hu Pai", which is wrong.
6. Pronunciation: huo
It has no literal meaning, it is just a foil. It is used as the suffix of a verb or the suffix of an adjective in a two-syllable word. It does not have a separate pronunciation in the dictionary. This sound is sometimes weakened to hu in some dialects, or even weakened again to he, as shown in item 9 below.
Used for adjectives such as "warm", "soft" and "even" as well as verbs such as "blending" and "stirring".
7. Pronunciation: hàn
In Taiwanese Mandarin, when the word "和" is used as a conjunction, it is pronounced hàn in daily spoken language, but it is pronounced hé in formal pronunciation. (Origined from the old Beijing spoken language, but has basically disappeared in the mainland.) (It is still pronounced this way in the spoken dialects of northern Shanxi, northern Shaanxi, and Inner Mongolia (Ordos, Inner Mongolia Hohhot, and Inner Mongolia Baotou) in mainland China.) In addition, Shandong In some local dialects, "和" is pronounced as hào or hèn.