周
From Wiktionary, the free dictionary
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周 (Kangxi radical 30, 口+5, 8 strokes, cangjie input 月土口 (BGR), four-corner 77220, composition ⿵⺆𠮷(GTJV) or ⿵⺆⿻一古 or ⿵⺆⿱𰀁口(HK))
Historical forms of the character 周 | |||||
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Shang | Western Zhou | Warring States | Shuowen Jiezi (compiled in Han) | ||
Oracle bone script | Bronze inscriptions | Chu slip and silk script | Qin slip script | Ancient script | Small seal script |
Old Chinese | |
---|---|
裯 | *tuːw, *dɯw, *do |
啁 | *tuːw, *rtɯːw, *tɯw |
禂 | *tuːwʔ |
綢 | *tʰuːw, *dɯw |
翢 | *tʰuːw, *duːw |
錭 | *duːw |
雕 | *tɯːw |
凋 | *tɯːw |
琱 | *tɯːw |
鯛 | *tɯːw |
鵰 | *tɯːw |
彫 | *tɯːw |
奝 | *tɯːw |
調 | *dɯːw, *dɯːws, *tɯw |
蜩 | *dɯːw |
惆 | *tʰɯw |
婤 | *tʰɯw, *tjɯw |
稠 | *dɯw |
椆 | *dɯw, *tjɯws |
周 | *tjɯw |
輖 | *tjɯw |
賙 | *tjɯw |
郮 | *tjɯw |
晭 | *tjɯwʔ |
倜 | *tʰɯːwɢ |
Oracle bone script: Pictogram (象形) of a jade artifact with carved patterns. Original form of 彫 (OC *tɯːw, “to carve”). The character was later borrowed as a country name and 口 was added as a distinguishing mark. A semi-conservative version in which the carvings are visible is 𠕛. The top part of the character gradually became similar to 用 in the late Western Zhou period.[1] See also 黃, which could have a reference to a jade artifact.
The seal script form can be interpreted as ideogrammic compound (會意 / 会意) : semantic 口 (“mouth”) + semantic 用 (“to use”) - indicating the idea of using words skillfully to express oneself, thereby conveying the meaning of being meticulous or detailed.[2]
Variety | Location | 周 |
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Mandarin | Beijing | /ʈ͡ʂou⁵⁵/ |
Harbin | /ʈ͡ʂou⁴⁴/ | |
Tianjin | /ʈ͡ʂou²¹/ /t͡sou²¹/ | |
Jinan | /ʈ͡ʂou²¹³/ | |
Qingdao | /tʃou²¹³/ | |
Zhengzhou | /ʈ͡ʂou²⁴/ | |
Xi'an | /ʈ͡ʂou²¹/ | |
Xining | /ʈ͡ʂɯ⁴⁴/ | |
Yinchuan | /ʈ͡ʂəu⁴⁴/ | |
Lanzhou | /ʈ͡ʂou³¹/ | |
Ürümqi | /ʈ͡ʂɤu⁴⁴/ | |
Wuhan | /t͡səu⁵⁵/ | |
Chengdu | /t͡səu⁵⁵/ | |
Guiyang | /t͡səu⁵⁵/ | |
Kunming | /ʈ͡ʂəu⁴⁴/ | |
Nanjing | /ʈ͡ʂəɯ³¹/ | |
Hefei | /ʈ͡ʂɯ²¹/ | |
Jin | Taiyuan | /t͡səu¹¹/ |
Pingyao | /ʈ͡ʂəu¹³/ | |
Hohhot | /t͡səu³¹/ | |
Wu | Shanghai | /t͡sɤ⁵³/ |
Suzhou | /t͡sɤ⁵⁵/ | |
Hangzhou | /t͡sei³³/ | |
Wenzhou | /t͡ɕɤu³³/ | |
Hui | Shexian | /t͡ɕiu³¹/ |
Tunxi | /t͡ɕiu¹¹/ | |
Xiang | Changsha | /ʈ͡ʂəu³³/ |
Xiangtan | /ʈ͡ʂəɯ³³/ | |
Gan | Nanchang | /t͡sɨu⁴²/ |
Hakka | Meixian | /t͡su⁴⁴/ |
Taoyuan | /tʃu²⁴/ | |
Cantonese | Guangzhou | /t͡sɐu⁵³/ |
Nanning | /t͡sɐu⁵⁵/ | |
Hong Kong | /t͡sɐu⁵⁵/ | |
Min | Xiamen (Hokkien) | /t͡siu⁵⁵/ |
Fuzhou (Eastern Min) | /t͡sieu⁴⁴/ | |
Jian'ou (Northern Min) | /t͡siu⁵⁴/ | |
Shantou (Teochew) | /t͡siu³³/ | |
Haikou (Hainanese) | /t͡siu²³/ |
Rime | |
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Character | 周 |
Reading # | 1/1 |
Initial (聲) | 章 (23) |
Final (韻) | 尤 (136) |
Tone (調) | Level (Ø) |
Openness (開合) | Open |
Division (等) | III |
Fanqie | 職流切 |
Baxter | tsyuw |
Reconstructions | |
Zhengzhang Shangfang |
/t͡ɕɨu/ |
Pan Wuyun |
/t͡ɕiu/ |
Shao Rongfen |
/t͡ɕiəu/ |
Edwin Pulleyblank |
/cuw/ |
Li Rong |
/t͡ɕiu/ |
Wang Li |
/t͡ɕĭəu/ |
Bernhard Karlgren |
/t͡ɕi̯ə̯u/ |
Expected Mandarin Reflex |
zhōu |
Expected Cantonese Reflex |
zau1 |
Baxter–Sagart system 1.1 (2014) | ||
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Character | 周 | 周 |
Reading # | 1/2 | 2/2 |
Modern Beijing (Pinyin) |
zhōu | zhōu |
Middle Chinese |
‹ tsyuw › | ‹ tsyuw › |
Old Chinese |
/*tiw/ | /*tiw/ |
English | Zhōu (dynasty and place) | cycle; all around |
Notes for Old Chinese notations in the Baxter–Sagart system: * Parentheses "()" indicate uncertain presence; |
Zhengzhang system (2003) | |
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Character | 周 |
Reading # | 1/1 |
No. | 17531 |
Phonetic component |
周 |
Rime group |
幽 |
Rime subdivision |
2 |
Corresponding MC rime |
周 |
Old Chinese |
/*tjɯw/ |
Notes | 甲金文象田間稼密, 爲稠初文 |
周
For pronunciation and definitions of 周 – see 週 (“week; circumference; etc.”). (This character is the simplified and variant traditional form of 週). |
Notes:
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This variant form is the name of the second tetragram of the Taixuanjing (𝌇), as listed in the ancient text.
周
Shinjitai | 周 | |
Kyūjitai [1] |
周 周 or 周+ ︀ ? |
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周󠄀 周+ 󠄀 ?(Adobe-Japan1) | ||
周󠄃 周+ 󠄃 ?(Hanyo-Denshi) (Moji_Joho) | ||
The displayed kanji may be different from the image due to your environment. See here for details. |
(Fourth grade kyōiku kanji, shinjitai kanji, kyūjitai form 周)
From Middle Chinese 周 (MC tsyuw).
周: Hán Việt readings: chu[1][2], châu[3]
周: Nôm readings: chu[1][4][5], châu[1][5]
Chu is the original Hán-Việt reading of this character and related ones according to Thiều Chửu. However, naming taboos for Nguyễn Phúc Chu (阮福淍) led to the reading Châu being used instead for this character, especially in the south of Vietnam, based on a tradition of u/âu sound swaps. Currently, both readings are in use. [6]
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