螆
See also: 蛓
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Translingual
Alternative forms
- In traditional Chinese (Taiwan and Hong Kong), the right component is written 茲 (contains 艹), which is the orthodox form found in the Kangxi dictionary.
- In simplified Chinese (mainland China), the right component is written 兹 (contains 䒑), which is also a historical variant found in classical Chinese dictionaries.
- In Japanese kanji, the right component is written 玆 (duplication of 玄).
- Due to Han unification, the three forms above are encoded under the same code point. This character will appear differently depending on the font used.
Han character
螆 (Kangxi radical 142, 虫+10 in traditional Chinese and Japanese, 虫+9 in simplified Chinese, 16 strokes in traditional Chinese and Japanese, 15 strokes in simplified Chinese, cangjie input 中戈廿女戈 (LITVI), four-corner 58132, composition ⿰虫兹(G) or ⿰虫茲(HT) or ⿰虫玆(J))
References
- Kangxi Dictionary: page 1094, character 27
- Dai Kanwa Jiten: character 33368
- Dae Jaweon: page 1557, character 17
- Hanyu Da Zidian (first edition): volume 4, page 2876, character 16
- Unihan data for U+8786
- Unihan data for U+2F9BE
Chinese
trad. | 螆 | |
---|---|---|
simp. # | 螆 |
Glyph origin
Etymology 1
For pronunciation and definitions of 螆 – see 蛓 (“a kind of caterpillar”). (This character is a variant form of 蛓). |
Pronunciation
Etymology 3
From the non-aspirated reading of 疵 (cī).
Pronunciation
Japanese
Kanji
螆
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