What are the homophones in western languages?

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1, Qian: Qian is a Chinese character in China, with a total number of strokes of 9 and awkward radicals. It is pronounced as qiàn, which means madder, and it also means "crimson" in ancient Chinese. When reading X:, transliteration uses characters, mostly names.

2.Hip: refers to the way or voice of laughter, which is often described as indecent or indecent.

3.Xi: Xi characters evolved from Oracle Bone Inscriptions. According to Oracle Bone Inscriptions, there is a hand (claw) on the left and a man tied by a rope on the right.

4. Sunseeker: Sunseeker is a Chinese character in China, pronounced Xι, with sound and form. From the water, from dusk, dusk also sounds. "Evening" means "dusk". "Water" and "evening" together are "water gushing at dusk".

5.Xi: Xi is a Chinese character in China, pronounced X:ο, which means fiery. The total number of strokes in Xi is 16, which can be used as both a verb and an adjective.

6. Greek: Greek is a Chinese character, the original meaning is embroidery, and the extended meaning is rare. This character is recorded in Selected Works, Poems of Cao Zhi, Poems of Wind and Poems of Poetry.

7. Sparse: The sparse pronunciation of Chinese characters is xι, which has the following meanings: the distance between things is far, the gap is large, and it is opposite to "dense"; Low concentration and high water content, as opposed to "thick"; Used before adjectives such as "rotten" and "loose" to express deep degree.