On the ancient sound of Chinese character "Xi"

The ancient sound of the word Xi should be pronounced as A (a). On this word, Kong Guangsen has a breakthrough opinion: "Xi, the rhyme of Tang Dynasty is in the twelfth qi, but the ancient sound has not been confirmed. However, Qin Shi is "broken" and Da Xue is quoted as "broken", which seems to have the same sound and meaning. The ancient sound "A" means "Xi" should also be pronounced as "A ...", and its detailed interpretation is beyond doubt. From the glyph, Xi means to make people open their mouths to make a "?" (the same test), and eight means to open their mouths. If so, the sound is naturally very similar to Ah. Every time the word Xi is replaced by the word Hu in ancient northern Chinese characters, the oldest pronunciation of the word Hu should be ha, and the interjection "Wu Hu", that is, "Aha" (Wu is the ancient word of crow, which is derived from the crow's voice). Using this pronunciation to interpret the Song of the Great Wind and the works of Chu Ci, we can know that it was all vernacular at that time. Liu Bang's sentence "The wind blows up in cloud flying" means "The wind blows up in cloud flying", so it can also explain why there are so many words in the Book of Songs, but there are almost no words in Daxie and Zhousong. This is because the national wind is a folk oral literature at that time, while Yasong is a temple literature at that time. s! 6364C6354212EA92! 1779.entry