How to pronounce what word?

1. Shi is a polyphonic word, pinyin is shíshén.

1. When pronouncing shí, form the words as follows:

Shiwu, Shijin, Jieshi, Shibo, Keshi

2. When pronouncing shén, form the words The words are as follows:

What, nothing, what, why, what to do

2. Definition:

[ shí ]

1. A set of ten. What are the ten households with ancient household registrations, the ten members of the army, and the ten elegant and hymn chapters in the Book of Songs?

2. Same as "十": ~one (one-tenth). ~Hundred (ten times or a hundred times).

3. Various; miscellaneous: ~ brocade. ~Things.

4. Psalms: Chapter ~. Good~.

[ shén ]

1. [What] interrogative pronoun.

2. Express doubts: Want ~? . Do it~?

3. Indicates empty or arbitrary pointing: He seems to want to say~. He's not even afraid.

3. Explanation of etymology:

Ten is both a phonetic and a form tense, indicating the sum of nine plus one. Shi, seal character (人, Dingkou) (十), means ten people. The original meaning of the word coin: an ancient household registration or military establishment unit with ten as the unit. In the official script, the word "人" in the seal character is written as "一人 beside".

Attachment 1? The classical Chinese version of "Shuowen Jiezi": Shi, Xiang Shi Bao Ye. From people, ten.

Appendix 2? The vernacular version of "Shuowen Jiezi": Shi, in units of ten households or ten people, to protect each other. The glyph adopts the meaning of "人,十".

Extended information:

1. Evolution of glyphs:

2. Definition of phrases:

1. Shiwu [shí wù]?< /p>

Refers to clothing and other trivial items used daily by families.

2. Shijin [shí jǐn]?

Attribute words. Made of a variety of raw materials or in various patterns: ~ Biscuits. ~sugar. ~ File.

3. Jié shí?

An outstanding poem.

4. Shi Bo [shí bǎi]?

In the ancient military system, ten people were Shi Bo, and hundreds of people were Bo. Because "Shi Bo" generally refers to the grassroots ranks of the army.

5. Keshi [kè shí]?

Manchu. The original meaning is grace, bestowal. Refers to a gift from the emperor.

6. What [shén me]?

Expresses doubt. a) Used alone, to ask about things: This is~?|You are looking for~?|He said~?|~It’s called rhyme?b) Used in front of nouns, to ask about people or things:~People?|~Things?|~Colors ?|~place?

7. Nothing [méi shén]?

It doesn’t matter; it doesn’t matter.

8. What [shén me]

Interrogative pronoun. express doubt. "Tan Jing·Ji Yuan Pin": "The master said: 'What have you done?'" Wang Dingbao of the Five Dynasties "Tang Yan Gong Jian": "Qizhang Gong originally came from the Yangtze River in the Yangtze River and kept a book bag. At the east gate of the country, he brought his business to meet the two princes first... Han Shi saw the question, covered his papers and asked, "Why do you want to make a decision?"...

9. Why [wèi shén me]?

"Why not" often contains the meaning of advice, which is similar to "Why not", such as: This technology is very useful, why don't you learn it?

10. What [gàn shén me]?

When asking about the truth of objective things, you can only use "why" or "how", but not "what" or "why", such as: Why can't the spider's silk Weaving?.

Why do watermelons grow so big?

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