Chuang (pinyin: chuàng, chuāng) is a common Chinese word. When Shuo Wen Jie Zi wrote and read Chu Qiang, it was thought that this book was "cut". Digging a well for the first time indicates a career? Do it for the first time. Then cut, cut and create. I wrote this book when I first read chuāng. It was first seen in the bronze inscriptions of the Western Zhou Dynasty, indicating a bloody wound on the knife edge and used as a verb to kill. Later generations used the word "Chuang".
In some places, bumping into people is called making people, and bumping into people is called building cars.