Song’s pinyin

The pinyin of song [sōng].

Character meaning:

Song, a standard third-level character in modern Chinese, is pronounced as sōng in Mandarin. It was first seen in Chu-style bamboo slips and is a picophonetic character in the Six Books. The basic meaning of "Song" is the same as "Song".

Evolution of the word origin:

Song was first seen on Chu-style bamboo slips and silk, and later gradually evolved into the regular script and simplified version of the word "Song".

Interpretation of ancient books:

Kangxi Dictionary:

Yinzhu Shansong·Kangxi Strokes: 11. External strokes: 8.

Guangyunxi Gongqieji rhyme Huisi Fusionqie Zhengyunxi Zhongqie, and the sound is loose. Erya·Shishan Mountain is big and high, Song. Shu Song, Song also. Also known as Gao. Poetry Daya Song Gao Weiyue. Chuanyue, the four mountains. During Shuyao's time, there were only four mountains, not the middle one.

Another saying: Song has a high appearance. Therefore, the person with the tallest mountain named himself Song, not the middle mountain. Today, the name of the mountain is Song, which may be used to establish its name. Han Yu's poem to send Hou and his staff to the palace in March has a few steps and a thousand red layers. Note: Songshan Shaoshiye. It is said that Wensong is also called Songshan Mountain in Zhongyue. Note also from loose. Tongya, Sun Wei, Xu Xuan and Songsong are combined into one character, Dai Dong is not the same character, which is mud.

The sentence for the word Song is as follows:

1. Song is high and the mountains are taller than the sky; the mountains are humming and the valleys are responding, the wind is blowing and the water is surging; the big rivers are swimming with dragons, and the long waves are tilting eastwards, and it is ocean-like. Nine thousand miles, galloping and galloping.