1. Chen chén (ㄔㄣˊ)
1. Basic meaning
(1) House, a deep house.
(2) The location of the North Star was later used to refer to the residence of the emperor, and was extended to the throne and the representative name of the emperor: Chenji. Chenju. Chen Zhang. Chen Zha (Emperor's Letters). Chenyou. Chen Han (the emperor's writings). Chenyuan (capital).
2. Basic meaning
宸?chén
〈Name〉
(1) (Phonetic. From 宀(?mián) , Chen sound. From "宀", it means related to the house. Original meaning: eaves)
(2) Same as the original meaning [eave]
Chen, house. ——"Shuowen"
And it is our Yichenyu. ——"Mandarin·Vietnamese". Note: "The house slipped away."
The atmosphere disappeared in Zhongchen. ——Zhang Heng's "Ode to Xijing". Note: "The intersection between heaven and earth is the space between heaven and earth."
(3) Another example: Chenyu (eaves. Metaphor of shelter)
(4) Deep and large house [great mansion ]
Chen, Jia Kui said: The secret of the room. ——"Jade Chapter"
(5) The emperor's residence [imperial palace]
Chen Fei has been established. ——Wang Bo's "Ode to the Nine-Cheng Palace"
(6) Another example: Chen Fei (Palace Gate)
(7) The pronoun of emperor and throne [emperor]
There is a line of small characters at the end: "On a certain day of the month of a certain year, the letter was given to Rong Guo Gong Jia Yuan", and there is also "Treasure of Wanji Chenhan". ——"Dream of Red Mansions". Note: Han, ink, calligraphy.
(8) Another example: Chenyou (formerly known as the emperor's outing); Chenji (the North Star, metaphor for the emperor)
2. Chenchéng (ㄔㄥˊ)
1. Basic meaning
The ancient library: Huangshicheng (the place where the royal families of the Ming and Qing dynasties of China collected records of emperors of all dynasties).
2. Basic meaning
宬?chéng
A house where books were collected in ancient times. During the Ming and Qing Dynasties, it specifically referred to the place [room of collected books] in the palace where documents and archives were collected. ——"Shuowen"
During the Qianlong period, the actual records and holy teachings were returned to the Emperor Shicheng. ——Extended information of "Manuscript of Qing History"
"Chen" related words
1. Chenhao [chén háo]?
The calligraphy of emperors.
2. 许Note [chén zhù]?
The emperor’s attention.
3. Zhongchen [zhōng chén]?
Space.
4. Chen title [chén tí]?
The emperor’s personal inscription.
5. Yuchen [yù chén]?
Tiangong.
6. Chenyu [chén yú]?
The emperor’s car. By referring to the emperor.
7. Chenyu [chén yǔ]?
Eaves. A metaphor for shelter.
2. Word groups related to "宬"
1. Shi Chen [shǐ chéng]?
That is, Huang Shi Chen. Ancient archives. It was built in the Jiajing period of the Ming Dynasty. The Qing Dynasty's Gu Yanwu's "Reply to Tang Jingxian Shu": "The names of the historical records preserved by Shicheng and the taboo records of the scholar-bureaucrats' families were changed to "Sheng Zheng Ji", which are all based on the three revisions." The Qing Dynasty's Feng Guifen's "Ji Pucheng Xiang Guowen" ": "Contained in Shicheng, inscribed on bamboo and silk." Details of "Huang Shicheng".
2. Chengshi [chéng shì]?
Refers to archives or library. "Family Biography of Mr. Fang Tian'an" by Feng Guifen of the Qing Dynasty: "Ten years after Mr. Fang's death, my master ordered Guifen to establish a family biography, stealing the meaning of the disciple's name on the Han Dynasty stele, and I would like to interpret it as shown on the right for future reference. "The collection of Chengshi"
3. Jingchen [chá chéng]?
An arrow-holding vessel.
4. Huangshichen [huáng shǐ chéng]?
The archives of the Ming and Qing dynasties. It was built in (Beijing) in the 13th year of Jiajing reign in the Ming Dynasty (1534). Liu Ruoyu of the Ming Dynasty, "Zi Zhong Zhi·Da Nei Regulatory Brief": "(Yongtai Gate) is located in the east of South Street, where the emperor's official records, important classics, and books in the stone chamber and golden cabinet since Taizu of the Ming Dynasty are collected." "Books by Gu Yanwu of the Qing Dynasty "The History of the Second Son of Wu Pan": "The history of the previous dynasties was carried out by the emperor's ministers and attendant officials, and they are never seen in the world. The place where the books are collected is called Huang Shicheng." "Qing Yitong Zhi·Jingshi IV·Official Office" ": "Huang Shicheng is in the southeast outside Donghua Gate, where the actual records, jade certificates, and daily notes are hidden." It is also pronounced as "Huangcheng". Qing Dynasty Huang Zongxi's "Talking about Confucianism's Tomb List": "The emperor's flames destroyed the country and history."