What does the word "淏" mean?

The word "淏" means clear water.

Introduction to the character 淏:

淏, a third-level Chinese character, is pronounced 描 (hào), the phonetic notation is ㄏㄠˋ, the radical is 氵, and the radical strokes are 3 strokes , can also be used as a personal name, such as Zhang Hao in the Song Dynasty, which means the appearance of clear water, from "Ji Yun".

Text definition:

淏〈Shape〉: the appearance of clear water. Hao, clear appearance. ——"Ji Yun", Hao hào; the water is clear and beautiful. When used as a person's name, it can be used as a metaphor for uprightness, innocence, and peace.

What is the meaning of the name "淏":

The original meaning of the word "淏" refers to the appearance of clear water. The word used in the name has the meaning of being clear and knowledgeable. When paired with Haohe, Haozhi, Haoyun, Haoteng, Haoyao, Haobing, etc., it has rich connotations and is the first choice word for parents to refer to when naming their children.

淏, pronounced as hào, notated as ㄏㄠˋ, the radical is 氵, and the radical strokes are 3 strokes. It can also be used as a personal name, such as Zhang Hao in the Song Dynasty, which means the appearance of clear water, from "Ji Yun".

The word "淏" is used in the name, which has the beautiful meaning of being clean and pure in heart, being aboveboard in doing things, and being magnanimous. For boys, it is suitable to use words with strong and tough meanings such as Yi, Qiang and Gang to set off the masculine temperament; for girls, it is suitable to use words with soft and beautiful meanings such as soft, Shu and Yan to set off the feminine temperament.

, which is the phonetic character in Chinese characters. Since their number is not large and most of them are commonly used words, we don’t need to talk about them.

Here, we only talk about the phonetic function of pictophonetic characters. Most of the phonetic symbols of pictophonetic characters are phonograms that can be used alone. They are used as phonetic symbols to represent sounds, which are not as accurate as the phonetic symbols of alphabets.

The development of the sources of Chinese characters:

The characters before the Shang Dynasty all belong to this stage. The second stage is the phonetic writing stage, which is based on ideographs and phonetic writing as the main body. From oracle bone inscriptions to the characters of the Qin Dynasty all belong to this stage. The third stage is the picophonetic stage with picophonetic characters as the main body, and some phonographic characters and phonetic characters are retained. From the Qin and Han Dynasties to modern Chinese characters, all belong to this stage.