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Find three same Chinese characters to form a new Chinese character

1. Five Elements

Five elements (wǔxíng|five elements of metal, wood, water, fire and earth): refers to metal, wood, water, fire and earth. The ancients believed that these five elements Various substances constitute all things in the world. Traditional Chinese medicine uses the five elements to explain various physiological and pathological phenomena. Superstitious people use the five elements to predict people's destiny.

What is very interesting is that the character structures of gold, wood, water, fire and earth all exist.

01 Xin (xīn), prosperity of wealth. Mostly used for store numbers or people's names. "Gold" originally means wealth. Three "金" characters formed into a pyramid shape, of course, means prosperity. Everyone must be familiar with the word "Xin". There are still many stores/companies with this word in their names. (Therefore, some dictionaries also explain "Xin" as: a commonly used word for store sizes and people's names, which means prosperity with more gold. "Xin" should be the richest Chinese character.

02 sen (sēn), There are many trees; they are dense. A single tree does not make a forest. If there are many trees (trees), it is a forest. It seems that many companies like the name "Mulinsen". I seem to have bought leather shoes with the trademark "Mulinsen". "Mu Lin Sen" embodies the magic of Chinese characters.

03 Miao (miǎo), also means "miao". The original meaning is the vastness of water; small and small. Small. There seems to be a person named "Jiang Miao" in my mind. It seems to be from the 95 News. She must be a senior sister. When I saw this name, my first thought was that this girl must have had her fortune told when she was named. She probably lacked the five elements. Water, so the name is very watery:) "Miao" is the most nourishing Chinese character.

04 Yan (yàn), spark, flame. It is worth mentioning that "fire" is more interesting than "wood". "Wood" includes wood, forest, and forest, while "fire" includes:

Fire oracle bones represent flames. The original meaning is the light, flame and heat emitted by the burning object;

The original meaning of Yan is the rising flame, hot and intense heat;

Yan spark, flame;

Incineration Yì (yì) means the appearance of burning fire, and is often used in people’s names. "燚" should be the most popular Chinese character.

05 垚 (yáo) high. This character is not common (so it cannot be typed using the intelligent pinyin input method. I think this character is relatively rare and not suitable for use as a name. At least I will not choose a character that is difficult to recognize as a child's name). I occasionally see them either as store fonts or used for people's names. "Tu" also includes Tu, Gui and Yao. When I saw "Yao" for the first time, I guessed based on the literal meaning that the word "Yao" should mean more earth (because Xin, Sen, Miao, and Yan basically all mean more gold, more wood, more water, more fire, so I think Xin, Sen, Miao, and Yan should belong to the idioms). I looked up the dictionary and found out that it means "high":) Maybe the ancients thought that a lot of soil would be very high if it was piled up. "Yao" is probably the most unsophisticated Chinese character.

2. Six domestic animals

Six domestic animals (liùchù|six domestic animals: ox, horse, goat, pig, dog, fowl): refers to six kinds of domestic animals, cattle, horses, sheep, and pigs , dogs, and chickens are all animals that have been domesticated by humans; they also generally refer to domestic animals.

I am about to announce the title "Which Chinese character is the best?" 》The answer. hehe. I don’t know when it became popular to say “cow”. People who trade in stocks like the “bull market” and hate the “bear market”. “Cow man” means that someone is very good, successful and has capital. “Look at your bearishness” is a curse. To say that someone is really "cool" is to praise someone for being awesome. On the Internet, "cool" is also used to describe someone who is extremely cool.

Writing this, I suddenly remembered that when I was in college, a classmate of Hubei Zhongxiang (ccnu\Chinese 96) had this catchphrase: "Two cows facing each other - more awesome", and he often looked very awesome when he said this. B's appearance, because many people don't know what "two cows facing each other's butts" means and can't help but ask him for the second half of the comment. Look, if one cow is so awesome, of course three cows will be awesome. What are the words for three cows?

06 Ben (bēn), a variant of "Ben", means to walk or run in a hurry; to do something in a hurry. The most awesome Chinese character is undoubtedly "Ben". The only drawback is that the meaning of "Ben" is not particularly awesome. Why did the ancients use three cows to represent "running"? I guess the creator of the word had witnessed the scene of three bulls fighting each other and running hard :) It is said that there is a team named "Running Bulls". If the name is awesome and the team is awesome, I strongly suggest that the Chinese team be renamed "Running Bulls". There seems to be a man named "Niu Ben" who is an old artist. In 1983, he won the Best Supporting Actor Award at the 3rd China Golden Rooster Award for "The Wrangler". "Ben" is naturally the most awesome Chinese character.

07 骉 (biāo), the appearance of galloping horses.

08 羴 (shān), a variant of "軻". Sheep odor, the smell of mutton.

09 Biāo (biāo) originally means the appearance of a dog running; quickly; it means "blast", storm, whirlwind. Yisheng (surge) means rapid rise.

Among the six animals, cows, horses, sheep, and dogs (dogs) all have the word character structure, but pigs and chickens do not. It seems that our old ancestors were more discriminatory towards pigs and chickens:)

10 Cū (cū), a variant of "thick". There is such a record in "Zuo Zhuan": "If there is no grain, there will be no coarse grain." The structure of the word "deer" means "coarse". I don't quite understand it, and I don't know why the ancients created the character this way. Anyone who knows the answer will definitely tell me. Thank you.

11 豱 (xiān), a variant of "fresh". In ancient times, it refers to raw fish; fresh, bright, beautiful (tastes), delicious and seasonal food. Three fish means freshness is a good idea. The taste of fish is indeed very fresh:) You can see the word "豻" in many restaurants. When you see the name of the restaurant, you will know that the special dishes in the store are related to fish (I have eaten it, and the special dish is boiled water) fish), although everyone may not know the pronunciation of "豻". I think the word "豻" is a very good word, definitely better than "类".

After talking about the three fish, let’s talk about the three insects. Flowers, birds, insects and fish. Flowers and birds do not have character structures, while insects and fish do.

12 worm (chóng), the traditional form of "worm". The word "worm" is mostly related to insects, snakes, etc. The oracle bone characters are snake-shaped, huǐ, that is, a venomous snake. The latter is the simplified form of "worm".

The last word with the character structure that I know that is related to animals is "赑".

13 赑 (bì).豑屃 (bìxì): a legendary animal, like a turtle. In the old days, the base of large stone monuments was often carved into its shape; it looked like it was exerting force.

Three, one, two, three, four, five, six, seven, eight, ninety... the upper, middle and lower classes speak hands... the sun, the moon, the water, the volcanoes, the stone fields, the soil... the swords, bows, chariots and boats

The pair in elementary school To me, it seems to have happened in the era of Emperor Xi. I vaguely remember that “one, two, three, four, five, six, seven, eight, ninety… the upper, middle and lower classes speak and speak… the sun, the moon, the water, the volcanoes, the rocks, the soil… the swords, bows, chariots and boats” were the order in which I read in primary school. The last few characters with the pin character structure that I know are probably composed of these common characters.

14 Zhong (zhòng), the original meaning is everyone, everyone. "Zhong" comes from three people. "Three" means numerous. "Zhong" means everyone standing. "Zhong" is an oracle bone character. Like many people working under the scorching sun.

人: "One stroke and one stroke is easy to write but difficult to do" means that the word "人" is easy to write but difficult to write, and it is difficult to be a human being. A person takes care of himself and controls himself.

From: Two people are involved in leadership issues, and the person behind follows the footsteps of the person in front. Therefore, the original meaning of "conform" is to accompany or follow.

Public: Three people are involved in management and division of labor.

15 Pin (pǐn), the original meaning is numerous. "Taste" from three mouths. Mouth represents people, and three represents majority, meaning numerous people.

One mouth, 口,

Two mouths, LV, oracle bone shape, like a spine, which is the original character for "膂". Original meaning: backbone

Three mouths, pin

Four mouths, █ (this word really cannot be typed) (jí), public mouth.

16 掱(pá), steal other people’s property. Pickpocket, same as "pickpocket". I think the character "掱" is quite well made and could almost win the Best Creative Award. What is "hand shaking"? It's a thief! What is a thief? The thief is the "three hands" we often call him! Therefore, the word "掱" is very classic. I hate "hands-off". The business they do without capital is to "take" other people's hard-earned hard-earned money as their own. "掱" is the most creative Chinese character.

17 妦 (xié), everyone works together.

18 Jing (jīng): The oracle bone glyph, from the third day, means light. Original meaning: bright, bright.

19 Lei (lěi): Understanding. From three stones. "Three" is not a definite number, it means a lot. Original meaning: many stones. I have never figured out why "Lei" is often used as a name. The meaning of this word is not very good. Does having more stones mean health, wealth or a future? None. If "stone" only refers to "jade", "Lei" can also represent wealth than "Xin":)

20 江(jiān): A variant of "劰". I think "rape" is the worst word. Take a look at the allusion below to understand the reason for my evaluation. Some people say that it reflects the low status of women in ancient China, which may not be unreasonable:) However, many words with beautiful meanings also use "女" as the radical, such as "好".

Adultery is private. ——"Shuowen"

Treachery, stealing. ——"Guangya"

Treachery means hypocrisy. ——"Guangya"

The bandits are traitors. ——"Book Shun Dian"

Those who use wealth from rails are traitors. ——"Guoyu·Luyu"

Stealing weapons for committing adultery. ——"Zuo Zhuan: The Eighteenth Year of Duke Wen"

The more thieves there are, the more rapes there are. ——"Chu Ci·Calling Souls". Note: "Evil."

Because the people were hungry and cold, they were called traitors (xié Samexie). ——"Mozi·Ci Guo"

The treachery and blame of the 渨湋. ——"Mengci·Xixian". Note: "Chaos within is called adultery."

Husband God is fond of peace but hates adultery. ——"Zhuangzi·Xu Wugui". Note: "Those who make promises privately are treacherous."

Therefore, the rule of law through punishment will bring about the prestige of the people, and the prestige of the people will mean that there will be no treachery, and if there is no treachery, the people will be content and content. ——"Shang Jun Shu·Kaisa"

21 Nie (niè): Same as "Nie". Understand. From three ears. Original meaning: whisper in the ear.

22 hōng: Same as "boom". Understand. From three cars. Original meaning: the sound of a group of cars moving.

23 毳 (cuì): knowing. From Sanmao. Original meaning: fine hairs of birds and animals.

Vellus hair, medically speaking, refers to the fine hair growing on other parts of the human body except hair, pubic hair, and armpit hair. Commonly known as "cold hair".

24 Chu (chù): upright, towering. I don't quite understand, "Nie" and "Hong" are correspondingly simplified to "Nie" and "Hong", why the character "chu" is not simplified in the same way - that is: the following two "straight" are replaced by "double" Replacement:) Doesn’t this save a lot of strokes?

Writing this, I finally breathed a sigh of relief. I finally finished describing the words with the structure of pin that I have seen.

I suddenly thought about the word "puppet" in "Puppet". If the three characters of "田" are put together, is it a meaningful Chinese character? So I typed "畾 pronunciation meaning" into Google and pressed Enter. Unfortunately, I entered the forum of "Chinese Input Method World" (/cgi-bin/Forum/UltraBoard.cgi?action=Readamp; BID=6amp; TID=13186amp; SID=101837). I saw a bunch of words with the word "品" in the structure. Oh my god, I went crazy. There were so many, and some of them were words I didn't expect! I list them below. Friends who are interested can look up the dictionary like me and mark the pronunciation and meaning for your reference. I really don't have the energy to do it.

Attachment 1: A Chinese character with the character structure that I accidentally saw in the forum of "Chinese Input Method World" -

靝():

啕():

彽():

咒():

壵():

四():

娨():

歮():

惢():

皛():

畾( ):

嚞():

舙():

譶():

雯():

祥():

飍():

馫():

飝():

厵() :

靐():

龘():