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兀 (Kangxi radical 10, 儿+1, 3 strokes, cangjie input 一山 (MU), four-corner 10210, composition ⿱一儿)
simp. and trad. |
兀 | |
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alternative forms | 㐳 |
Historical forms of the character 兀 | ||
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Western Zhou | Shuowen Jiezi (compiled in Han) | Liushutong (compiled in Ming) |
Bronze inscriptions | Small seal script | Transcribed ancient scripts |
References:
Mostly from Richard Sears' Chinese Etymology site (authorisation),
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兀
兀
Borrowed from Turkic, ultimately from Proto-Turkic *ol (Zhang and Zhang, 2007). Compare Old Turkic 𐰆𐰞 (ul¹), Turkish o (“he, she, it; that”), Uyghur ئۇ (u, “he, she, it; that”), Chuvash вӑл (văl, “he, she, it”) and Karakhanid اُلْ (ol, “he, she, it; that”). First recorded in the Song Dynasty:
兀
(This etymology is missing or incomplete. Please add to it, or discuss it at the Etymology scriptorium.)
兀
兀
For pronunciation and definitions of 兀 – see 尢 (“lame; crippled”). (This character is a variant form of 尢). |
兀 (eum 올 (ol))
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.兀: Hán Nôm readings: ngột, ngát, ngút
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