Traditional Culture Encyclopedia - Photography major - Kou has several pronunciations
Kou has several pronunciations
Kou has 1 pronunciation.
The pinyin of Kò is: kòu.
Interpretation: "cocoa"; nail polish; refers to cardamom, a perennial evergreen herb with 14 strokes. Related words include white cardamom, grass cardamom, cardamom, and cardamom.
Radical radical: Fuck.
Stroke order: horizontal, vertical, vertical, dot, dot, horizontal hook, horizontal, horizontal, left, vertical hook, vertical, horizontal, horizontal hook/horizontal hook, dot.
Number of strokes: 14.
Structure: upper and lower structure.
Wubi encoding problem
According to the general splitting rules of Wubi input method, the word "密" should be split into A (艹) P (冖) F (二) C (again) . However, because the Wubi input method in early computer systems did not support repeated coding of phrases and single characters, the encoding of the commonly used word "labor" happened to be APFC, so the encoding of the word "寔" was artificially specified as APFL.
Today's Wubi input method already allows phrases and single-character encoding, but some still use the historical APFL encoding, such as Jiepin Wubi, and other input methods use APFC instead. Due to serious irrationality in the coding of APFL, the standard Wubi coding of the word "寇" should be APFC.
Explanation of cardamom words
1. Cardamom: herb. The fruit is oblate spherical. The seeds are fragrant and are used as traditional Chinese medicinal materials.
2. Kodan: oil for dyeing nails.
3. Kou Kou: The fruit of a plant called Alpinia japonica (a plant belonging to the Zingiberaceae family, a perennial grass), also known as amomum villosum, false amomum villosum, grass cardamom, and cardamom. When the capsule is ripe Red, can be used as medicine.
4. Nutmeg: a hard and fragrant spherical seed widely used as a spice. Also known as "meat fruit".
5. Caokou Pill: Caokou Pill, the name of the traditional Chinese medicine prescription.
Citation explanation
Also known as grass fruit. Perennial herbs. It is about ten feet tall and bears fruit in autumn. Produced in Lingnan. Southerners call it the flower that has not yet fully bloomed, because it looks like a pregnant body. It is often used as a metaphor for girls in poetry. Du Mu's poem "Farewell" of the Tang Dynasty: "Pingping has been curling up for more than thirteen years, and the cardamom branches are on the head in early February." The poem "Nanxiangzi" by Ouyang Jiong of the Later Shu Dynasty: Reed wine drops on the cane branches, sunflower mats are spread, and cardamom flowers are in the evening day.
The poem "Spring Thoughts in the Small Garden" written by Lu You of the Song Dynasty: "The sadness in the small pavilion enters the lilac knots, and the cardamom shoots grow in the spring in the quiet path." Xu Zichang's "Water Margin·Marriage" of the Ming Dynasty: "I dream of holding mandarin duck quilts around Wushan, but It's pitiful to have a baby with cardamom. "Scene 1 of Tian Han's "Rejuvenation Song": "Coconut fat, cardamom fragrance, you are nourished by nature's richness.
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