U+524A, 削
CJK UNIFIED IDEOGRAPH-524A

[U+5249]
CJK Unified Ideographs
[U+524B]

Translingual edit

Han character edit

Stroke order
 

(Kangxi radical 18, +7, 9 strokes, cangjie input 火月中弓 (FBLN), four-corner 92200, composition )

Derived characters edit

References edit

  • Kangxi Dictionary: page 140, character 5
  • Dai Kanwa Jiten: character 2000
  • Dae Jaweon: page 317, character 11
  • Hanyu Da Zidian (first edition): volume 1, page 341, character 2
  • Unihan data for U+524A

Chinese edit

trad.
simp. #

Glyph origin edit

Historical forms of the character
Warring States Shuowen Jiezi (compiled in Han)
Chu slip and silk script Small seal script
   

Phono-semantic compound (形聲形声, OC *slewɢ) : phonetic (OC *slew, *slews) + semantic .

Pronunciation 1 edit


Note:
  • xiāo - vernacular (“to pare; to slice the ball”);
  • xuē/xuè - literary.
Note:
  • “to pare with a knife; to delete; to mock; to remove fat; to damage the spleen”.

  • Dialectal data
Variety Location
Mandarin Beijing /ɕiɑu⁵⁵/
Harbin /ɕiau⁴⁴/
/ɕyɛ²¹³/
/ɕyɛ⁴⁴/
Tianjin /ɕiɑu²¹/
/ɕye²¹/
Jinan /ɕyə²¹³/
Qingdao /syə⁵⁵/
Zhengzhou /syo²⁴/
Xi'an /ɕyo²¹/
Xining /ɕyu⁴⁴/
Yinchuan /ɕye¹³/
Lanzhou /ɕyə¹³/
Ürümqi /ɕyɤ²¹³/
Wuhan /ɕio⁵⁵/ ~球
/ɕio²¹³/ 剝~
Chengdu /ɕye³¹/
Guiyang /ɕie²¹/
Kunming /ɕio³¹/
Nanjing /sioʔ⁵/
/syeʔ⁵/
Hefei /ɕyɐʔ⁵/
Jin Taiyuan /ɕyəʔ²/
Pingyao /ɕyʌʔ¹³/
Hohhot /ɕyaʔ⁴³/
Wu Shanghai /ɕiaʔ⁵/
Suzhou /siɑʔ⁵/
Hangzhou /ɕiɑʔ⁵/
Wenzhou /ɕa²¹³/
Hui Shexian /ɕiɔʔ²¹/
Tunxi /siu⁵/
Xiang Changsha /sio²⁴/
Xiangtan /sio²⁴/
Gan Nanchang /ɕiɔʔ⁵/
Hakka Meixian /siok̚¹/
Taoyuan /siok̚²²/
Cantonese Guangzhou /sœk̚³/
Nanning /ɬœk̚³³/
Hong Kong /sœk̚³/
Min Xiamen (Hokkien) /siɔk̚³²/
/siaʔ³²/
Fuzhou (Eastern Min) /siɛʔ²³/
Jian'ou (Northern Min) /siɔ²⁴/
/sia²⁴/
Shantou (Teochew) /siauʔ²/
Haikou (Hainanese) /tia⁵⁵/

Rime
Character
Reading # 1/1
Initial () (16)
Final () (107)
Tone (調) Checked (Ø)
Openness (開合) Open
Division () III
Fanqie
Baxter sjak
Reconstructions
Zhengzhang
Shangfang
/sɨɐk̚/
Pan
Wuyun
/siɐk̚/
Shao
Rongfen
/siɑk̚/
Edwin
Pulleyblank
/sɨak̚/
Li
Rong
/siak̚/
Wang
Li
/sĭak̚/
Bernard
Karlgren
/si̯ak̚/
Expected
Mandarin
Reflex
xue
Expected
Cantonese
Reflex
soek3
BaxterSagart system 1.1 (2014)
Character
Reading # 2/3 3/3
Modern
Beijing
(Pinyin)
xiāo xiào
Middle
Chinese
‹ sjak › ‹ sjewH ›
Old
Chinese
/*[s]ewk/ /*[s]ewk-s/
English scrape, pare scrape, pare

Notes for Old Chinese notations in the Baxter–Sagart system:

* Parentheses "()" indicate uncertain presence;
* Square brackets "[]" indicate uncertain identity, e.g. *[t] as coda may in fact be *-t or *-p;
* Angle brackets "<>" indicate infix;
* Hyphen "-" indicates morpheme boundary;

* Period "." indicates syllable boundary.
Zhengzhang system (2003)
Character
Reading # 1/1
No. 13761
Phonetic
component
Rime
group
Rime
subdivision
2
Corresponding
MC rime
Old
Chinese
/*slewɢ/

Definitions edit

  1. to pare with a knife; to peel with a knife; to scrape off the surface; to slice
  2. to divide; to split; to separate
  3. to reduce; to cut down
  4. to weaken
  5. to rob; to expropriate; to plunder
  6. (literary or Taiwanese Hokkien) to delete; to remove; to cut out
  7. (table tennis) to slice (the ball)
  8. (ideophonic) steep (as if sliced); precipitous; sheer
  9. (ideophonic) emaciated; scraggy; slender
  10. (historical) writing knife
  11. (historical) thin slips of wood used for writing; letters
  12. (Cantonese) skinny; lean
  13. (Cantonese) to hurt (the stomach)
  14. (Hokkien) to mock; to ridicule; to have a dig at someone (to embarrass someone)
  15. (Xiamen Hokkien) to remove fat, etc. from a body organ (of food or beverage)
  16. (Xiamen Hokkien) to damage the spleen, stomach, etc. (of food or beverage)
  17. (Taiwanese Hokkien) to compete; to fight
Synonyms edit
  • (to reduce):
  • (to weaken):
  • (to remove):
  • (to plunder):
  • (to mock):
  • (to remove fat, to damage the spleen): (Hokkien) 𠛅 (khau)
Usage notes edit

Use (bāo) for peeling something with one's hands, like a tangerine. Use (xiāo) for peeling something with a knife or peeler, like a potato.

Compounds edit

Pronunciation 2 edit


Definitions edit

  1. Original form of (qiào, “sword sheath”).

Pronunciation 3 edit



BaxterSagart system 1.1 (2014)
Character
Reading # 1/3
Modern
Beijing
(Pinyin)
shào
Middle
Chinese
‹ sræwH ›
Old
Chinese
/*[sˁ]rewk-s/
English zone near the capital

Notes for Old Chinese notations in the Baxter–Sagart system:

* Parentheses "()" indicate uncertain presence;
* Square brackets "[]" indicate uncertain identity, e.g. *[t] as coda may in fact be *-t or *-p;
* Angle brackets "<>" indicate infix;
* Hyphen "-" indicates morpheme boundary;

* Period "." indicates syllable boundary.

Definitions edit

  1. (historical) fief within three hundred li from the state capital

Japanese edit

Shinjitai
Kyūjitai
[1]

削󠄁
+&#xE0101;?
(Adobe-Japan1)
 
削󠄃
+&#xE0103;?
(Hanyo-Denshi)
(Moji_Joho)
The displayed kanji may be different from the image due to your environment.
See here for details.

Kanji edit

(common “Jōyō” kanji)

  1. plane, whittle

Readings edit

From Middle Chinese (MC sjak):

From Middle Chinese; compare Mandarin (qiào, xiào):

From native Japanese roots:

Compounds edit

References edit

  1. ^ Haga, Gōtarō (1914) 漢和大辞書 [The Great Kanji-Japanese Dictionary] (in Japanese), Fourth edition, Tōkyō: Kōbunsha, →DOI, page 300 (paper), page 200 (digital)

Korean edit

Etymology edit

From Middle Chinese (MC sjak).

Hanja edit

Korean Wikisource has texts containing the hanja:

Wikisource

(eumhun 깎을 (kkakkeul sak))

  1. Hanja form? of (cut).

Compounds edit

References edit

  • 국제퇴계학회 대구경북지부 (國際退溪學會 大邱慶北支部) (2007). Digital Hanja Dictionary, 전자사전/電子字典. [1]

Vietnamese edit

Han character edit

: Hán Nôm readings: tước, tược, tướt, tượt

  1. This term needs a translation to English. Please help out and add a translation, then remove the text {{rfdef}}.