踌
Appearance
See also: 躊
|
Translingual
[edit]Han character
[edit]踌 (Kangxi radical 157, 足+7, 14 strokes, cangjie input 口一手大戈 (RMQKI), composition ⿰𧾷寿)
References
[edit]- Kangxi Dictionary: not present, would follow page 1227, character 9
- Hanyu Da Zidian (first edition): volume 6, page 3707, character 6
- Unihan data for U+8E0C
Chinese
[edit]For pronunciation and definitions of 踌 – see 躊. (This character is the simplified form of 躊). |
Notes:
|
Japanese
[edit]踌 | |
躊 |
Kanji
[edit]踌
(Hyōgai kanji, shinjitai kanji, kyūjitai form 躊)
Readings
[edit]- Go-on: じゅう (jū)←ぢう (diu, historical)
- Kan-on: ちゅう (chū)←ちう (tiu, historical)
- Kun: ためらう (tamerau, 踌う)←ためらふ (tamerafu, 踌ふ, historical)
Usage notes
[edit]Not used in Japanese, despite this character is included in the JIS X 0213 character set introduced in 2000 suggests that it is an extended shinjitai. The kyūjitai form 躊 is more commonly encountered in Japanese.
Categories:
- CJK Unified Ideographs block
- Han script characters
- Translingual lemmas
- Translingual symbols
- Chinese lemmas
- Mandarin lemmas
- Cantonese lemmas
- Hokkien lemmas
- Middle Chinese lemmas
- Old Chinese lemmas
- Chinese hanzi
- Mandarin hanzi
- Cantonese hanzi
- Hokkien hanzi
- Middle Chinese hanzi
- Old Chinese hanzi
- Chinese terms spelled with 踌
- Chinese simplified forms
- Japanese kanji
- Japanese hyōgai kanji
- Japanese kanji with goon reading じゅう
- Japanese kanji with historical goon reading ぢう
- Japanese kanji with kan'on reading ちゅう
- Japanese kanji with historical kan'on reading ちう
- Japanese kanji with kun reading ためら・う
- Japanese kanji with historical kun reading ためら・ふ