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Zihui
The ''Zìhuì'' () is a Chinese dictionary, edited by Mei Yingzuo (梅膺祚) during the late Ming Dynasty and published in 1615, the forty-third year of the Ming Wanli Emperor. The work is divided into 14 scrolls (''juan'' 巻) and contains a total of 33,179 Chinese characters. It was the first dictionary to introduce the modern radical-stroke system. Whilst the ancillary first and last fascicles explain topics like stroke order and radicals, the main ones are named after the twelve Earthly Branches. The Qing Dynasty scholar Wu Renchen ( 1628 – 1689) published the 1666 ''Zihui Bu'' (字彙補 "Zihui supplement"). ==Classification system== Compared to the 540 section headers used in the earlier ''Shuowen Jiezi'', the dictionary reduced the number of radicals (''bushou'' 部首, literally 'section header') used for classification to 214 and included a number of non-standard character forms known as ''sú zì'' (俗字). The ''Zihui'' also formed the basis for the later ''Zhengzitong'' written by Zhang Zilie (張自烈). In order to make this lexicographical advance into the logically arranged 214 radicals, Mei Yingzuo simplified and rationalized the inefficient classification system used in the ''Shuowen Jiezi'' in which some radicals contain few characters. For instance, its "man radical" 男, which compounds the "field radical" 田 and the "power radical" 力, only lists three: ''nan'' 男 ("man; male"), ''sheng'' 甥 ("nephew; niece"), and ''jiu'' 舅 ("uncle; brother in law"). The ''Zihui'' more efficiently lists ''nan'' 男 under the "power radical", ''sheng'' 甥 under the "life radical" 生, and ''jiu'' 舅 under the "mortar radical" 臼.
抄文引用元・出典: フリー百科事典『 ウィキペディア(Wikipedia)』 ■ウィキペディアで「Zihui」の詳細全文を読む
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