Radical 105

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104 ⽧ ◄ 105 ► ⽩ 106
Pinyin : (= two hands)
Zhuyin : ㄅ ㄛ
Hiragana : は つ が し ら
hatsugashira
Kanji : 癶 頭hatsugashira
Hangul : 걸을
Sinocorean : 발 pal
Codepoint : U + 7676
Stroke sequence : 癶

Radical 105 , which means “two hands above”, is one of 23 of the 214 traditional radicals in Chinese writing that are written with five strokes.

With 4 character combinations in Mathews' Chinese-English Dictionary, there are very few characters that can be found under this radical in the lexicon.

The radical "two hands above" takes only in the traditional characters - list of traditional radicals consisting of 214 radicals 105. position. It can be found in a completely different place in modern abbreviation dictionaries. In the New Chinese-German Dictionary from the People's Republic of China, for example, it is in 154th position.

This is an obsolete sign that can only be found in conjunction with others in the new dictionaries today. It originally shows two feet that point in opposite directions and means “separation, difference”, but also “to step up”, with the help of a stool on a wagon. The word “ascend” is written today with the stool under the radical. If the “door” follows, it means “to visit someone”. In China all doors have / had a step.


Character combinations ruled by radical 105

Strokes character
+ 00

+ 03

+ 04 癸 癹 発

+ 07 登 發

In the Unicode block Kangxi radicals , radical 105 is coded under the code point number 12.136 (U + 2F68).

literature

For detailed references, see List of Traditional Radicals: Literature

Web links

Commons : Radikal 105  - Graphic representations of Radikal 105