Radical 92

from Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
91 ⽚ ◄ 92 ► ⽜ 93
Pinyin : yá (= tooth)
Zhuyin : 一 ㄚ
Hiragana : き ば kiba
Kanji : 牙 kiba (= canine tooth)
Hangul : 어금니
Sinocorean : 아 a (= canine tooth)
Codepoint : U + 7259
Stroke sequence : 牙

Radical 92 , meaning “ tooth ”, is one of 34 of the 214 traditional radicals in Chinese script that are written with four strokes. With only 2 character combinations in Mathews' Chinese-English Dictionary , there are very few characters that can be found under this radical in the lexicon.

The radical "tooth" will only in the traditional characters - list of traditional radicals consisting of 214 radicals, the 92nd 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 99th position.

The seal form shows two clenched teeth.

Most of the time, Laut occurs as a sound carrier in compound characters, as in 鸦 (ya = raven bird), 芽 (ya = scion), 伢 (ya = jack), 蚜 (ya = aphid), 讶 (ya = be amazed), 呀 (ya = Exclamation of astonishment like Oh!). It is unclear whether it in 邪 (= heretical) indicates the clenched teeth of the fanatics.

The characters listed under 牙 in older reference works are mostly very uncommon today. In the Cihai there are only three other than 牙 itself, namely: 邪 (ya = false doctrine), 鸦 (ya = raven bird) and 雅 (ya = neat). Other dictionaries sort these characters under their other components 阝 (= right ear), 鸟 (niao = bird) and 隹 (zhui = short-tailed bird) and no longer list 牙 as a radical.


Character combinations ruled by radical 92

Strokes character
+ 00

+ 08

In the Unicode block Kangxi radicals , radical 92 is coded under the code point number 12.123 (U + 2F5B).

literature

For detailed references, see List of Traditional Radicals: Literature

Web links

Commons : Radikal 92  - Graphic representations of Radikal 92