Radical 194

"鬼" redirects here. For other uses, see 鬼 (disambiguation).
Radical 194 (U+2FC1)
(U+9B3C) "ghost, demon"
Pinyin: guǐ
Bopomofo: ㄍㄨㄟˇ
Wade–Giles: kuei3
Jyutping: gwai2
Cantonese Yale: gwai2
Hiragana: キ, おに ki, oni
Kanji: 鬼 oni
鬼繞 kinyō
Hangul: 귀신 gwisin
Sino-Korean: 귀 gwi
Stroke order animation

Radical 194 ( Unicode U+9B3C, pinyin guǐ meaning "ghost" or "demon") is one of eight Kangxi radicals written with ten strokes.

The character is historically composed of "legs", representing a large demon's head and a curl looking similar to taken to represent a swirl of vapour, or a demon's tail. The character can be traced to the oracle bone script, where it depicts a man kneeling on a monster head.

Most of the characters derived from the radical have meanings related to ghosts or souls, including "devil, demon", "black magic", "nightmare", "soul". In some signs, however, the radical is present purely as a phonetic marker, for example in , the State of Wei during the Spring and Autumn period.

Derived characters

seal script character
Strokes Characters
+ 0
+ 3
+ 4 鬾 鬿 魀 魁 魂
+ 5 魃 魄 魅 魆
+ 6
+ 7 魈 魉
+ 8 魊 魋 魌 魍 魎 魏
+10
+11 魑 魒 魓 魔
+12 魕 魖
+14 魗 魘 魙

Literature

See also

External links

Wikimedia Commons has media related to Radical 194.
This article is issued from Wikipedia - version of the Tuesday, October 20, 2015. The text is available under the Creative Commons Attribution/Share Alike but additional terms may apply for the media files.