Radical 189 or radical tall (高部) meaning "tall" is one of the 8 Kangxi radicals (214 radicals in total) composed of 10 strokes.
| 高 | |
|---|---|
Radical 189 (U+2FBC)
| |
| 高 (U+9AD8) "tall" | |
| Pronunciations | |
| Pinyin: | gāo |
| Bopomofo: | ㄍㄠ |
| Wade–Giles: | kao1 |
| Cantonese Yale: | gou1 |
| Jyutping: | gou1 |
| Japanese Kana: | コウ kō (on'yomi) たか-い taka-i / たか taka / たか-まる taka-maru / たか-める taka-meru (kun'yomi) |
| Sino-Korean: | 고 go |
| Hán-Việt: | cao |
| Names | |
| Japanese name(s): | 高い/たかい takai |
| Hangul: | 높을 nopeul |
| Stroke order animation | |
In the Kangxi Dictionary, there are 34 characters (out of 49,030) to be found under this radical.
高 is also the 191st indexing component in the Table of Indexing Chinese Character Components predominantly adopted by Simplified Chinese dictionaries published in mainland China.
Evolution
edit- Oracle bone script character
- Bronze script character
- Large seal script character
- Small seal script character
Derived characters
editSinogram
editThe radical is also used as an independent Chinese character. It is one of the kyōiku kanji or kanji taught in elementary school in Japan.[1] It is a second grade kanji.[1]
References
edit- 1 2 "The Kyoiku Kanji (教育漢字) - Kanshudo". www.kanshudo.com. Archived from the original on March 24, 2022. Retrieved 2023-05-06.
Literature
edit- Fazzioli, Edoardo (1987). Chinese calligraphy : from pictograph to ideogram : the history of 214 essential Chinese/Japanese characters. calligraphy by Rebecca Hon Ko. New York: Abbeville Press. ISBN 0-89659-774-1.
- Lunde, Ken (Jan 5, 2009). "Appendix J: Japanese Character Sets" (PDF). CJKV Information Processing: Chinese, Japanese, Korean & Vietnamese Computing (Second ed.). Sebastopol, Calif.: O'Reilly Media. ISBN 978-0-596-51447-1.
External links
editWikimedia Commons has media related to Radical 189.