U+9157, 酗
CJK UNIFIED IDEOGRAPH-9157

[U+9156]
CJK Unified Ideographs
[U+9158]

Translingual

Han character

(Kangxi radical 164, 酉+4, 11 strokes, cangjie input 一田山大 (MWUK), four-corner 12670, composition )

References

  • Kangxi Dictionary: page 1281, character 19
  • Dai Kanwa Jiten: character 39794
  • Dae Jaweon: page 1781, character 16
  • Hanyu Da Zidian (first edition): volume 6, page 3576, character 9
  • Unihan data for U+9157

Chinese

trad.
simp. #
alternative forms

𨠮
𨠯

Glyph origin

Written as in Shuowen. Compare (OC *qʰun).

Ideogrammic compound (會意 / 会意) and phono-semantic compound (形聲 / 形声, OC *qʰos): semantic (alcohol) + phonetic (OC *qʰoŋ, bad).

Pronunciation



Rime
Character
Reading # 1/1
Initial () (32)
Final () (24)
Tone (調) Departing (H)
Openness (開合) Closed
Division () III
Fanqie
Baxter xjuH
Reconstructions
Zhengzhang
Shangfang
/hɨoH/
Pan
Wuyun
/hioH/
Shao
Rongfen
/xioH/
Edwin
Pulleyblank
/huə̆H/
Li
Rong
/xioH/
Wang
Li
/xĭuH/
Bernhard
Karlgren
/xi̯uH/
Expected
Mandarin
Reflex
Expected
Cantonese
Reflex
heoi3
Zhengzhang system (2003)
Character
Reading # 1/1
No. 13888
Phonetic
component
Rime
group
Rime
subdivision
0
Corresponding
MC rime
Old
Chinese
/*qʰos/

Definitions

  1. to be given to heavy drinking
  2. to be roaring drunk; to become violent under the influence of alcohol

Compounds

  • 沉酗
  • 酗訟 / 酗讼
  • 酗酒 (xùjiǔ)
  • 酗酣
  • 酗醟 / 酗蒏
  • 醉酗

References

  • 莆田市荔城区档案馆 [Putian City Licheng District Archives], editor (2022), “”, in 莆仙方言文读字汇 [Puxian Dialect Literary Reading Dictionary] (overall work in Mandarin and Puxian Min), page 269.

Japanese

Kanji

(Hyōgai kanji)

  1. drunk
  2. to become violent under the influence of alcohol

Readings

  • On (unclassified): (ku)

Korean

Hanja

• (hu) (hangeul , revised hu, McCune–Reischauer hu, Yale hwu)

  1. drunk
  2. to become violent under the influence of alcohol

Vietnamese

Han character

: Hán Việt readings: [1][2][3][4], húng[1][4], hung[2]
: Nôm readings: [1], húng

  1. chữ Hán form of húng (drunk)

References

  1. 1.0 1.1 1.2 Trần (2004).
  2. 2.0 2.1 Trần (1999).
  3. ^ Nguyễn (1974).
  4. 4.0 4.1 Thiều Chửu (1942).