Kun's similar-shaped characters include, in addition to stick, mixed and won.
Kun is pronounced kūn, and the explanation is as follows:
1. Descendants, descendants. Such as: ~ descendants (descendants). After~.
Yu and Wei Zhikun. ——Zuo Si's "Ode to Wu Du"
Translation: The brothers of Yu and Wei.
2. Brother: ~ younger brother (a. brother; b. friendly and dear). ~ Zhong. ~ Season. ~ Jade (a respectful term for calling someone a brother).
Kun, brother. ——"Guangyun"
Translation: Kun refers to brothers.
3. Numerous: ~ insects (general name for insects).
Insects are as good as centipedes. Kun, everyone. ——"The Book of Dadaili"
4. Mountain name ("Kunlun Mountain", located at the junction of China's Xinjiang Uygur Autonomous Region, Tibet Autonomous Region and Qinghai Province.), ancient legend
Jade Mountain.
Mixed pronunciation: hùn; hún, the explanation is as follows:
1. Mix together: ~ miscellaneous. ~And. ~ Same. ~ Confused. ~For a talk.
2. Chaos, chaos: ~ chaos. ~The Demon King of the World.
3. Meng, Chong: Meng~. ~ Charge. ~ Enter. Fish eyes ~ beads.
4. Just living it up: Hu~. ~Things.
5. Hún: Same as "hun". Such as: bastard (unreasonable, unreasonable; also refers to unreasonable people, bad guys)
English translation: to mix; blend; mingle; to bumble along
won Pinyin: hún; Cantonese pronunciation: wan4;
Radical: 飣?; Stroke: 11
Wubi input method: qnjx; ? Stroke order number: 35525111535
Explanation: 〔~饨〕A kind of food that is cooked and eaten with soup. It is made of thin bread and stuffed. ("饨" is pronounced softly).
English translation: dumpling soup; wonton
Local name of wonton:
Beijing and other places in northern China are usually called wonton.
Sichuan is commonly known as Chaoshou. Sichuan people are fond of spicy food. There is a famous dish called "Red Oil Chaoshou". ("Chaoshou" means "holding your hand")
Chongqing is called Chaoshou, and Kaizhou District, Wanzhou, Yunyang and other places in the northeast of Chongqing are called Baomian. ?[3-4]?
Some people in Hubei also call it dumplings (called in Wuhan) and bread noodles (called in other areas of Hubei).
Wannan, Anhui is called "burden".
The pronunciation of "wonton" in the Wu dialect of Jiangnan, Shanghai, southern Jiangsu, Zhejiang and other places is [?w?nd?n], which is quite similar to the Cantonese pronunciation.
Jiangxi is commonly known as clear soup, and in some places it is also called noodles and wontons.
Because the word "wonton" is relatively rare in Guangdong and the knowledge level of people in the past was limited, it is customary to write "wonton" (Cantonese
with the same pronunciation) as "wonton" in English. That is derived from Cantonese.
Extended information
Related words for mixed words:
1. Confusing hùn xiáo?
Explanation:
(1) Mixed; blurred boundaries (mostly used for abstract things): authenticity ~.
(2) To confuse; to blur the boundaries; ~ black and white | the boundaries between ourselves and the enemy cannot be tolerated ~.
Sentence: This will help you avoid confusion and stay organized when you have many scripts, and it will also help you later when you need to execute them all at once
It will also help you play back the scripts helped.
2. Mix in hùn jì
Explanation:
Sentence: He put on a tattered SS jacket, pretended to be a captured Nazi officer, and blended in.
Source: Tang Yuanzhen's "Hundred Rhymes for the Old Man in Qujiang": "Disfigured and wearing a red scarf, wearing a yellow scarf when wandering around."
English translation: hide one's identity
3. Chaos? hùn dùn
Explanation:
(1) In Chinese legend, it refers to the blurry scene before the formation of the universe: ~ the beginning. Also written as chaos.
(2) Describe the appearance of ignorance.
Sentence: Hawking said that the first blow to Newton's idea that the universe could not be born from chaos came in 1992, when a planet was observed
orbiting a star that is not our sun.
4. Ménghùn
Explanation: Using deception to make people believe in false things: ~ Pass the test.
Sentence: Before the 2008 milk scandal, Chinese dairy farmers often mixed milk with water or added cheap ingredients like melamine to fool protein tests. Pass.
5. Fish and dragon mixed yú lóng hùn zá
Explanation: It means to describe good people and bad people mixed together.
Source: Tang Dynasty Zhang Zhihe's "The Fisherman's Ci" No. 13: "The wind stirs up the waves in the sky, and the fish and dragons mix in the river."
Similar words: good and bad alike
< p>Antonyms: clear distinction between Jing and Wei, black and white6. Mixed dragon and snake? lóng shé hùn zá
Explanation: It is a metaphor for good people and bad people mixed together.
Source: "Dunhuang Bian Anthology·Wu Zixu Bian Wen": "It is difficult to stand alone, seeing such hardships, soap and silk (white) are difficult to distinguish, dragons and snakes are mixed."
Usage : Subject-predicate form; used as predicate and attributive.