What to read "Xi" Is it traditional?
Seal pinyin: xǐ traditional Chinese characters: seal radical: jade, external strokes: 5, total strokes: 10, five strokes 86&; 98:QIGY Cang Xie: NFMGI stroke sequence number: 3523411214 quadrilateral number: 27 103 UniCode:CJK unified the basic meaning of Chinese character U+73BA-. Emperors wear seals, and courtiers wear seals. Without the imperial seal, Wang Yan could not have reached all parts of the world. If there is no seal, the text of the department will be offset and cannot be completed where it belongs. This has been the case since the Qin and Han Dynasties. The seals worn by emperors, empresses and empresses are used by ministers. There are rules, otherwise it will turn around. There were 24 seals in Ming Dynasty and 25 seals in Qing Dynasty. ● seal)xǐㄒㄧˇχ seal refers to the seal of the emperor since the Qin Dynasty: jade ~. Zhang ~ minister. ~ books. ~ part (sealed). ~ ribbon. Chinese-English translation-Chinese-English translation-Chinese-English translation-Chinese-English translation-Chinese-English translation. Royal seal xi is the earliest name of seal. Before the Qin Dynasty, both official seals and private seals were called "seals". However, the writing of this "seal" is either "gold" or "earth", which is named because the material is different from copper and earth. After Qin unified the six countries, a series of hierarchical systems were formulated, and the "Jeffling City" in charge of the seal system was established in Shaofu. At that time, it was stipulated that the emperor was called "seal" alone (from then on [Jin Er] wrote "seal"), and its material was jade, and the subjects were only called "seal", not jade. The Han Dynasty basically followed the Qin system, but the system was slightly relaxed, which some princes and queens called "feng". Judging from the official seals of the ancient Warring States period, all of them only wrote their official positions, and there was no name of "seal" or "seal". Of course, this was widely used before the Qin Dynasty. However, with the reform of the first emperor, such as "I" for the emperor, "seal" for the emperor's seal. Since then, it has been spread to future dynasties. In fact, the emperor's seal is sometimes called "seal" and "seal", both of which appeared in the seals of emperors in previous dynasties.