The pronunciation here: chōng, the initial consonant is ch, the final rhyme is ong, and the tone is the first tone.
1. Interpretation: River branch (mostly used in place names): river~. Shrimp ~ (in Guangdong).
2. Another pronunciation: yǒng?, the initial consonant is y, the final syllable is ong, and the tone is the third tone.
Interpretation:
1. Water or clouds emerge: tears are like springs~. Wind and clouds~.
2. Emerging from water or clouds: after the rain, the sky clears, and a bright moon appears. A smile appeared on his face.
3. Waves with a semicircular crest, extremely large wavelength and extremely high wave speed.
The character Yong belongs to the Yong character family. In the Yong character family, the character Yong is both a sound symbol and a symbol for meaning. The Chinese characters of the Yong family are all related to the meaning of "buried, buried, closed". The original meaning of gu is "water emerging from the ground."
3. Evolution of glyphs:
Extended information
Analysis of the homoglyphs of yong
1. Chrysalis [yǒng]: original meaning: barrel Under the protection of this cocoon, the silkworm completes its transformation from larvae to adult without eating.
2. Yu [yǒng]: Original meaning: Situation: Many people carry buckets with both hands, and the objects in the bucket are heavy. In order to maintain good walking, the heels are often slightly lifted off the ground, while the soles of the feet are used.
3. Gong [yǒng] original meaning: after the bucket is sunk into the well water, when it is lifted up with the windlass, the water flow rises from bottom to top at the moment when the water comes out, describing the water's turbulence and rising upwards. surging: surging: the appearance of a flood rising violently; describing the momentum as being overwhelming and unstoppable.
4. Figurine [yǒng]: Original meaning: a wooden or pottery puppet that is driven by a simple machine and can rotate and jump by itself. Dolls used for burial in ancient Chinese tombs. It is a simulation that symbolizes the burial of slaves. It appeared more and more in the tombs of the Eastern Zhou Dynasty, became popular from the Qin and Han Dynasties to the Sui and Tang Dynasties, and gradually declined after the Northern Song Dynasty, but it was still used until the Yuan and Ming Dynasties.