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Pinyin of Claws

zhuǎ zi.

Claw (zhuǎ) zi, originally interpreted to mean an animal's foot with pointed nails; claw (Pinyin: zhao?, a polyphonic character, pronounced as the 3rd tone). In the dialect vocabulary of Sichuan, Chongqing and Xiangfan in Hubei, zhuǎzi (爪子) means "to do something", and according to the Kangxi Dictionary, it should be "口爪子", or "mouth claw". It can also be used as a nickname.

Detailed Explanations:

1. Judeo-stupid, stupid.

Yuan Namoji "Village Music Hall", second section: "I say to you, such claws in the house to disturb, I teach the same tomorrow to drive him away."

2. An animal's feet with pointed nails.

Ding Ling? Du Evening Fragrance - What is this place": "[The bear] pounced on the headlights with two big claws."

3. An abusive term for a hand.

The Dream of the Red Chamber, the 52nd time: "What do you want this paw to do? It can't flick a needle, it can't hold a thread, and it only steals food from the mouth!"

Related Vocabulary Explanations:

1. scaly claw [lín zhǎo]?

Scales and claws, a metaphor for fragments of things.

2, claws and teeth [zhǎo yá]?

Claws and teeth are the weapons of raptors and beasts. It is a metaphor for a bad man's henchmen or a dog's leg who works for a bad man.

3. foot and claw [jiǎo zhǎo]?

The claws of an animal.

4, claws [zhuǎ zi]?

An animal's feet with pointed nails: chicken claws.

5, claw tip er [zhuǎ jiānr]?

Pig's hooves used as food.