Second, the basic interpretation?
[ yǒng ]
1, water or clouds come out: tears gush. The wind is surging.
2. Emerge from water or clouds: After the rain clears, a bright moon emerges. There was a smile on his face.
3. Waves with semicircular peaks, particularly large wavelengths and extremely high wave speeds.
[ chōng ]
Branches of a river (mostly used for place names): Rivers. Shrimp surge (in Guangdong).
Third, the word combinations include surge, emergence, gushing, surge, spring surge, surge, gushing, surge, surge, surge, surge, surge, surge, surge, surge and so on.
Extended data 1. Evolution of glyphs
Second, the etymological explanation
Classical Chinese version of Shuo Wen Jie Zi: Yong, Teng Ye. From the water, Yong Sheng. As soon as the water gushed, it was in Chu. ?
Vernacular version of Shuo Wen Jie Zi: Surge, water waves soar. The glyph uses "water" as the side and "Yong" as the sound side. One view is that "Yong" is a river, which is in the territory of Chu.
Third, related words
1, Tengyong: still boiling. Refers to the churning phenomenon when the liquid reaches a certain temperature. ?
Lu Xun's "Wild Grass, Lost Hell": "The sword tree has lost its light, and the edge of boiling oil has not surged."
2. Surge: describe the turbulent water flow.
Qu Qiubai's Journey to the Hungry Hometown II: "This' great stream of life' contains all kinds of things, and it flows naturally. Among them, each branch, even wave after wave, is also striving for a prominent life there, so each phase is fighting and changing."
3, gush out: also known as "gush out." Come out.
Shen Congwen's autobiography, I read a small book and a big book at the same time: "Water gushed from the sewers in many places."
4. Emergence: Sudden appearance.
Qin Mu's "Gathering Shells in the Art Sea": "When reading literary works, many of us have this feeling. For some touching plots, our * * * sounds and feelings do not suddenly emerge."
5, inrush: still rushing.
Du Pengcheng? The first chapter of "Defending Yan 'an": "The enemy, like the tide, rushes to the foot of the eastern mountain."