Sore is pronounced: [chuāng].
Detailed explanations for sore are as follows:
1. Morphological sound. From sick (chuáng), cangsheng. Original meaning: a disease of swollen ulcers on the skin.
2. A general term for carbuncle, paralysis, gangrene and boil.
Sore, sores also.
All the evils become sores and bruises. --Zhang Heng (张衡) Xi Jing Fu (西京赋). Xue's note: "A sore or a contusion is also called a scar."
To heal a sore in front of the eyes, one plucks out the flesh of the heart. -Nie Yizhong (聂夷中)《咏田家》
又如:sores(all sores and poisonous swellings);sores and rashes(meaning rashes);sores and diseases(generalized as scabies, ringworm, carbuncle, gangrene, and other skin and surgical ailments)。
3. Wound; trauma. Also known as "trauma".
E.g.: sores (harm); sores home (doctors who treat sores); sores keloid (trauma, scarring, referring to people's suffering).
4. Metaphorically, it refers to injury; pain.
The group words for sore are as follows:
1. 百孔千疮 [ bǎi kǒng qiān chuāng ]:
(Tang) Han Yu, "The Book of the Book of Meng Shangshu": "Han's has been coming, the group of scholars district repair, a hundred holes and a thousand sores, with the chaos and the loss of. " The original describes everywhere are loopholes, later also refers to the situation is corrupted or destruction is serious, has reached the point of no control.
2, full of sores [ mǎn mù chuāng yí ]:
See 〖sores and bruises〗: the eyes are traumatized, describing the scene after suffering from war, disaster and serious damage. It is also said that the eyes are full of wounds.
3, sore huge provocation deep [ chuāng jù xìn shēn ]:
Judas create huge pain deep. (Song) Ye Tinggui's "Sea Records of Broken Things": "The sores are huge and the provocations are deep, and it is not possible to win the poison." See "创巨痛深".
4, gouging out flesh to cure sores [ wān ròu yī chuāng ]:
Metaphorically, it is said to focus only on the immediate future, and to use harmful methods to save an emergency (sore: wound). It is also said to gouge out the flesh to mend the sores and to dig out the flesh to mend the sores.
5. chuāng yí mí mù ]:
See "Soreness".