The pinyin for fried is zhà, zhá.
Fried, a standardized first-grade character in modern Chinese (commonly used), is pronounced zhà, zhá in Mandarin, and was first used in pre-Qin times. When pronounced as zhá, the basic meaning of "炸" is to cook food in boiling oil; the derived meaning is to blanch, for example, to deep-fry spinach. When pronounced zhà, "炸" basically means the sudden breaking of an object with a sound; by extension, it means to flee in all directions because of shock, e.g., to fry the eyes.
Grouping words
1, fried thunder [zhà léi] loud thunder.
2, dynamite [zhà yào] a substance that explodes on heat or impact and produces large quantities of energy and hot gases, such as yellow dynamite and black gunpowder.
3, time bomb [dìng shí zhà dàn] detonator controlled by a timer bomb, can be exploded at a predetermined time.
4, blow up the nest [zhà wō] birds or swarms of bees disturbed from the nest to fly in all directions.
5, fried hinoki [yóu zhá huì] is fried fruit. According to legend, the people hate the Southern Song traitor Qin Hui, so this name.